Hakka make up approximately 1.7 percent, while mainlanders make up about 15 percent of Taiwan's population. |
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The venture has proved so popular that there are enough students taking part in training to make up two teams. |
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In Fort Worth horses evoke rodeo and Baltimore is home to the Preakness Stakes, one of the races that make up the triple crown. |
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The only advice to those players is that they should make up their own minds and not listen to anybody else. |
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If you make up your mind to live from writing, it is prudent to make certain that your work is good, he added. |
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The particular make up of the MMR live vaccine means that many more children are being affected. |
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Stews, roasts, and casseroles with vegetable, salads, sour pickles, and sauerkraut make up the usual main course. |
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In maize, the stomium is located at the meeting point of the two loculi that make up each half anther. |
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Keith had a deficit of 15 metres to make up and with a very gritty performance he handed over the baton only five metres in arrears. |
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After openly avowing that his soul was bound with hers, William could not but be impatient with Elizabeth for refusing to make up her mind. |
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We try to make up for our rebellious feelings by behaving in artificially loving ways toward others. |
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The Nepalese account for another 35 percent, while the Assamese make up 15 percent of the country's inhabitants. |
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The closer you are to retirement the harder it will be to make up the losses. |
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To make up a team, Alsager teacher Lindsay Purcell recruited a number of footballers. |
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Anyone unable to get a full team together can also turn up to make up more teams on the night. |
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Did this mean, he asked, that the disabled were being taxed to make up for the city's lost revenue? |
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I make up a cocktail of vitamins and minerals and feed this to the shrimps. |
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That theme carries through to the steering column-mounted tach and all the rings and things that make up the gearbox area and cupholders. |
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We spent so much time searching for the bra that would make up for the sag. |
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The black zones, which make up about 10 percent of the regions in which the Shan, Karenni, and Karen live, are rapidly shrinking. |
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Asiatic lilies make up for having little or no scent with the beauty of their huge upturned flowers in luminous colours. |
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She picked up her make up bag and left the wash room, heading to the bedroom she shared with her best friend. |
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There are at least 1000 islands in the chain of 19 atolls which make up the Maldives. |
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Recovering from injury, she stood in goal one night at training to make up a team and hasn't been released since. |
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To be honest, I felt sure I was there to make up the numbers and I was quite happy to do so. |
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Obviously, the film is as much about the boys who make up the team as their coach. |
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We all work long hours these days, but many men try to make up for it when they get home. |
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Calcium, magnesium, phosphorus and zinc are the major minerals that make up bones. |
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He had been dawdling with the ball on the halfway line as if he had all day to make up his mind. |
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At 35 and obviously aging, Roy Jones needs to make up his mind and decide on his future very soon. |
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At 28 he knows he is supposed to be in his prime and he knows there is a lot of lost time to make up for. |
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Americans make up the second largest expat population in Shanghai after the Japanese. |
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There is, of course, also a love interest, moments of pure comedy and all the facets that go to make up a truly great play. |
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They make up one of the most dangerous tandems in recent National Football League history. |
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Floors jetty out, but are seemingly pulled back by the tambour shutters that make up the facade. |
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Ethnic Hungarians, or Magyars, make up the majority of Hungary's 10 million people. |
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To make up for this, the runner beans got off to a great start and are already showing their first beans. |
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Slices of ham, salami and capicollo topped with a few black olives and some marinated garden vegetables make up the appetizer. |
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She had completed freshman year, and only had to make up a couple of courses over the summer to makeup her absences. |
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Add a few former players invited to make up the occasional visiting side, and you have the wall game community of the planet. |
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He scowled, pretending anger to make up for the insane urge to grin absurdly. |
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The middle grouping make up the majority readership of these scandal sheets, but they are also much less likely to read the qualities. |
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However, there was not sufficient quantity of material to make up one full load of slab. |
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That process would briefly liberate the quarks and gluons that make up protons and neutrons. |
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Rugosa roses make up a dense, compact hedge at the end of the garden without distracting from the sea view. |
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I don't like jewelry or make up, but I loved buying chains that accessorize my clothing. |
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Together, the Pleistocene and Holocene make up the Quaternary period, marked by waxing and waning of polar glaciers. |
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Aquatic plant material and waste grain left in plowed fields make up the majority of the Canada Goose's diet. |
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As a result, the progeny of a single queen make up a genetically diverse population. |
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The acer seems unable to make up its mind, turning a few leaves over to autumn red while still making new green leaf at the tips of its branches. |
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This is apparent on the string of flaccid acid-house tracks that make up the middle portion of the disc. |
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Berries, acorns, and other seeds and nuts make up most of the Band-tailed Pigeon's diet. |
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The campaign is from then on to hold or win the balance who tend normally to make up about forty percent of the electorate. |
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It is necessary to re-examine the balance of power in the running of the different institutions that make up the global architecture. |
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As if to make up for the sluggishness in his body, his mind was racing along at double speed. |
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The elements that make up this family are also known as the actinides, after the first member of the family. |
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To make up for the lost sleep, he sleeps to the full on weekends, getting up after noon. |
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However, she feels that the job satisfaction will more than make up for any reservations she has. |
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The movie itself might not be much on serious drama, but the bonus features make up for that. |
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People are putting in long hours to make up for poor organisation and planning in the workplace. |
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Pierce refuses to discuss their departure, but rails at the suggestion that the newly-recruited line-up are just there to make up the numbers. |
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To make up for a rainout in June, they played at Shea Stadium in the afternoon, then at Yankee Stadium the same night. |
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The Greater and the Lesser Antilles are a group of islands that make up the West Indians. |
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The weathered minerals of the regolith, together with an admixture of organic matter and water, make up the soil. |
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By June last year his studies were complete, but Tyrone had a lot of ground to make up. |
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The ayatollah wields considerable influence among Shiites, who make up more than 60 percent of Iraq's 25 million people. |
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The coniferous forests of the taiga make up 27 percent of the world's forests. |
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Ranji David is Appu, Rashmi Kothari and 13 others join in to make up a dramatic interplay of laughs and guffaws, back talks and whatnots. |
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When I'm forced to make a decision, I'll often use some random means to help me make up my mind. |
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The show's whip-smart writing, bold frankness and exceptional acting more than make up for these minor stumbles. |
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A much larger problem is the army rations that make up the rest of my diet. |
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Germans and South African Afrikaners, arriving in the nineteenth century, make up most of the 6 percent of the population that is white. |
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At present, however, it is premature to assume that Kazakh oil will make up the gap. |
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David admits he's a floating voter who will make up his mind on how to vote nearer the time. |
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Now it was simply to spend a bit more time with her, to keep her company and just to make up for all the time she hadn't been there. |
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It has yet to make up its mind as to whom to talk, what to talk and how to move in this matter. |
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These are financial instruments that rise in value as the market falls, enabling the holder to make up for losses on an orthodox share portfolio. |
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The cubicled floor space of start-ups turned agglomerates make up the Binary Proletariat. |
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While you can make up a solution from basic fertilizers, I recommend a ready-mixed formulation. |
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Two teams battle for laughs and points as they make up scenes, games and songs on the spot. |
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The wealthy elites who make up the governing class can see which way the wind is blowing. |
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The extracts provided for problems of the windgall and fetlock are mixed to make up 200 ml of an oil based treatment. |
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If the fare for both business and leisure travelers was the same, leisure airfares would have to rise to make up the difference. |
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The farmers are calling on the Government to pay compensation and make up for the so-called BSE tax. |
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A temporary solution is to open a window to let in a little make up air, preferably on the windward side of the house. |
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While Asian firms make up 30 percent of all minority companies, they account for 52 percent of all receipts from minority businesses. |
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They exchange books and movies and are doing their best to make up for all the lost years. |
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I woke to hear my alarm clock shrilling at me and after shutting it off I went to have a shower and put some make up on. |
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The men also make up kinnikinnik, our herbal smoking mixture, from herbs that we gathered in the previous spring, summer and fall. |
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Both men, he says, were forced to kiss and make up in front of everybody on the team bus on Friday afternoon. |
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I think she has it in her head that if she gets us all in the same room we'll crack and kiss and make up. |
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We have our little spats from time to time, but we always kiss and make up before the neighbors start to wonder. |
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You know sisters argue, and they kiss and make up and that's just how our relationship was. |
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The most important thing for Cole is to think independently of his agent before he chooses whether or not to kiss and make up with Arsenal. |
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It was time for the brothers to kiss and make up, and also for Owen to reconcile with Davey. |
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Along comes a referee intent on making peace but instead of getting both sides to kiss and make up the peacemaker only exacerbates the situation. |
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We have got to kiss and make up with the staff we have been in dispute with and get the team rebuilt. |
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He was supposed to say sorry and she was supposed to forgive him, then they'd kiss and make up. |
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The Dominion Post reports that Kiwis are indecisive on polling day because 30 percent of us make up our minds in the last months of an election. |
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It will enrich the amazing melange of sounds that make up this wonderful new South Africa. |
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Villagers will also be searching for their loose coppers to make up a mile of coins. |
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They make up 89 percent of the payers, and they pay on the knocker every time. |
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You swipe your finger on this scanner, and software then tries to make up for your mental woolliness. |
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The colour of a pigment is dictated by the way it absorbs certain parts of the spectrum that make up visible light and reflects others. |
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In coastal areas during the non-breeding season, fish, krill and other marine creatures make up a large portion of their diet. |
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It doesn't pay to get caught in reflexive habit patterns when you are moving through the complex variables that make up life. |
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They argue almost constantly, only stopping occasionally to hug and kiss and pretend to make up. |
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The minarets, columns, and pillars that make up the skyline are a mixture of recognizable Alexandrian landmarks and the Bellinis' own invention. |
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Since the end of the sanctions, the Kurds have sought ways to make up for that lost income. |
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What Kuwaiti fans lack in numbers, they plan to make up for in noise and enthusiasm when their team take on Australia in the Asian Cup. |
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The only way to make up the deficiency was to organize all men discharged from the regular Army into an enlisted reserve. |
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The regular size was huge, what they miss in quality they try to make up for in quantity. |
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The difference in the arrangement of space in the atoms that make up the structure of an element is called allotropy. |
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It is all right for the author to be undecided or out of the loop during a production, but here I was directing and had to make up my mind. |
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Encourage people to make up totally false rumors about Blogosphere all-stars. |
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They called for voices that can speak for the diverse identities that make up the mosaic of humanity. |
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We have the occasional sighting of a bluejay or a cardinal, but that doesn't make up for the lower class of birds who hang out in my yard. |
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Kate, one of the make up artists had a Tupperware box full of cashew nuts and almonds. |
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Whether the partnership can move quickly enough to make up for lost time, however, remains to be seen. |
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After all, he needed something to make up for the fact that in general, his mind was as much use as a milkshake with no milk. |
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It agreed to supply half the budget and the Wallises remortgaged their house to make up the difference. |
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So big-hearted Melvyn bought Al a slap-up lunch the other day to kiss and make up. |
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The lanthanides make up the elements between barium and hafnium in Row 6 of the periodic table. |
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The descendants of the people of Nanchao make up the modern day Shan, Lao and Thai. |
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Kerosene and the rest of the organic mixture's lighter components evaporated, leaving behind the heavier molecules that make up tar and asphalt. |
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That was a short but sappy chapter to make up for some of the gruesome chapters I made y'all go through! |
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The rate has to increase by an extra amount the following year to make up the shortfall. |
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When it comes to organising holidays, we can never make up our minds and try not to commit until the last minute. |
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Do staff members try to make up for the lack of rampaging aliens by occasionally running amok themselves? |
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All the amplification in world can't make up for a lack of soul, providing more proof that some genres just don't rock. |
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Her blue eyes, entirely void of make up, gave her face a strange, reptilian look. |
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Coleoidea, Crustaceans, nudibranch mollusks and polychaete worms make up a large part of the larger zooplankton. |
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Damselfish make up almost half, with angelfish, surgeonfish, wrasses, gobies, and butterfly fish accounting for another 25 to 30 percent. |
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My work has taken me away a great deal and I want to make up for lost time whilst I am still hopefully young and fit enough to do so. |
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She was his least favorite make up artist but also the only one able to come in for the special shoot today for their interviews. |
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Cuckoos, coucals, anis, malkohas, and roadrunners are approximately 127 species of birds that make up the family Cuculidae. |
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Nematodes make up the second most diverse animal phylum, second only to the arthropods. |
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However, Sampower Star forfeited ground by drifting across the track towards Pipalong and could not make up the leeway. |
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It has to make up the leeway elsewhere through its legendary cost-cutting programmes. |
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Playing against the wind now, the Bulldogs faced a ferocious assault by the visitors, determined to make up the leeway. |
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Hedgerows and fields make up the left hand side of the path with the old canal on the right. |
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It also made them keen to make up for lost opportunity and learn more about where they came from. |
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Lutein is one of the hydroxy carotenoids that make up the macular pigment of human retinas. |
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Planetary mass, size, and orbital dynamics are the properties that make up this second proposed definition. |
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All you need to do is to make up a team of six to eight, give yourself a catchy name and come along to test your wits and enjoy yourselves! |
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However I was aware that we lived in a world where I can make up my own mind, so if I want to smoke then let me. |
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Now that prices are kicking booty, let's crank open the oil spigots and make up for lost time! |
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Sun, wind, chlorine and salt break down the protein structures that make up each strand of hair, rendering it dull, dry and lifeless. |
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Only 3 percent of his 16,500 acres are riparian, but they make up 35 percent of his total production. |
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The only way to become familiar with which grapes make up which Appellations is to research the appellation you are interested in. |
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With the influx of new blood every year, ready-made stars, they have a massive advantage over the ordinary club side, who must make up the numbers from within their own ranks. |
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But before we organise a whip-round to make up for his shortfall, spare a thought for those who are having to cope with below-inflation pay rises. |
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Surfers bobbing in the line-up make up a community of sorts, one often strengthened by the presence of locals who know and look out for each other. |
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At the end of it all, you swap shirts, shake hands, make up and go home. |
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He was an extremely taciturn man, so it would have been totally out of character for him to have consciously chosen to make up that sort of thing. |
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He relied on the principles of control and movement to make up for his lack of velocity, but it was his lionhearted approach that won him the most praise. |
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This is where the scenes that will eventually make up the movie are forged. |
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I expect newspapers to misquote and misunderstand Church officials and to overemphasize minor points, but not to make up quotations out of whole cloth. |
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They knew that as much as they tried to make up for it with brute force, their cultural power was nil. |
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He soon had Sir Michael Stoute's charge on the rails and allowed him to make up the ground steadily, but he could not peg back Kandidate and went down by a length. |
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It uses rubber rings and to make up for their lack of shape, one side is coloured black, the other white and any quoit which falls black side up, doesn't score. |
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But whatever we may lack in hygiene, we make up for in ecological smarts. |
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In his portrait of a castrato, Andrea Sacchi let a well-hung Apollo make up for the singer's loss. |
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We weren't pleased about it but he said he would make up the extra time, but he then did a runner on the Saturday during a break and checked out of his hotel. |
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For me the benefits of being more creative, better at lateral thought and problem-solving, and all that gubbins more than make more than make up for it. |
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The Royal British Legion report, released the day before Armistice Day, estimates that 10.5 million people make up Britain's ex-service community. |
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And there are plenty of laughs along the way to make up for it. |
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The magic of compound interest means that it's always hard to make up for lost time. |
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The bright, airy building proved an ideal setting for the colourful mix of traditional and modern paintings and drawings that make up the display. |
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On the third circuit they make up just 17 percent of justices, and on the eighth circuit 18 percent. |
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I reckoned acrophobia was part of everyone's make up, more pronounced in some and lying latent in those guys who sat swinging their legs over the skyline of New York. |
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These three make up the band's trio of lead vocalists and songwriters. |
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Zirconium, palladium, and ruthenium make up a metal that repairs itself. |
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They have all been scrapped and now make up 1,200 tonnes of square baled metal, the first consignment of which was transported to the Netherlands last Thursday. |
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They make up a two-book set with recipes from all 85 Relais chateaux chefs in North America. |
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It just feeds the fire of materialism, and feeds the fire of make up, and false attire, and whatnot. |
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Judges in England often start as part-time Recorders, so that they can make up their own minds whether they would like a judicial job in the future. |
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Wit changes to anguish to make up a very absorbing narrative. |
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The clefs, rests, and expression marks such as slurs and phrasing, even the thickness of the staves, make up a complex pictorial and typographical unity. |
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On the way out, it occurred to me that if they sold everything on that table for the prices they were asking, they would probably make up a third of the film's budget. |
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Older people make up the majority of the rush on the medicines. |
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I guess when you're thrown in with a group of people for a relatively short period of time, you make up for lost time by getting to know each other quickly. |
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I watch a chic woman with full make up and a glittering green bikini conduct an animated mobile phone conversation while strolling up and down and smoking. |
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Otherwise the halitosis of the old, their extreme make up and the heavy jewels they wear on their tired ears, get in the way. |
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The asterisked figures are for periods a little longer than the others, as they include time added on at the ends of the two halves to make up for stoppages. |
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It is ten people shy of its target, although Mr Smith assured that the firm would not be pursuing any compulsory redundancies to make up the shortfall. |
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They could not make up their minds, so they voted eight abstentions. |
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The Harpa mollusc shares much in common with volutes and olives. All three families make up the Volutacea superfamily, all of which are active, carnivorous sand burrowers. |
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Now come on, slap some make up on and let's go do some retail therapy! |
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A lot of different aspects make up the constitution of a football player. |
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Russians still make up 34.7 percent of the population, and other non-Kazakhs such as Ukrainians, Koreans, Turks, Chechnians, and Tatars, make up another 17 percent. |
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So far, national Democrats are staying out of the picture and letting Aiken make up his mind. |
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Food aid from abroad must now make up for these lost harvests. |
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To make up for the day off, Saturday December 11 is to be a working day. |
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What he lacks in big daddy empathy skills he just has to make up for in raw politics. |
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The book is well worth reading and you can make up your own minds. |
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The driver overshot the last station before the wreck, and a crew member and several passengers speculated the train was speeding to make up time. |
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Until they find more definitive evidence of the danger or safety of meat entering the food chain the public must continue to make up their own minds about what they eat. |
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Before serving themselves, each person has to make up a short rhyme. |
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Low-income work was a necessity, either to make up for the absence of a man or to bolster his own low-income paycheck. |
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Four to six companies make up a battalion, which is normally commanded by a lieutenant colonel with a command sergeant major as principal NCO assistant. |
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The US is the most advanced scientific nation on earth, and yet in some states, church attenders now make up almost 50 per cent of the population. |
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Does that increasing skill set make up for the diminishment of a rags-to-riches mythology? |
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The perpetrators of political turmoil in Juba are not Dinka or Nuer, nor any other ethnic people who make up South Sudan. |
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As such, black owners have to reduce prices in order to make up for this disadvantage. |
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Until recently, guerrilla warfare against occupation forces has come almost entirely from Sunni Muslims, who make up 25 per cent of the Iraqi population. |
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Magnetite, apatite, titanite and zircon make up the accessory minerals. |
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A mix of clear ice and rime ice is formed when droplets vary in size or when snow, various-sized droplets and ice pellets make up the mix that is hitting the plane. |
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A sequence of beautiful frames will not make up a good movie and neither will a selection of apothegmatic lines picked up from a philosophy manual. |
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What their characters lack in flamboyance the writers make up for in the raw power of their stories. |
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Local organisations and individuals are invited to make up teams of four. |
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The various groups that make up this community have organized to challenge development, protect the riparian region of the Santa Cruz River, and promote bird watching. |
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African Americans make up only 12 percent of the population but comprise 44 percent of HIV cases. |
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Some of the dividend yielding sectors like telecom and utilities make up a significant portion of the portfolio. |
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Although it hasn't changed I do sometimes think it has become such a fixed thing that I don't really pose too much or wear make up or tart myself up. |
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Debt relief would barely make up for the fall in commodity prices such as coffee and cotton on which many developing nations' economies are reliant. |
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But we had a great auld night and we will make up for it again. |
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Most of the granitic plutons that make up this part of the batholith are characterized by upright magmatic-state planar fabrics trending NE with shallow lineations. |
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These two resorcinols make up more than one third of the total amount of the phenols generated in the process. |
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Aw, Becky, don't pay no attention to THEM. Why, they don't hardly know NOTHIN'. They alluz make up things. I declare they do. |
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His many charitable donations are beside the point. They do not make up for the fact that he stole the money to begin with. |
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In the Fourth 5 year Plan special efforts are to be made to make up the beway in the field of girls' education. |
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In the untouched Shangri-la-like Kingman Reef in the Line Islands in the central Pacific, sharks make up 75 per cent of the fish biomass. |
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Men, of course, also participate in cosplay and all its attending events, but women make up the greater numbers. |
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Dicotyledons and monocotyledons together make up the flowering plants, the angiosperms. |
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To make up the match with my eldest daughter, my wife's dilling, whom she longs to call madam. |
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The corn ration was drastically reduced, and it was announced that an extra potato ration would be issued to make up for it. |
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Sell her her waste, please, and give her good measure if you can make up your mind to do the liberal thing for once. |
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Together they make up the Scottish Government, the executive arm of the devolved government. |
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The novels that make up The Cortes Trilogy by John Paul Davis take place in the Isles of Scilly. |
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Standard English spelling is based on a graphomorphemic segmentation of words into written clues of what meaningful units make up each word. |
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Private Members' Bills make up the majority of bills, but are far less likely to be passed than government bills. |
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The qualifier is the descriptive part of the name that would probably make up the entire name if you weren't using Hungarian. |
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Nassau County, one of the four that make up Long Island, is also of Dutch origin. |
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About twenty of the most senior government ministers make up the Cabinet and approximately 100 ministers in total comprise the government. |
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The charter trustees for the City of Bath make up the majority of the councillors on Bath and North East Somerset Council. |
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Each name is based upon the texture of the grains that make up the limestone. |
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Unto whom too many applying themselves, betwixt jest and earnest, betray the cause of truth, and insensibly make up the legionary body of error. |
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Multiple web pages with a common theme, a common domain name, or both, make up a website. |
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The complete set of observable traits that make up the structure and behaviour of an organism is called its phenotype. |
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Insects were particularly successful and even today make up the majority of animal species. |
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Approximately two million individual pieces of glass make up the cathedral's 128 stained glass windows. |
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These Quaker yearly meetings make up the largest proportion of Quakers in the world today. |
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We need eleven players, but we are only nine. Can you help us make up the numbers? |
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The larger towers provided space for habitation to make up for the loss of the donjon. |
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It is formed within the mycelium, the mass of threadlike hyphae that make up the fungus. |
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Some earlier Latin poets tried to make up for this deficiency by creating new compound words, as the Greeks had done. |
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The books that make up The Chronicles of Narnia have sold the most and have been popularised on stage, TV, radio, and cinema. |
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The common practice period is when many of the ideas that make up western classical music took shape, standardized, or were codified. |
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Instead, a documentary film directed by Julien Temple was released to make up for the lack of a festival. |
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The outermost lines that make up the length are called the doubles sidelines. |
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As the Australians began their innings, it was clear that not enough time remained for them to make up the 341 runs by which they trailed. |
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Plains make up much of the eastern portion of the West, underlain with sedimentary rock from the Upper Paleozoic, Mesozoic, and Cenozoic eras. |
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The Crown Dependencies are not part of the United Kingdom, but are politically associated with it, and together make up the British Islands. |
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The two Bailiwicks of Jersey and Guernsey together make up the Channel Islands. |
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Cameron refused this request, saying people were able to make up their own minds in multiple elections spaced a short time from each other. |
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The constitution of the United Kingdom is the sum of laws and principles that make up the body politic of the United Kingdom. |
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Throughout the battle, the Luftwaffe had to use numerous reconnaissance sorties to make up for the poor intelligence. |
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Many of the tales make up part of the wider Matter of Britain, a collection of shared British folklore. |
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The rocks which today make up Snowdon and its neighbouring mountains were formed in the Ordovician Period. |
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The British military and their families make up the rest of the population. |
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The table below demonstrates how three or four battlegroups make up a brigade and three or four brigades make up a division. |
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These proteins are important in bending arrays of nucleosomes and arranging them into the larger structures that make up chromosomes. |
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His recondite imagery is couched in phrases that make up in a kind of wistful hinted beauty what they lack in lucidity. |
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The stanzas that make up the poem are a series of elegies for warriors who fell in battle against vastly superior numbers. |
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Polish people make up the largest minority group by a considerable margin, and still form the bulk of the foreign workforce. |
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In mainland Europe, water voles make up a large portion of the stoat's diet. |
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Violins make up a large part of an orchestra, and are usually divided into two sections, known as the first and second violins. |
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The University is an integral part of the burgh and during term time students make up approximately one third of the town's population. |
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Apart from the stable isotopes, which make up almost all lead that exists naturally, there are trace quantities of a few radioactive isotopes. |
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The Brecon Beacons are one of four ranges of mountains and hills in South Wales which make up the Brecon Beacons National Park. |
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These are more important outside the breeding season, when they can make up a considerable part of the merlin's diet. |
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The established buyers of these products make up a niche market, which makes marketing for Fairtrade a challenge. |
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Though she's superficial to the point of noxiousness and obsessed with amassing cultural cache, her ridiculous affectations make up for it. |
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If you can't make up your mind whether to choose astrological, numerological, or some other type of spiritual guidance, don't worry. |
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The waveform shapes are necessary to make up for the distance variations from the electron beam source and the screen surface. |
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Smaller places like Omaha, Tulsa, and Kansas City make up local capitals, but the king of them all is Chicago, third largest city in the country. |
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The inexpensive one-shots still make up a minuscule part of the market, but they are getting attention. |
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Technology is also being developed to store excess energy, which can then make up for any deficits in supplies. |
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The local authorities, rather than the State, make up the larger part of the public sector in Sweden. |
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Pakistanis make up the single largest ethnic minority, followed by Swedes, Somalis, and Poles. |
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Foundations and substructures make up a large fraction of offshore wind systems, and must take into account every single one of these factors. |
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Some training units were mobilised to make up for the bulk of the Jagdwaffe being absent in the Soviet Union. |
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It could not be expected that even for a brief period our Air Force could make up for our lack of naval supremacy. |
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Rodents make up the largest order of mammals, with over 40 percent of mammalian species. |
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Grouse make up a considerable part of the vertebrate biomass in the Arctic and Subarctic. |
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Deposition of transported sediment forms many types of sedimentary rocks, which make up the geologic record of Earth history. |
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Together, they make up most of the land in Earth's western hemisphere and comprise the New World. |
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This principle states that the meaning of a whole should be constructed from the meanings of the parts that make up the whole. |
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In other words, one should be in a position to understand the whole if one understands the meanings of each of the parts that make up the whole. |
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The crust and the relatively rigid peridotite below it make up the oceanic lithosphere. |
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Convergent margins with growing accretionary prisms are called accretionary margins and make up nearly half of all convergent margins. |
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New ice is a general term used for recently frozen sea water that does not yet make up solid ice. |
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Cape Hatteras is a bend in Hatteras Island, one of the long thin barrier islands that make up the Outer Banks. |
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The Bahama Banks are the submerged carbonate platforms that make up much of the Bahama Archipelago. |
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There are many components that make up sea lion physiology and these processes control aspects of their behavior. |
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Ranging greatly in both size and geographic location, freshwater marshes make up the most common form of wetland in North America. |
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The sediments that make up a tombolo are coarser towards the bottom and finer towards the surface. |
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Taxicab companies claimed they increased fares in order to make up for lost competition resulting from the increased supply of taxis. |
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For example, the four unitary authorities which make up Cheshire correspond to the same area as the Cheshire Constabulary. |
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