A number of experts have stated that high winds could have been a factor in driving the ship off course. |
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Michael claims that while in Damascus he saw three separate convoys of luxury Iraqi licensed vehicles, driving under armed escort. |
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He cut back on to his left foot before driving the ball across for Derek Nicol to head home. |
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I've heard plenty of reports of people clocking in for friends who are off driving taxis around Heathrow. |
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With all the deadlines and projects driving me up the wall, I decided to take a break from all these and go for a short therapy session. |
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He also has a knack for driving the ball into right field or right-center, which allows the runner to reach third. |
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When asked what he is doing, he explains that he is driving away elephants. |
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A lot of us enjoy driving and prefer to drive a car that makes a journey a rewarding experience. |
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He was the driving force upfront, and was ably supported by the willing Richard Pugh, Duncan Jones and Ryan Jones. |
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A business owner claims a foul stench wafting through his premises is driving disgusted customers away. |
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The rain was actually driving horizontally with these incredibly dark skies and no visibility. |
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He frowned as he stared out the window at the sleet driving against the window pane. |
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With a swirling wind driving into their faces, the second-half promised to be a stiffer test for City's defensive resolve and so it proved. |
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However, as a result of strong winds and driving rain, the team eventually decided to abandon the session. |
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The pressure to reach a destination on time has serious consequences for our driving safety. |
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Edward IV followed up the following day, his initial success assisted by flurries of snow driving into the enemy. |
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Fierce headwinds driving against currents produced steep-fronted waves that smashed into the fleet as it struggled to reach the finish line. |
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We have had several cars driving far too close, almost on our bumper bar at times. |
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The move comes as many shopkeepers in the area are complaining that traffic jams and the lack of parking spaces are driving customers away. |
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I have mentioned my driving history a few times in the last year and a bit. |
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It was hard work driving the cattle to the fair and standing all day with them. |
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Two days out from Almeria we got caught in a brewing gale driving in from the west. |
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We saw her as we pulled out of our drive. She had her head down as the snow was driving in the wind. |
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In a sentence, he summed up the pros and cons of driving a soft-top car in Ireland. |
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The government is all to quick to penalise motorists for driving a car which is not in a safe condition. |
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She was booked on misdemeanor counts of hit-and-run and driving without a valid driver license. |
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The wind was driving the rain at acute angles, and the windows were shuddering from the thunder. |
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It was one of the old-fashioned services which helped absent-minded customers avoid the risk of driving without insurance. |
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Lately, he has been making solid contact but not driving the ball in the air. |
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If you're a bloke you do feel a bit of a wally driving the thing, even if you do manage to buy one in black or silver. |
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So I checked the back pocket for a wallet, took it out and found a driving licence. |
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Now that I have a daughter of my own, I can't help wondering when the time will be right for me to start driving her up the wall. |
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The game was played in dreadful conditions with a strong breeze driving the heavy rain into the Keane's Road goal. |
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In the distance, Rossiter could see the rain driving straight down and growing closer. |
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He now spends his days driving his weakening cattle back and forth across the valley first to find meagre pasture and then to find water. |
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Irresistibly propelled by its walking bass, Mirrors of Fire is a driving, dramatic piece which never loses its superbly focused energy. |
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Residents say that their cars are being hit and scraped by motorists driving too fast along the road. |
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During this campaign 245 drivers were arrested for driving under the influence of alcohol. |
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The rocks were encased in crusted snow and the wind was driving spindrift across the open slopes. |
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And poor Paul, he probably felt like a chauffeur, always driving her wherever she needed to go. |
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The next you know, Grazia's teenage daughter is walking out with the policeman and Grazia is driving around with three children on the scooter. |
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I just hoped Luke, along with his designer moodiness, wasn't above actually driving there. |
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Anyway, when we were sharing a flat in London I carried on driving him to clubs on a Friday night. |
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Motorists driving under the influence of drugs are being targeted in a new poster campaign. |
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She enrolled in nursing, not because of any influence from her mother, but because even at that tender age there was an inner force driving her. |
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He admits that he sees the world as hopeless and has considered driving his motorcycle into a bridge abutment. |
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If apnea is falling asleep at the wheel and driving off the road, SIDS is falling asleep at the wheel and driving into a bridge abutment. |
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Traffic chaos has frustrated drivers, both those driving private cars as well as public transportation drivers. |
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Ankle deep mud from melting snow, ice covered pools and hail and snow driving into the faces of runners on Mickleden Edge. |
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It began on the western frontier, at a time when driving cattle was vital to the survival of an expanding nation. |
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I am tired of short people who can't see over the steering wheel driving large cars. |
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But the charge wouldn't stick, and when I protested, they did me, absurdly, for drunk driving. |
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Photo number two shows local postman Owen McDonald aboard his horse and cart driving up Ballymanus Terrace. |
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Almost as soon as work began above ground, work also began on driving a tunnel northwards towards the sandstone face of Worsley Delph. |
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That is the sort of absurd nonsense that has been driving the other side of the debate. |
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By morning, the wind was driving icy pellets against the windows. |
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He usually is late on fastballs and is having trouble driving the ball. |
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But just what is driving such an exciting, burgeoning expansion of hip-hop? |
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The group took turns driving the dogs, breaking trail and navigating. |
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But as you point out, this can be bewildering for the consumer who is driving all of this. |
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The greatest of celebrity musicians will do fine under any system, while those who are currently waiting on tables or driving a cab to support themselves have nothing to lose. |
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Though this has been portrayed as genuine consultation, in fact the lack of any real, driving ideas about educational reform is an abnegation of political responsibility. |
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On my way back to the train station, in the back seat of a Mulsanne, I asked the driver how he likes driving a Bentley. |
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Not only does this serve to strengthen the car in a crash, but it also allows the car to absorb heavy impacts in jumps and fast driving over rough terrain. |
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The assassins apparently first bashed the car Fornari was driving several times, finally pushing it into a guardrail. |
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An armored car was driving over the sidewalk as people were fleeing for their lives. |
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During the first week, the main shopping street was jammed with cars filled with families driving slowly, aimlessly. |
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If I'm not snowboarding in it, I'm driving my Suzuki wagon in it. |
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Arrested on misdemeanor citation for driving with a suspended license in Burbank. |
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However, throughout the underground Internet war driving, formerly known as war dialing, seems to be of real concern to many wireless network users. |
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Brakes squealed as the few cars that happened to travel down that road screeched to a stop and promptly did an about-face, quickly driving in the opposite direction. |
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But it does chafe to be arrested by language cops when you are in fact driving in the right lane. |
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The accident serves as a grim reminder of the dangers of drinking and driving. |
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And The Prize Is Death, a cartoon by Albert Levering, attacks an epidemic of reckless driving. |
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We wade the cold water, fishing for an hour in the driving rain. |
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I kept driving him back with furious right handed jabs to the ribs. |
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She got into a car accident while driving through a dangerous intersection. |
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Tim Russert and I are driving back to the Albany airport after taking our kids to the baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown. |
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Cari's mother, Candice, threw herself into the cause of stopping drunken driving. |
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If you're driving the ball poorly, you don't need statistics to know it. |
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Adhesive weight is the portion of the locomotive's weight bearing on the driving wheels. |
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The danger of all these devices was that the driving crew could be tempted to add weight to the arm to increase pressure. |
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Locomotive brakes employ large shoes which press against the driving wheel treads. |
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The common feature of these three types was the provision of reduction gearing and a drive shaft between the crankshaft and the driving axles. |
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Tractive Effort is defined as the average force developed during one revolution of the driving wheels at the rail head. |
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Tractive force, as noted earlier, is largely determined by the boiler pressure, the cylinder proportions, and the size of the driving wheels. |
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The engine was placed on blocks and reverted to its original stationary job of driving hammers. |
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The prohibition of lighting a fire has been extended in the modern era to driving a car, which involves burning fuel and using electricity. |
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Most guitar parts take inspiration and direction from the melody, rather than driving the melody as in other acoustic genres. |
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In the driving scenes shot in the city, the main characters' cars are almost always pictured heading down the city's steeply inclined streets. |
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I turned it on Eileen and threw in a couple of my normal nags about her driving. |
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Mark Aston the head coach and driving force behind the Sheffield Eagles as been confirmed as the head coach of Rugby League Ireland. |
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On 26 February 1991, the coalition succeeded in driving out the Iraqi forces. |
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In addition to Aadhaar, PAN cards, Ration cards, Voter Cards and driving licences are also used. |
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A foreign citizen without driving skills living in Denmark can not get such documents. |
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For most purposes when identification is required, only valid documents are ID card, passport or driving license. |
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The Transport board issues driving licences which are valid as identity documents in Sweden. |
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However, driving licences from the UK and other EU countries are usually accepted within other EEA countries for identity verification. |
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A photograph of the bearer is usually present, as well as additional information, such as restrictions to the bearer's driving licence. |
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The acts were widely opposed, driving neutral parties into support of the Patriots and curtailing Loyalist sentiment. |
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In these wind driven currents, the Ekman spiral effect results in the currents flowing at an angle to the driving winds. |
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Reckless driving or reckless handling of a potentially lethal weapon may result in a death that is deemed manslaughter. |
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A person who is driving carefully, but whose car nevertheless hits a child darting out into the street, has not committed manslaughter. |
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The driving figure in the establishment of the Cambrian Archaeological Association was the Rev. |
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One such instance portrays an angry Jesus driving dishonest market traders from the temple. |
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They include driving offences, vandalism, criminal damage of small extent, low level violent offences and being drunk and disorderly. |
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They also provided a driving force for crustal deformation, and a new setting for the observations of structural geology. |
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This is accomplished by driving a pod together with boats and usually into a bay or onto a beach. |
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In some areas, they cooperate with local fishermen by driving fish into their nets and eating the fish that escape. |
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Now and then, one or more dolphins appear, driving the fish towards the line of fishermen. |
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On 1 January 1977, Aden, in line with Yemen and neighbouring states, changed to driving on the right. |
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In 1924, Welsh was back in court, after he was involved in a car collision caused by him driving his vehicle on the wrong side of the road. |
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Their music is termed an aggressive style of rock, blending strong driving guitars, groove and bounce, and pop elements and accessibility. |
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The diesel or gasoline engine and the electric motor, separated by clutches, were initially on the same shaft driving the propeller. |
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Rolf Sievert was named Chairman, but a driving force was George Kaye of the British National Physical Laboratory. |
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The massif is a smaller structural unit of the crust than a tectonic plate and is considered the fourth largest driving force in geomorphology. |
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A single shaft combined cycle plant comprises a gas turbine and a steam turbine driving a common generator. |
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This is accomplished by driving a pod together with boats, usually into a bay or onto a beach. |
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According to Vinci Autoroutes one third of accidents in French motorways are due to sleepy driving. |
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Additionally, they have been criticized by the driving public for the inefficiency with which they handle peak hour traffic. |
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Softer suspensions, greater storage, and more luxurious appointments add to their driving appeal. |
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The UK, Germany, Italy, Switzerland and Norway banned flying, driving and boating on Sundays. |
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Heavily damped oscillators tend to have broad linewidths, and respond to a wider range of driving frequencies around the resonant frequency. |
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In the Northern Netherlands however, the mass emigration from Flanders and Brabant became an important driving force behind the Dutch Golden Age. |
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When driving on a highway, convoys are also useful to conserve fuel by drafting. |
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Convoy driving is initiated when the strong wind quickly fills the road with snow behind snowplows, particularly on mountain passes. |
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During the winter of 1990 there was convoy driving for almost 500 hours at Saltfjellet. |
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The Allied forces were eventually successful in driving back Germany, in what turned out to be their last major advance of the war. |
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A steamboat is a boat that is propelled primarily by steam power, typically driving propellers or paddlewheels. |
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He was beaten by Richard Hammond, driving a 2008 Volkswagen Polo BlueMotion. |
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James May, driving a 2008 Subaru Legacy, arrived 40 minutes after Clarkson. |
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Clarkson travelled the shortest distance, but was injured after driving his lorry through a brick wall. |
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The next morning the fog had given way to a palpable, horizontally driving rain. |
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However, cases are known of badgers driving vixens from their dens and destroying their litters without eating them. |
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Phenolic compounds, such as polyphenol oxidase, are the main driving force behind browning in apples. |
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The parallel parking or reverse parking manoeuvre is known for being one of the most difficult and as a result, fails a great many driving tests. |
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Hydroelectric power comes from water driving a water turbine connected to a generator. |
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James Edward Oglethorpe was the driving force behind the colony, and the only trustee to reside in Georgia. |
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Motivation is the driving force of desire behind all deliberate actions of humans. |
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However, driving a vehicle which is in a dangerous condition on a public road is always illegal, irrespective of its test status. |
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Penn also introduced the trunk engine for driving screw propellers in vessels of war. |
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This tragedy serves as a stark reminder of the dangers of drunk driving. |
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He was tired and had trouble staying alert while he was driving. |
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I don't mind driving if you're willing to do the navigation. |
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When driving, she always wears her seatbelt as a precaution. |
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She was sensible enough to stop driving when she got too tired. |
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It's one of those thingamajigs that can give you driving directions. |
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People contemplating matrimony are like two autoists planning a long journey together, each driving his own car. |
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Individual bitcoin users are not the only driving force in terms of securing the bitcoin network. |
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John was so bullheaded that he kept driving and refused to stop for directions, even after getting hopelessly lost. |
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He's driving a ten-year old lime-green Caddy with a trunk full of golf clubs and one suitcase. We got a license number. |
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The authorities are trying to crack down on drunk driving during the holidays. |
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Every year around the holidays, the police launch a campaign to crack down on drunk driving. |
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He was driving and I was in the passenger seat, so we crashed together when the truck hit us. |
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Several factors are driving this transformation of New York City's cyberscape. |
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Every living creature has a driving force that pushes him in the direction of certain goals. |
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Many authors see a digital revolution taking place today and stress that this is a driving force behind many changes in companies. |
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Diffusing particles experience a drift motion in addition to random diffusion, when an external driving force is applied. |
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This is dumb! We're driving in circles! We should have asked for directions an hour ago! |
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And I think with driving a motor car, the danger is a very necessary ingredient. |
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Convoy driving is used through Hardangervidda pass on road 7 during blizzards. |
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You are jet-lagged, have a headache, can't stand driving a Fiat, it's turned dark and you cannot see or read the road signs. |
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And, driving back in the fly, Macmaster said to himself that you couldn't call Mrs. Duchemin ordinary, at least. |
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One of the wildly dancing horse's forehooves slammed into his shoulder, nearly dislocating it, and driving the breath out of his lungs. |
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Eating while driving is dangerous, says a new report from the Department of the Bleeding Obvious. |
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The other day, l was driving along in my old Mini when the gearknob came off in my hand. |
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I had to be careful driving toward the river so I wouldn't high-center the car on a boulder and break the crankcase. |
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Brown bear also consume bison, often by driving off the pack and consuming the wolves' kill. |
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It is also easier to steer the tractor and driving with the front wheel against the furrow wall will keep the front furrow at the correct width. |
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Jugurtha, however, turned on his brothers, killing Hiempsal and driving Adherbal out of Numidia. |
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The military presence at Eboracum was the driving force behind early developments in its economy. |
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In 829 he conquered Mercia, driving its King Wiglaf into exile, and secured acknowledgement of his overlordship from the king of Northumbria. |
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Edmund was able to temporarily relieve London, driving the enemy away and defeating them after crossing the Thames at Brentford. |
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Command of the sea was secured by driving the Genoese allies of the French out of the English Channel. |
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The convention of driving on the left hand side of the road has been retained in much of the former empire. |
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He intended to attack the coalition armies before they combined, in hope of driving the British into the sea and the Prussians out of the war. |
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By late afternoon, the French army had not succeeded in driving Wellington's forces from the escarpment on which they stood. |
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With the death of Prince Albert in 1861 the scheme lost its driving force, but by then many paintings were completed or underway. |
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On 22 March 2017, a terrorist attack took place, when a man stabbed a police officer after driving into pedestrians on Westminster Bridge. |
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In the early 10th century, the Ottonian dynasty had established itself in Germany, and was engaged in driving back the Magyars. |
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The chalk that forms the hills can clearly be seen on both sides of the cutting when driving on the motorway. |
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The 18 hole Wells Golf Club is on the outskirts of the city and also has a 24 bay driving range with optional grass tees. |
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These were especially suitable for driving textile mills, and many Watt engines were employed in these industries. |
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It was found that subjects who started driving unbelted drove consistently faster when subsequently belted. |
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Watt proceeded to develop his engine further, modifying it to provide a rotary motion suitable for driving factory machinery. |
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In the same direction of traffic driving direction, they are mainly settled in the median strip, edge lines, and dangerous sections of the road. |
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Few of the surviving coaching inns can be seen while driving on the A1, because the modern route now bypasses the towns with the inns. |
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When driving in heavy rain drivers notice a reduction in road spray from other vehicles and improved visibility. |
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For the driver, visibility is good from both sides of the driving cab so the choice on which side to site the driver less important. |
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The motives driving the Viking expansion are a topic of much debate in Nordic history. |
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The Bangladeshi private sector has since rapidly expanded, with numerous conglomerates now driving the economy. |
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Rickshaw driving provides employment for many poor Bangladeshis coming from rural areas. |
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Increasing student loans have also been blamed for driving tuition costs up. |
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Her car, a Morris Cowley, was later found at Newlands Corner, perched above a chalk quarry, with an expired driving licence and clothes. |
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Drumming characteristically focuses on driving rhythms, strong bass drum and a backbeat on snare, sometimes using cymbals for emphasis. |
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Many mods wore military parkas while driving scooters in order to keep their clothes clean. |
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Oldman was charged with drunk driving in 1991 after a night out in Los Angeles with actor Kiefer Sutherland. |
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Grid penalties can be applied for driving infractions in the previous or current Grand Prix, or for changing a gearbox or engine component. |
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The driving force was Jake Massey, who lobbied the club relentlessly once the game went professional. |
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He was also charged with not producing his driving licence and insurance certificate. |
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Ken Tyrrell became a constructor and Jackie Stewart won at Silverstone driving the Tyrrell 003 on his way to a second World Championship. |
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Schumacher, driving for Ferrari finished second while teammate Barrichello gained the final spot in the podium. |
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Away from driving, in 1962 he acted as a colour commentator for ABC's Wide World of Sports for Formula One and NASCAR races. |
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For the 1981 season Moss stayed with Audi, as the team moved to Tom Walkinshaw Racing management, driving alongside Martin Brundle. |
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During his driving career, Moss was one of the most recognised celebrities in Britain, leading to many media appearances. |
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Mansell made a return to racing in 1998 in the British Touring Car Championship, driving in a Ford Mondeo for three rounds. |
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Hamilton's helmet was made yellow so that his father could tell which kart his son was driving back in his karting days. |
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Button junior failed his first driving test for getting too close to a parked vehicle. |
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The S suffix of the 570S and 650S stands for Sport, underlying the levels of performance and engaging driving experience. |
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The revolutionary central driving position was designed for visibility and no compromise on control positions for the driver. |
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His replacement was a returning Nigel Mansell, who had spent the previous two seasons driving for Scuderia Ferrari. |
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The Marreau brothers won the 1982 edition driving a Renault 20 Turbo 4x4 prototype. |
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It is also the driving force behind reality shows like Survivor and the Discovery Kids show Flight 29 Down. |
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The close of the Seven Years' War in 1763 saw Great Britain triumphant in driving the Kingdom of France from North America, but heavily in debt. |
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William Wilberforce was a driving force in the British Parliament in the fight against the slave trade in the British Empire. |
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He then won a victory at the Second Battle of Dego, driving the Austrians northeast, away from their Piedmontese allies. |
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Disturbance to nesting turtles is an issue in some areas due to activities such as camping, driving on beaches and illegal fishing. |
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The process by which a country adopts a constitution is closely tied to the historical and political context driving this fundamental change. |
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The suspension is important because it makes the car stable and easier to control and keeps the tires on the road when driving on uneven terrain. |
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Consequently, two deliveries of steam onto each piston face in two cylinders generates a full revolution of the driving wheel. |
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A force from Madras under the command of Lieutenant Colonel Robert Clive arrived and liberated the city, driving out the Nawab's troops. |
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Brunswick then went on the attack, driving the French southwards and capturing Cassel before the war was halted by an armistice. |
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Parking, storage, and traffic issues in crowded cities, along with the easy driving position make them a popular form of urban transportation. |
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People are still allowed to walk along the pier, but must contend with motor traffic driving along the same wooden walkway. |
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Through deforestation and land degradation, livestock is also driving reductions in biodiversity. |
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Deeper, more thorough penetration is achieved by driving the preservative into the wood cells with pressure. |
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They had been granted a general amnesty on 17 March, yet Antony succeeded in driving most of them out of Rome. |
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Nothing prevents splitting the wood as much as first driving a pilot hole, especially for hard wood. |
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Preparation for war was one of the main driving forces behind industrialization, mostly due to distrust of the outside capitalistic world. |
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Wind is the driving force in the Red Sea to transport material as suspension or as bedload. |
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They will go to the mating area and he will maintain privacy by driving away all intruders. |
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Ethnic rivalry was one of the most important factors driving Andalusi politics. |
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The Chinese sent a squadron of junks against Portuguese caravels that succeeded in driving the Portuguese away and reclaiming Tamao. |
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These buses travel the tourist section of Acapulco, driving up and down the coast. |
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Electronic integrated bridge concepts are driving future navigation system planning. |
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He is credited with driving recusants out of the country, those who refused to attend Anglican services. |
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Concurrently, industrialization was quickly making Europe the center of manufacturing and economic growth, driving resource needs. |
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Based on the rapid growth, scholars expect the global middle class to be the driving force for sustainable development. |
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She complained that he was a psycho for driving at such a high speed in heavy traffic. |
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The driving of vehicles on beaches can crush nests buried in the sand and such activity should be avoided in nesting areas. |
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But there is useful energy in the exhaust pressure pulse, and what a turbocharger does is to put it to work driving a supercharger. |
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In all 13 colonies, Patriots had overthrown their existing governments, closing courts and driving away British officials. |
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However, the Court of Appeal acted so as to limit its application to offences involving criminal damage and reckless driving. |
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The Committee also recommended that manslaughter should be an optional charge for the more serious driving cases. |
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There is the possibility of charging an aggravated taking without consent for less seriously dangerous driving where death results. |
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An equivalent to causing death by dangerous driving in Canada under the Criminal Code is Causing death by criminal negligence. |
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For example, a pedestrian crosses a road negligently and is hit by a driver who was driving negligently. |
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A car that wins such a rallye uses its victory to convince potential purchasers that it can cope with difficult driving conditions. |
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However such evidence may be admissible if the defense has argued the defendant had no knowledge driving impaired was a crime. |
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Additionally, driving while intoxicated in some states may be a misdemeanor if a first offense, but a felony on subsequent offenses. |
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It shows a pair of yoked oxen driving the wheel via a sakia gear, which is here for the first time attested, too. |
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Whereas the entrepreneur might have philanthropic intentions as their main driving force. |
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Crompton's machine was largely built of wood, using bands and pulley for the driving motions. |
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It replace decentralized cottage industries with centralized factory jobs, driving economic upheaval and urbanization. |
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Stationary steam engines are fixed steam engines used for pumping or driving mills and factories, and for power generation. |
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This movement spins a large wheel on the treadle frame, connected by a thin leather belt to a smaller driving wheels on the sewing machine. |
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A connecting rod from the other end of the beam, rather than driving a pump rod, now drives a flywheel. |
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Matthew Murray improved the working of these valves by driving them with an eccentric gear attached to the rotating shaft of the engine. |
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Now assuming that the grains only grow due to the influence of curvature, the driving force of growth is. |
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In 1805 the Thames Archway Company was formed with the intention of driving a tunnel beneath the Thames between Rotherhithe and Limehouse. |
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Users of the road were obliged to follow what were to become rules of the road, such as driving on the left and not damaging the road surface. |
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Joseph Locke, driving Rocket, now saw that there were people on the line ahead. |
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Phelps Brown was called to serve on this council, and sought to use an incomes policy to reduce inflation without driving higher unemployment. |
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He saw their effect as a driving force behind the predominant trend towards liberal capitalism today. |
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Most hydroelectric power comes from the potential energy of dammed water driving a water turbine and generator. |
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Critics claimed that success in meeting consumer needs was driving other companies out of the market who were not as successful. |
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About 200m of ascent can be saved by driving to the top of Gale Road and beginning from the public carpark just behind the summit of Latrigg. |
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It was operated by a succession of different owners, driving five levels through mostly barren rock to explore three mineral veins. |
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Subduction is the driving force behind plate tectonics, and without it, plate tectonics could not occur. |
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This road has also been used many times in the BBC's Top Gear series for test driving cars. |
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A fifty yard runback of a punt by Jack Reed in the fourth period gave Bowdoin a 6-0 win over Williams today in a driving rain. |
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In shinny, everyone wins. Though rules are scaled back, the game is not loosened beyond all form, and the driving competitive element remains. |
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Smelling the barn can result in driving too fast, not clearing weapons properly, and bypassing ammunition-recovery procedures. |
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I remember driving to remote villages outside of Abuja, the capital. |
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These packs can be holding or driving devices, depending on what they are splined to. |
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As we were driving home, large spludgy balls of sleet drummed against the roof of the car. We had to wait a while before getting out. |
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The arctic cold front brought subfreezing temperatures, snow, freezing rain and treacherous driving conditions. |
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Shortly thereafter, a supervirus destroys nearly all human life on earth, driving the few survivors underground. |
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All this is set to a driving backdrop of hard, slightly surfy, surprisingly powerful strumming. |
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Freddie gave me a quick five-minute lesson on handling Cherry Pie and we switched off between sleeping and driving. |
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After a few minutes, the soldier gave the all-clear and they kept driving. |
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That's why driving truck became more than a job for many in the industry. Driving truck was a lifestyle. |
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The great god Baseball has returned, driving the forces of winter and darkness from the tundral landscape. |
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Under no circumstances should I be responsible for your reckless driving of my vehicle. |
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Yet the driving force of the whole process from humblest plant to possible superman is will to power, will not to be, but to be more. |
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I was driving my new Iveco van and they say I was going at 60mph when the limit was 50 but this is a single carriageway A-road. |
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Delivery driver Asar Khan, 26, drove like a madman on the rain-soaked M9, M90 and A9 while driving north to visit the woman who is now his wife. |
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Instead of driving down the street to meetings, soon Yahoos need merely stroll the walkways that crisscrossed a bright green lawn. |
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Final tune Ticket to Liberty adds a wailing harmonica to the driving acoustic guitar. |
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The first to go was the well-set Joe Root on 88, driving loosely to get a big nick to wicket-keeper Sarfraz Ahmad off Riaz. |
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He was a driving force in the enactment of agency shop legislation in Pennsylvania which was vital to workers and their families. |
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From sleeping on an air bed, he's gone to living in a mansion and driving a Bentley. |
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Known as an alcolock, the device is aimed at preventing those who have been convicted of drinking and driving from reoffending. |
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I reckon a picture of Jeremy Clarkson driving on the M40 swigging an alcopop might do the trick. |
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In Limassol, 140 alcohol-level tests were performed, with 22 drivers written up for driving while intoxicated. |
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Yesterday, he admitted assaulting the yob on April 12 last year by driving his van at him to his severe injury and the danger of his life. |
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They were able to take refuge in an Anderson shelter and sit in the driving seat of a US Jeep. |
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And how nine-time senior champion Jim Thorpe walked down a driving range in Hawaii to introduce himself and compliment Johnson on his play. |
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The oddball incident is not the first of its kind as a Minnesota man pleaded guilty in May 2012 to driving a Zamboni drunk. |
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When Dillon was 19, he was stopped for driving under the influence and had a marijuana joint and a Quaalude pill in his pocket. |
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