The turning point came when she started in on the psychiatrist, who as she pointed out, smoked continually. |
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I think that trying to find a major turning point of this rather one-sided affair is hard to come by. |
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In a visually economical and brilliantly staged turning point, the village idiot jealously, for love of Ivy, stabs Lucius nearly to death. |
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The economy had reached a turning point, and during the forecast's range, it would end up in an economic recovery phase. |
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The author suggests that by summer 1998 there had been a turning point, and a more confident Commission had come of age. |
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She leaves a suicide note, whose contents are held back until an appropriately melodramatic turning point. |
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He stopped and chatted and spoke of how this hard-won point just might be the kick-start Rangers need, the turning point in their woeful season. |
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What appeared to be the turning point for him was when he failed to turn up for a World Cup qualifying match in Albania. |
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Historians consider the Louisiana Purchase to be a landmark event or turning point in American history. |
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The turning point had come for him in 1913, when he'd attended a Yom Kippur service in Berlin. |
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The turning point came in 1973 with the legalisation of abortion by the Supreme Court. |
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The big turning point for me was when I was taking my finals and I felt so anxious and nervous. |
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The key turning point arrives during a long sequence of Paul learning to climb the rock face of an intimidating cliff. |
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Thirty seconds into the additional period came what would be the turning point of the whole saga. |
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The turning point of his career was the year 1993, when he saw an IMAX giant screen film for the first time in Washington. |
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The Spinning Mule marked a turning point for the textile industry as it massively increased the quantity and quality of yarn spun. |
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The turning point came when he took his children to a theme park and discovered that he was too big for the rides. |
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The turning point was when James himself, in the thick of the battle, was cut down. |
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Jack thought it was a turning point, but did not think the foul merited the punishment. |
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Arguably the turning point of the match came as early as the sixth game of the first set. |
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The turning point arrived in the shape of a small, solid female a bit wider than she was tall. |
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However, the real turning point arrived four minutes into the third quarter and was nothing short of bizarre. |
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A key turning point in church history was caused by a meteorite shower, Swedish geologists have claimed. |
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After all, it is neither a moment of truth nor a turning point for two of the three characters. |
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The decision is a definitive turning point and has been recognised as such in Japan. |
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The turning point of the half and perhaps the game, occurred on the eleventh minute. |
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His goal, 15 minutes into the second half, was the final turning point in the game. |
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Last Tuesday night could yet be seen as a turning point, but in which direction it is for Ferguson to say. |
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There is a bit of a fight in us and maybe that Doncaster result will be a bit of a turning point. |
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His silence cannot hide the fact that this war represents a profound turning point in international relations. |
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The breakthrough was hailed as a turning point in television and an indication of an unabating shift toward Internet-delivered entertainment. |
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In another pulsating affair full of vim and vigour it may seem absurd to select a single act as the turning point. |
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The turning point probably came when the General Convention revised the canon on divorce and remarriage. |
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This week was going to be the turning point, the time he'd start bringing some maturity to his game. |
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But we have reached a frightening turning point if artists are cowed into silence by violence and threats. |
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There was a turning point in my early teens when I went from being a consummate slacker to an overachiever that nobody liked. |
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But, Cordery argues, the collapse of Chartism as a national political movement was a turning point in the development of friendly societies. |
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Instead we surrendered possession and suddenly it was 32-10, and to me that was the real turning point in the game. |
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It was a turning point for cinema taste in Paraguay in synchronicity with a change in Latin American film production. |
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It seemed like quite an inauspicious, dark year at the time, but 1981 was, like 1945, a turning point up from a bottom in some sense. |
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I have read your letter many times, trying to find the turning point in this relationship, and keep coming back to the nose picking. |
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The firehouse, commissioned in 1966, represents the height and turning point of the architect's career. |
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The way Mike dealt with his injury was the turning point for our football team. |
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In the summer of 1987 there was a turning point of sorts, I was sat on the steps of a footbridge over railway lines in Towyn north Wales. |
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If these documents are shown to be forgeries, it will be the turning point in the news business between the new and old media. |
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An opposition party refusing to move on is forgoing any possible historical turning point. |
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Where was the fork in the road for America, the turning point sought in all those thousands of books and articles? |
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Reporters claim that he is desperately alone, at a turning point in his premiership. |
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The election is already promising to be a turning point in Italian politics. |
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The arrival of this ruddy-faced giant, with his public-school accent and naive confidence, proved a turning point. |
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Self-important rock journalists like to wax poetic about the magnitude of grunge as a musical and cultural turning point. |
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The turning point came when the company diversified into other commercial services. |
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From an academic standpoint, his work marks a turning point in Monacan archaeology and the overall understanding of Monacan ethnohistory. |
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As long as we don't get a double-dip downturn, investors may look back on this quarter as a turning point. |
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If that happens, and the signs suggest that it will, a historic turning point will have been reached. |
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If he wins South Carolina, the smackdown with John King may well be remembered as the turning point. |
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The Humvee experience, which he captured on film, was a turning point in his reporting. |
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Being nearly blown up in a Humvee, which he captured on film, was a turning point in his reporting. |
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The counteroffensive in the Moscow region marked the beginning of a turning point not only in the course of the Great Patriotic War but also in World War II as a whole. |
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The linesman had flagged to say the deflected shot should have been ruled out for offside but the referee overruled him, and this goal proved to be the turning point. |
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Another major turning point, levy said, was the popularity of National Geographic and Discovery programming. |
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The big turning point in the vote seemed to be when both McConnell and Cornyn supported the cloture vote. |
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This marvellous book serves as a portrait of a young woman and her times, but it is also an engrossing portrait of a place at a turning point in its cultural history. |
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In his book, Dennis argued that the turning point for Spears was when her father intervened and placed her in a conservatorship. |
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A second incident shows James assuming disguise to gain advantage in 1537 at another turning point in his life, when he had to make a decision of whom to marry. |
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A turning point came some 25 years ago, when her close friend Carol contracted ovarian cancer. |
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But just as Orgreave was witness to a turning point in history in 1984, it now faces a new and perhaps unlikely future as the would-be boom town of South Yorkshire. |
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Some historians credit her involvement in the War of 1812 as the turning point which led to peace between American forces and those loyal to the British crown. |
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Some called it a gimmick, but Townshend says he knew it was a turning point. |
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It represents a nice turning point in the series, easing out from its inaugural season into one of the finer shonen anime series in recent memory. |
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And that was the turning point to where I was like, OK, Derby first and everything else after. |
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But Cole also points to the proliferation of phones with video capabilities as a turning point. |
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In perhaps the turning point of the game, Steven Boyack flattened Dennis Wyness just inside the area in 18 minutes and Paul Sheerin powered in the penalty. |
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This coming battle, if it materializes, represents a turning point in U.S. foreign policy and possibly a turning point in the recent history of the world. |
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The penalty miss in this game was obviously the turning point. |
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The decisive turning point in the scholarship of early El Greco came out of the blue in 1983, when the Dormition of the Virgin shown in the London exhibition was found. |
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A critical turning point occurred in 1319 when Rinchan, a Laddakhi Buddhist Bhotia, dethroned the Hindu ruler Sahdev, and married Sahdev's wife, Kotarani. |
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When the bacteriophage was discovered, this was a turning point for bacteriology, but phages long remained the concern of medical bacteriologists. |
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Even the intervention of the US Supreme Court was treated in a cynical and light-minded fashion, rather than as a turning point in American political history. |
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The conjunction of the Pre-Raphaelite movement and the new treatment of light by J. M. W. Turner marked the great turning point in the history of Western art. |
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In this regard several essays published in 1987 clearly mark a turning point, not to mention the insouciant crashing of psychoanalytic theory on the Black Studies scene. |
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In 1973, the appointment of a constitutional law professor, Bora Laskin, as chief justice represented a major turning point for the court. |
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A head-to-head between the two Jonathans 12 minutes from time proved the turning point. |
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The statue of a woman holding a pick hammer marks a major turning point in the city's history and recovery. |
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The 1964 Games were thus a turning point in the global visibility and popularity of the Olympics. |
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However, this marked a turning point as Button scored in all of the remaining races. |
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A turning point came in the 2003 World Championship, where Part and Taylor met in the final. |
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This was a significant turning point in the war and led to the restoration of the French Republic. |
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As it marked the turning point of the Hundred Years War, the significance of this battle was great. |
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The turning point was when the Germans reduced the intensity of the Blitz after 15 September. |
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In stiffening the resolve of those determined to resist Hitler the battle was an important turning point in the conflict. |
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Our use of international influence to halt England, France and Israel's aggression against Egypt in 1956 was a historic turning point. |
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But the partition of Ireland in 1921 was a turning point to attitudes towards the language. |
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The publication of Deaths and Entrances in 1946 was a turning point for Thomas. |
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The Melba broadcast caught the people's imagination and marked a turning point in the British public's attitude to radio. |
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However, the later establishment of the United Kingdom of the Netherlands in 1815 marked a turning point. |
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This proved to be Rommel's last attempt to take the initiative and as such his defeat here represented a turning point in the battle. |
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Path dependencies occur when the response to a turning point event or treatment is contingent upon the individual's developmental history. |
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This was the bloodiest battle of the war, and has been called the war's turning point. |
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The turning point of this phase of the war usually seen as the Athenian victories at Pylos and Sphakteria. |
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In the 1994 parliamentary elections, the Democratic Agrarian Party gained a majority of the seats, setting a turning point in Moldovan politics. |
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Despite his imperial claims, Frederick's rule was a major turning point towards the disintegration of central rule in the Empire. |
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Schneider's critique is widely acknowledged to have marked a turning point in anthropology's study of social relationships and interactions. |
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The turning point came in 785, when Widukind had himself baptized and swore fealty to Charlemagne. |
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It was a turning point in the development of linguistics, allowing the introduction of a rigorous methodology to historic linguistic research. |
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The publication of Jan Huygen van Linschoten's book Voyages provided a significant turning point in Europe's maritime history. |
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The 1926 Slavery Convention, an initiative of the League of Nations, was a turning point in banning global slavery. |
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This battle did not take place in the streets. It took place entirely in words, and it was to prove the turning point in the war. |
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The Uprising became a turning point in the overthrow of Apartheid years later. |
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When Rihanna released her rebellious breakaway album Anti, it marked a definitive turning point in the singer's career. |
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In 886, Alfred the Great retook London, which he apparently regarded as a turning point in his reign. |
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The climax of the third book is the account of the Council of Whitby, traditionally seen as a major turning point in English history. |
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Some, such as Richard Southern, have seen the conquest as a critical turning point in history. |
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However, the victory was not a turning point in the war, which continued and often favoured Spain. |
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However, this was not a significant turning point in the history of parliamentary democracy. |
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The election was, however, something of a turning point for the Liberal Democrats. |
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The First World War was the turning point for the economy of Northern England. |
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Markus sees this as a turning point in missionary history, in that forcible conversion gave way to persuasion. |
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The turning point was the battle for Brindisi, where the Sicilians launched a major counterattack by both land and sea. |
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The 1939 New York World's Fair marked a turning point in architecture between the Art Deco and modern architecture. |
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Morel is a major turning point in his autobiographical novel Sons and Lovers, a work that draws upon much of the writer's provincial upbringing. |
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Indeed, 1994 was a crucial turning point for dance music's role at the festival. |
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The year 2006 is clearly a turning point for HTS technology. |
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Once at New Street, the turning point for the 61 and 63, jump off and at the same stop catch the 98, 99 or the X64 to catty on to Colmore Row or Priory Queensway. |
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Rousting Muqtada al-Sadr out of Najaf was supposed to be a turning point. |
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Where does the company see the Bitcoin industry now as Wall Street has begun to embrace it and what was the turning point that legitimatized Bitcoin? |
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An early turning point occurs in the middle of the book, when Peter, a nonswimmer, jumps into Mill Creek with Arthur, in a self-baptism that replicates Arthur's earlier one. |
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In the sphere of economics, World War II marks a turning point. |
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Anne was devastated by her husband's death in October 1708, and the event proved a turning point in her relationship with the Duchess of Marlborough. |
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Approaching the Supreme Court library, one enters the pyramid area, a large space that serves as a turning point before the entrance to the courtrooms. |
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Critics cite the financial involvement of the Ford Foundation as the turning point when such clinics began to change from giving practical experience to engaging in advocacy. |
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The year 1953 marked an important turning point in Burton's career. |
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The success of the 1991 matches led to a contract extension with USA and NBC through 1997, marking a turning point in the competition's popularity. |
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The discovery and utilization of fire, a simple energy source with many profound uses, was a turning point in the technological evolution of humankind. |
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The 1991 Dili Massacre was a turning point for the independence cause and an East Timor solidarity movement grew in Portugal, Australia, and other Western countries. |
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Coffeehouses represent a turning point in history during which people discovered that they could have enjoyable social lives within their communities. |
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Henry's authority was restored and the Provisions of Oxford were forgotten, but this was nonetheless a turning point in the history of the Parliament of England. |
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Japanese historians regard this war as a turning point for Japan, and a key to understanding the reasons why Japan may have failed militarily and politically later. |
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Because of the prevailing winds Mauritius was chosen as a turning point. |
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The modern historiography is influenced by the Octavian traditions, such as when Caesar's epoch is considered a turning point in the history of the Roman Empire. |
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The closure of the Platonic Academy in 529 was a notable turning point. |
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Markus suggests that the Gregorian mission was a turning point in papal missionary strategy, marking the beginnings of a policy of persuasion rather than coercion. |
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O'Connell's manoeuvres were important, but the decisive turning point came with the change in public opinion in Britain in favour of emancipation. |
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King Philip II ruled at a critical turning point in European history toward modernity whereas his father Charles V had been forced to an itinerant rule as a medieval king. |
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The Clyde formed an important sea route from the earliest times, and the Battle of Largs in 1263 marked the turning point for the end of Viking ambitions in Britain. |
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It is clear that Lawrence had an extremely close relationship with his mother, and his grief became a major turning point in his life, just as the death of Mrs. |
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A turning point came after the Battle of the Frigidus of 395, ending the last serious attempt at a pagan revival in the now Christianized Roman Empire. |
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