The percentage of air shots was very high and rules were relaxed to accommodate these. |
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Common sense and the sense of self-protectiveness tell us to accommodate to what we cannot change. |
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Also, the fore-and-aft sail on the mizzenmast, originally a triangular lateen sail, was changed to accommodate the more modern rig. |
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How can society hope to accommodate to men and women alike pursuing their public ambitions while maintaining a stable domestic life? |
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Empires generally expect neighboring states and dependencies to accept their power and accommodate to it. |
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Every effort should be made to accommodate the wishes of women and their partners. |
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Certain other measures have been adopted to accommodate the claimant's wishes. |
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The one issue they all agree on is that the work world must change to accommodate families. |
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In the case of genuine absence, you must see if you can accommodate the needs of the employee. |
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It is difficult to accommodate the wishes of all in the community but we do try to get it right as far as we possibly can. |
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Difference of opinion is good but we must learn to accommodate each other's point of view at the same time. |
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The system cannot revolve around any one case, but must try to accommodate the needs of all cases. |
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Not for Mandarin, but for the other local languages it is designed to accommodate. |
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Some of the pigs might also go to nearby farm buildings if neighbouring farms could accommodate them, he added. |
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The local government has thus far built shelters to accommodate people from the area. |
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The chapel could only accommodate a fraction of the people and each mass was dedicated to all the victims. |
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Meanwhile, new buildings on the four hectare site will accommodate another 60 flats. |
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Since permissible limits in India are as high as to accommodate these pollutants, they cannot be booked under pollution control rules. |
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Abdominal fat cells happily inflate to accommodate more fuel, widening your waist inch by inch. |
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Each siding will accommodate a locomotive and wagons capable of transporting 210 vehicles. |
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Pad both values to one bit greater than the number of bits in the minuend to accommodate the sign bit and to help avoid alignment mistakes. |
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Pots lend themselves to the cultivation of annuals and throughout the year they can accommodate a changing display of flowers. |
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We are considering making our site responsive in order to accommodate the ever increasing number of mobile visitors. |
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Because of the type of film he uses, he is forced to use antiquated cameras that do not accommodate the recording of direct sound. |
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How is it that we are dominated by an alien culture and religion, and even alter our laws to accommodate the practices of others? |
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They claim it will achieve its goals to welcome, accommodate, entertain and amuse visitors. |
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Good garden steps should have a slight riser and a broad tread that will accommodate a foot without crowding. |
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In operation the two adjustable perpendicular members are lineally adjusted to accommodate a given press bed. |
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The upgrading is to include extensions to the runway, taxiway and apron, which will enable it to accommodate bigger aircraft. |
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The airport has also built a 92,000-sq-ft apron that can accommodate about 20 aircraft. |
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Consequently, reforming institutions of the federal government to accommodate western concerns may indeed help cure this problem. |
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Especially to accommodate the explosion of the derivatives markets, the Fed must guarantee continuous and liquid markets. |
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The new buildings erected in the 1960s and 1970s were needed to accommodate the swelling numbers on the school roll. |
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These devices generally accommodate objects within a limited workspace and collect data via a mechanical touch probe. |
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So, CRT and widescreen meet only if you're willing to give up many cubic feet of your living space to accommodate them. |
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The building will provide individual workspaces to accommodate start up enterprises in the food and technology industries. |
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With cabins, unlike condos or houses for rent, there are packages that accommodate specific recreational activities. |
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This joint allows rotation to accommodate movement due to thermal expansion of the arches. |
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After amending the native soil for planting, dig a hole to accommodate the root system. |
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We meet in Soho, in a tall, skinny office just large enough to accommodate his 6ft 2ins of long-limbed languidness. |
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This residence was designed to accommodate a growing family but also to have elegant reception rooms suitable for entertainment. |
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For city-bred women, these mud pots are not meant to hold water but to accommodate flowers, both natural and artificial. |
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Few lots in the theater district can accommodate big buildings without a transfer of air rights. |
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The fields would be developed to accommodate tennis, roller hockey, lacrosse, lawn bowling, field hockey and other sports. |
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He felt he had to become a Zelig character, redefine himself to accommodate this new reality. |
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Already there are 12 hotels to accommodate the 880,000 tourist trips made here each year, plus five ancient monuments and 146 listed buildings. |
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Karachi became the first capital of Pakistan, struggling to find its feet and to accommodate the incoming streams of refugees. |
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Benches, if they are to accommodate anyone but love-struck teens, should be 5 or 6 feet wide. |
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However, with the admission of young women, many traditions died or had to be recalibrated to accommodate them. |
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Whether myopia, hyperopia or astigmatism is present, surgical correction attempts to redirect light rays to accommodate the refractive error. |
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The five-year scheme to build homes on land given up by the national park would accommodate key workers identified by Craven District Council. |
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The county council has taken all our views on board and promised it will do its best to accommodate the wishes of the village within reason. |
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It can be flexibly configured to accommodate indoor team sports ranging from table tennis to indoor soccer. |
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He knew how bored she had been and wanted to try to accommodate her, but within reason. |
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There are going to be larger yachts and sailing boats on the lake so we need bigger jetties to accommodate them. |
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Fitzgerald, a fine lyric poet, neglected today, was able to accommodate his gifts to the buoyancy and basic serenity of the Odyssey. |
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The shape and size of the bras were specially tailored to accommodate the different styles of clothing in varied eras. |
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This soft retained austenite can accommodate impact stresses better than the harder constituents. |
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The congregation has outgrown its building and often rearranges its Sunday meeting schedule and location to accommodate the many worshipers. |
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Also, order a good supply of ready-made frames and small gift items to accommodate last-minute and impulse gift purchases, advised these framers. |
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The sandbank area could accommodate up to 200 turbine bases, and the construction project will create an anticipated 420 new jobs. |
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On either side of a tunnel deep inside the Rock, a series of huge chambers was being dug to accommodate purpose-built ammunition magazines. |
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It is worth going that extra mile when you know they've gone the extra mile to accommodate you. |
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The fuel tank and exhaust pipe routing were modified slightly to accommodate the new subframe. |
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Top of the agenda were plans for the Atlantic League designed to accommodate big clubs from the smaller countries. |
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Planning permission has been granted for an additional seven bedrooms and ancillary rooms, which will accommodate another 10 residents. |
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At this time, the house was modified to accommodate a resident farmer and his family. |
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Anyway he was able to accommodate the wine club and will arrange a talk with 4 different tastings for the meeting on April 12th. |
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Air travel is growing in leaps and bounds, and airlines and nations are investing in new aircraft to accommodate that growth. |
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The technology isn't nearly as sophisticated as video games, because most developers outfit advergames to accommodate slow modems. |
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When creating a responsive website you also need to accommodate Retina images into them. |
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Some of the original buildings were connected inside, with ramps to accommodate the varying floor levels. |
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They had to be flexible, and adopt different positions to accommodate ever changing circumstances. |
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On the landward side of the harbour, a series of wharves and porticoes were built to accommodate traders and the storage of goods in transit. |
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The squad owns black raincoats and black parkas in a variety of sizes to accommodate all members for every type of weather. |
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We want to educate designers and manufactures to accommodate left-handers ' comfort and safety in new product and building design. |
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He designed and built the lattice fence himself, setting the stepped sections back slightly from the sidewalk to accommodate a planting strip. |
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People who have a modest home with an ample garden will be able to accommodate this breed. |
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She has a complement of six officers and 27 men as permanent crew and can accommodate and impart sail training to 30 cadets. |
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In addition, many worksites have facilities that can be modified to accommodate numbers of people interested in educational messages. |
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Other holes have been burrowed to accommodate the reef's larger residents, which give it its popular name, Conger Alley. |
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During periods of rapid weight gain, skin stretches to accommodate increased body volume. |
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Floor duct systems are a network, or grid, of metal raceways with channels that can accommodate both electrical wiring and technology cable. |
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Another wiring and cabling approach that can accommodate retrofit applications is the perimeter raceway system. |
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With three telescopic boom sections and an articulating jib, sections of pump hose are added as needed to accommodate the distance to placement. |
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Unnecessary and unsightly accretions have been stripped away and the building replanned to accommodate new teaching spaces and laboratories. |
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If you let them worry about you more, you get stronger at your best techniques and they have to accommodate to your game plan. |
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I have always thought that the best way to begin to accommodate to new circumstances is to learn to laugh in them. |
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What we do not expect, however, are the speed and extent to which many of these victims accommodate to their new circumstances. |
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Urban society will have to accommodate to those prices, and with the majority of people living in a sprawling urban environment, we're going to have a hard time. |
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We got home lateish, and slept in later, then I worked most of Saturday while Paul moved around the furniture so we could accommodate a party on Saturday evening. |
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In addition, heavily populated areas such as south Florida don't have nearly enough anchorages or hurricane holes to accommodate the thousands of boats in that area. |
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Country residences such as Bishop's Waltham were designed to accommodate the bishop and his household as well as powerful guests and their retinues. |
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At the same time, growing demands from operators for highly customized handsets could force Nokia to retool its manufacturing to accommodate smaller production runs. |
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If a component was fairly large, he might have to modify his hearth to accommodate the work, and certainly needed to draft in help to control the hot metal on the anvil. |
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The range to the right of the 2nd tee will be roped off and will accommodate as many players as will assemble there at any one time without any difficulty. |
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The sub-committee have come to an arrangement with other Waterford clubs to accommodate Tramore members who wish to play golf during those closed days. |
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The king spent increasing amounts of time at his hunting lodge at Versailles, and by the late 1660s it was being regularly extended to accommodate his growing entourage. |
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To accommodate the rich level of activity hoped for in his mathematical laboratory, he proposed that two consecutive class periods be allocated to it. |
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We need proper loos now, of sufficient quality and quantity, to not only accommodate shoppers and visitors, but also to deal with the rugby hordes. |
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Designed as a city runabout, the two-door hatchback is shorter and narrower than a Maruti 800 and can just accommodate two adults and two children. |
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A major university hospital recently commissioned such tests during planning and expansion to accommodate lab microscopes with 40OX magnification. |
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Fearing arrest and imprisonment for harbouring satyagrahis, the local landlords refused to accommodate the marchers in the traveller's inns under their control. |
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If the job is to be printed digitally, the only way to accommodate these situations is to scan the hard copies to electronic files and perform makeready on the job. |
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To accommodate all these new costs clinical services have been scaled down, while matching assumptions about increased efficiency are only variably delivered. |
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However, there are no buildings of a suitable height or design available to accommodate telecommunication equipment in the area, or masts capable of being shared. |
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We'll have to change the configuration of the system to accommodate the new server. |
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Printing processes, including lithographic, flexographic and more advanced rotogravure, now can accommodate up to 10 colors and metallic inks. |
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It is broadly the same as the previous one, but rises to five storeys in places to accommodate bigger flats. |
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To set out transplants, he simply makes a hole in the mulch and digs out enough soil to accommodate the root ball. |
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If a fan has a Spanish or Japanese accent, George will switch languages to accommodate them. |
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She's happy to accommodate vegetarians, vegans, and those intolerant of gluten. |
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The Council approved an order to accommodate two planning applications seeking to develop a toy store and retail warehousing with car parking at a site on Mercy Road. |
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The daguerreotypist was expected to accommodate the wishes of his clients. |
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In my small garden I have three compost bins and two water butts so I do not lack facilities to dispose of vegetable waste, merely space to accommodate an unwanted bin. |
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Several times a week a Singapore Airlines jumbo leaves Dublin with spare capacity which could accommodate additional high-value, fast-moving consumer goods or components. |
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New facilities are being added to accommodate the special needs of elderly residents. |
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Every other pitcher on the team steps aside to accommodate the big kahuna. |
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Bows can be made totally from sapwood of many tree species, but some slight changes need to be made in the following designs to accommodate whitewood bows. |
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Martin watched her disappear through a train door barely wide enough to accommodate a person standing widthways in a fast moving blur of purple and gold. |
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The cut-away collars that accommodate fat Windsor knots are giving way to fuller cuts that pinch in neatly under the tie with the use of tabs or poppers. |
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Folding chairs were snapped open along the aisles and in the choir loft, filling every available surface in order to accommodate the throng who had come to honour Fred. |
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And so today the road has a slight kink in it to accommodate the tree. |
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Discussion resulted in agreement on the remainder, and the main body of the corpus was re-examined to accommodate changes to the original coding system. |
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The Animal Centre will accommodate 60 cats and kittens, plus 40 dogs and puppies. |
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Few applicants had a location nailed down to accommodate their indoor cultivation and dispensary needs. |
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Today's custom homes will accommodate most luxury tubs, but floor joists may require reinforcement in older homes if the tub is oversized especially whirlpool baths. |
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This woman was my therapist and had only agreed to accommodate my neediness by allowing me to watch her ride on a Saturday morning during a competition. |
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It is large enough to accommodate even the largest of cruise ships which are even able to turn through 180 degrees in the fjord. |
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The peoples of the Old World had had thousands of years for their populations to accommodate to their common diseases. |
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The new policy means that the use of Afrikaans is now often reduced in favour of English, or to accommodate the other official languages. |
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The Pitcairners take tourists in turns to accommodate those few tourists who occasionally visit the island. |
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The house was big enough to accommodate his family as well as Antoine's family and some servants. |
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Ocean was designed and built to accommodate an embarked commando and its associated stores and equipment. |
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Some Anglican provinces, particularly in Nigeria, Kenya, Rwanda and the Southern Cone, are seeking to accommodate them. |
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Much of the city was originally a wetland that was reclaimed over the decades to accommodate a burgeoning population. |
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He would often change his schedule to accommodate his clients. |
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The Iron Bridge proprietors also built the Tontine Hotel to accommodate visitors to the new bridge and the industrial sites of the Severn Gorge. |
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Old courthouses with the two jury boxes necessary to accommodate the 24 jurors of a grand jury can still be seen. |
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Tennessee has over 82,000 farms, roughly 59 percent of which accommodate beef cattle. |
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Speculative demand is much harder for central banks to accommodate, which they influence by adjusting interest rates. |
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It is the world's largest passenger airliner, and the airports at which it operates have upgraded facilities to accommodate it. |
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In 2008 the A380 test aircraft were used to trial the modifications made to several airports to accommodate the type. |
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Proposals to extend the entrance to accommodate wheeled vehicles failed owing to cost, and it was used only by pedestrians. |
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To accommodate the workers needed for these industries the Duke built extra housing and cottages. |
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This aircraft, which could also feature new engines, would accommodate an additional fifty passengers. |
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The A330 and previous iterations of the A350 would only be able to accommodate a maximum of eight seats per row. |
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During these boom years, Ramsden proposed building a planned town to accommodate the large workforce which had arrived. |
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Three rows of terraced houses, which used to accommodate the quarry workers, stand near the station. |
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A new wing has been built at the Ruskin Museum to accommodate the fully restored Bluebird K7 boat. |
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The area is the only spot in downtown Moscow that can accommodate a project of this magnitude. |
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The 787 interior was designed to better accommodate persons with mobility, sensory, and cognitive disabilities. |
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The machines' scoring displays were modified from their originals for the scene, to accommodate for large scores. |
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Once completed, it could accommodate up to 100,000 sailors and embarked troops for battle. |
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The Victoria Hotel and the Midland Hotel were built to accommodate business travellers to the city during the height of the woollen trade. |
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In the 1530s and 1540s, the royal library was reorganised to accommodate hundreds of books that were previously kept in monastic collections. |
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The four buildings, which are connected to a central street, accommodate about 3,000 people. |
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It was the rainy season and we had put up a big shamiana around the open-air pit to accommodate everyone. |
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Oxygen levels will be decreased to accommodate fewer people. |
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Flying was temporarily diverted to East Fortune, which had its runway extended to accommodate the airliners of the period. |
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Queensway Data Centre will accommodate up to 1500 high performance computer racks offering the highest levels of resilience and data security. |
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The sections either side of the Pennines are open to amended design to accommodate HS3 using sections of HS2 track. |
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Here, we describe a new ustilaginomycetous order, the Uleiellales to accommodate Uleiella. |
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Until a full WAC program can be developed, the Handbook will serve as a reference to accommodate students and faculty from across the curriculum. |
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On a carrier, there are two wardrooms, both large enough to accommodate about 150 officers. |
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These buildings had clear patient rooms and were designed to accommodate large numbers of soldiers. |
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Airports increasingly are redesigning their space to accommodate retail and are offering a wider variety of goods and services. |
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However, many Episcopalians were quiet about any Jacobite sympathies and were able to accommodate themselves to the new regime. |
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As a result, the new studio was made slightly larger so that it could accommodate a network production. |
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Broadsheets typically are also folded horizontally in half to accommodate newsstand display space. |
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The United Kingdom has many world class golf courses which can accommodate crowds in the tens of thousands for tournaments. |
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To accommodate the wealthy tourists, several grand hotels were built, among them the Flamingo Hotel. |
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No, it was finding a London hotel willing to accommodate his two pet Jack Russell terriers. |
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I am hoping, maybe because I am roasting out here, that it is to accommodate some breed of shady tree. Like a bluegum or a paperbark. |
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Occasionally races consist of six riders but this is rare as most tracks are too narrow to accommodate the extra riders safely. |
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Many adjustments can be made to the equipment to accommodate the physiques of the crew. |
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They were kind enough to accommodate me with a ride to the train station. |
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There was insufficient hardstandings to accommodate all the aircraft so many had to be parked on the turf, some areas being supported by tarmac. |
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They have been drained to create agricultural land or filled to accommodate urban sprawl. |
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Dependent on terrain, and to accommodate different levels of ability, hunts generally have alternative routes that do not involve jumping. |
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The next step is to accommodate the harmonic terms due to the elliptical shape of the orbits. |
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The theatre can accommodate up to 400 patrons and host a variety of different events. |
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It can also be used for standing events and can accommodate up to 180 people. |
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Coleridge had spent 18 years under the roof of the Gillman family, who built an addition onto their home to accommodate the poet. |
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As modified, the Type A1 barge could accommodate three medium tanks while the Type A2 could carry four. |
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To accommodate both his wife and his work, he moved to 17 Gough Square near his printer, William Strahan. |
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New towns were constructed to accommodate overspill from established cities. |
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It can seamlessly accommodate the full AppManager product for management of Windows-based applications. |
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It has an area of 32,000 m2 on a site of 15 hectares and can accommodate 690 people. |
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However, the city lacks a large capacity room, the theatre can accommodate only 700 spectators. |
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With further technological advances, cooking came to accommodate new opportunities. |
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The tower was repaired in 1606, and then had the purpose of serving as a hall to accommodate the merchants of Calais. |
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If the sea rises, many coasts that are developed with infrastructure along or close to the shoreline will be unable to accommodate erosion. |
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Detached breakwaters are shore protection structures, created to build up sandy material in order to accommodate drawdown in storm conditions. |
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New Providence's harbour could easily accommodate hundreds of ships, and was too shallow for the Royal Navy's larger vessels to navigate. |
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These panels may be square in shape, or sometimes triangular to accommodate arched or decorative bracing. |
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The ceilings were too low to accommodate his terrific height. |
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All stories must have an R-rated version that will be toned down to accommodate pg-13 readers. |
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Construction of new tracks and raceways is planned to accommodate an increasing number of races. |
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The building of the railway from Shrewsbury in the 1860s encouraged visitors and hotels sprang up in the town to accommodate them. |
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To accommodate, the cookline is embellished with raw product and dried goods displays. |
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In fact Wroth had to preach in the churchyard because the church was too small to accommodate all those who attended. |
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The project had targeted shipping 30,000 bpd, but Tesoro ordered about 800 rail cars that can accommodate another 10,000 bpd, Goff said. |
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Currently, Gate 12, Pier B has been upgraded to accommodate the A380, the only gate at the airport that can handle this aircraft so far. |
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In addition to the driver and wheelchair passenger, a third-row bench seat and optional jump seat can accommodate up to four other passengers. |
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It will have had enough seats to accommodate the ample behinds of the SFA's gin-and-tonic-swilling junketeers. |
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It is commonly believed that these were provided by Brunel to accommodate traversers to carry coaches between the tracks within the station. |
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To try to accommodate all faiths, the school adopted the shalwar kameez, a garment worn by many faiths on the Indian sub-continent. |
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Give me also faith, Lord,.. to lithe, to form, and to accommodate my spirit and members. |
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Motels and hotels that accommodate prostitutes commonly rent rooms by the half or full hour. |
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Recessed at the speaker's base are two gold-plated five-way binding posts that can accommodate bare wire, spade lugs, or banana plugs. |
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Construction of new Dias casework and cabinetry, to accommodate new contractor provided Audio Video Equipment. |
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The District Council took advantage of recently lifted restrictions, and built over 1,000 new homes to accommodate the rising population. |
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Similar in size to the A variant, the B sacrifices about a third of the A variant's fuel volume to accommodate the vertical flight system. |
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The station is characterized by the presence of carbonization room that can accommodate up to 200 liters under an atmosphere of nitrogen. |
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It then automatically and reversibly adjusts its function to accommodate the wound's needs, which may frequently and unpredictably change. |
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The original Nelson family arms were altered to accommodate his naval victories. |
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To the street, it presents a long white roughcast wall, which moves a little in plane to accommodate the entrance. |
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The company hired 13 new employees to accommodate its new coffee shop, including 11 from Skagit County, according to a press release. |
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Run by Cardiff City Council since 1971, the residential centre can accommodate up to 58 people. |
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Glenrothes High School was built in 1966 to accommodate pupils at a higher level. |
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But it is worth waiting for The show requires a theatre with a large stage to accommodate the set, which recreates Middle Earth. |
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To accommodate rapid population growth and demand for better sanitation, the city improved its infrastructure. |
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He laid out the beautiful mile-long curving High Street with set width burgage plots each side to accommodate the traders and craftsmen. |
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The first and second terminals will be revitalized in order to accommodate 67 million passengers a year. |
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Wherever new works were established, cottages were built to accommodate employees and their families. |
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The bigger problem, though, was finding a space that could accommodate the boatlike LS, which is 198 inches long. |
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With rootbound plants then, if you can accommodate a larger container you can pot on. |
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The building was designed in the Brutalist architectural stile, built to accommodate 6,000 employees. |
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To accommodate the cancelled Glasgow Airport Rail Link plans, the platforms were renumbered. |
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This setup often required creative use of desk space in order to accommodate his braille textbooks and braillewriter. |
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A studio complex in Stornoway was opened in 1993 to accommodate the expansion of the station's Scots Gaelic programming production. |
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Once completed, the rejigged T-1 will accommodate 17 million passengers annually. |
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To accommodate the huge number of participants, the event is being hosted in Sweden's fourth largest city, Kristianstad. |
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Hong Kong started developing new towns in the 1950s, to accommodate rapidly growing populations. |
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Saihoji, a Rinzai Zen Buddhist temple near the Japanese city of Kitakyushu, was recently remodeled in order to accommodate more attendees. |
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The housing precincts were designed to better accommodate increases in car ownership which increased significantly from the 1960s onwards. |
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They commonly can accommodate both wet and dry soilage, a useful feature in industrial plants and manufacturing facilities. |
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Crespi d'Adda is a company town founded in 1878 to accommodate workers of the local textile mill. |
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Crowd sizes were regularly increasing and a new site was becoming needed to accommodate these supporters. |
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The Ibn Batouta International Airport has been modernized to accommodate more flights. |
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Apart from navigational compasses, other specialty compasses have also been designed to accommodate specific uses. |
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In the early period of motorcycle history, many producers of bicycles adapted their designs to accommodate the new internal combustion engine. |
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However, there simply are not enough clerkships to accommodate all the academically eligible graduates. |
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This vessel belongs to the shipping company Royal Caribbean and can accommodate up to 700 passengers. |
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The map is drafted on a modification of Ptolemy's second projection, expanded to accommodate the Americas and the high latitudes. |
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It is inscribed with names of the yachts that competed for it, and has been modified twice by adding matching bases to accommodate more names. |
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Punta del Este has 122 hotels, 80 restaurants, an international airport and a yacht harbor that can accommodate 500 boats. |
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The whole Higher Education Mega Centre can eventually accommodate up to 200,000 students, 20,000 teachers, and 50,000 staff. |
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On the contrary, instead of wholeheartedly defending Chase, Marshall fell over himself to accommodate his accusers. |
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In the 20th century, ships became large enough that the larger types, cruisers and up, could accommodate a commander and staff. |
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In practice, people use different definitions of world circumnavigation to accommodate practical constraints, depending on the method of travel. |
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Mules were used since unpaved roads and mountainous terrain could not generally accommodate carts. |
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To accommodate the union, institutions such as the law and national churches of each remained separate. |
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This meant that many rows of terraced housing were built along the valley sides to accommodate the influx. |
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Passengers were not happy to be dropped there with no services to accommodate them, and it was soon clear that a town must be built. |
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The dynamics of today's workforce are changing at a rapid pace and employers need to better accommodate those changes, one employers' advocate says. |
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Since the eyes take up so much room on the chibi face, the head needs to be stretched and, therefore, usually ends up being oval-shaped to accommodate the oval-shaped eyes. |
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This book assumes that cooler heads will prevail. Russian and American negotiators will find some way to accommodate the deployment of a modest interceptor force. |
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For many, the congruencies of the Anzac legend and the diggers who served in Vietnam were slight, too slight, and the legend seemed unable to accommodate them. |
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At the same time, the crowns of the teeth became longer, and the skulls become higher from top to bottom and shorter from the back to the front over time to accommodate this. |
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This change was designed to accommodate Mersey flats, although the low fixed bridges required that traffic on the canal be able to lower or unship their masts. |
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Various new physics models, e.g., theories of compositeness, can accommodate the color singlet leptohadrons that interact with the leptons, quarks, leptoquarks, etc. |
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Compound engines exhausted steam in to successively larger cylinders to accommodate the higher volumes at reduced pressures, giving improved efficiency. |
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Gate 12 was specially adapted to accommodate the Airbus A380 which is operated by Emirates on their route three times per day from Dubai to Manchester. |
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But this improvement in the efficiency of communication created a challenge for libraries, which have had to accommodate the weight and volume of literature. |
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Schools need to accommodate students, staff, storage, mechanical and electrical systems, storage, support staff, ancillary staff and administration. |
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A single race requires hotel rooms to accommodate at least 5000 visitors. |
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Office wear also has to be suitable for movement, to accommodate the billion microjourneys a person takes each day to the supply closet or the coffee machine or the restroom. |
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Numerous vaults below street level were inhabited to accommodate the influx of incomers, particularly Irish immigrants, during the Industrial Revolution. |
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Central banks typically have little difficulty adjusting the available money supply to accommodate changes in the demand for money due to business transactions. |
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Convair would later develop the Convair 340, which was slightly larger and could accommodate between 44 and 52 passengers, and 311 of this model plane were produced. |
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Thus, one will usually adapt and accommodate their speech, for reasons such as convenience, freedom of misunderstandings and conflict, and to maintain intimacy. |
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In fact, most compact tabloids formerly used the broadsheet paper size, but changed to accommodate reading in tight spaces, such as on a crowded commuter bus or train. |
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Among these, the Bole International Airport in Addis Ababa and the Aba Tenna Dejazmach Yilma International Airport in Dire Dawa accommodate international flights. |
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Parliament was subsequently expanded to 550 seats to accommodate ARS members, which then elected Sheikh Sharif Sheikh Ahmed, the former ARS chairman, to office. |
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The Defence Secretary Michael Fallon announced on 4 March 2016 that Lossiemouth was a preferred option to accommodate an additional Typhoon squadron and 400 personnel. |
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A quarter of the South Stand is used to accommodate travelling supporters. |
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A number of items of work are under way or proposed to accommodate additional freight traffic between the Haven ports and the Midlands including track dualling. |
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At this point, the neutrons are arranged in complete shells in the atomic nucleus, and it becomes harder to energetically accommodate more of them. |
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In 1916, to accommodate the growth of steam power, the descriptions were changed to how the sea, not the sails, behaved and extended to land observations. |
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The theatre includes two performance spaces, the 635 seat Main Auditorium and a smaller studio space, the Walker Theatre which can accommodate 250 seating or 500 standing. |
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By the mid 20th century these locations improved the number of visitors they could accommodate with the introduction of caravan parks and chalet parks. |
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Historically, in the warm Middle Eastern and Mediterranean climates, the courtyard served to accommodate the large number of worshippers during Friday prayers. |
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At the end of the 2005 Super League season, an extra team was relegated to National League One in order to accommodate French side Catalans Dragons' entry to the competition. |
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Lifting decks to accommodate higher cargo reduces the total capacity. |
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The constitution requires that constituency boundaries be reviewed at least once in every twelve years, so that boundaries may be redrawn to accommodate changes in population. |
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These segment boundary zones accommodate the differences in fault displacement between the segments and are therefore known as accommodation zones. |
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On 28 March the British raided St Nazaire in Operation Chariot and destroyed the Normandie dock, the only one in France that could accommodate the largest German warships. |
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The Type C barge could accommodate up to four Schwimmpanzern in its hold. |
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These setts can be vast, and can sometimes accommodate multiple families. |
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Over the decades and with the growth of slavery throughout the South, Baptist and Methodist ministers gradually changed their messages to accommodate the institution. |
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In November 2005 the main shipping channels into the harbour and the Port of Poole were dredged to accommodate modern ferries at all states of the tide. |
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These ships are slightly bigger than their predecessors, with extra vehicle space, but will only accommodate 360 passengers compared to 500 on the older vessels. |
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They concluded that Trinidad would need to spend considerable time being overhauled, but the small Victoria was not large enough to accommodate all the surviving crew. |
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A ship repair slipway can accommodate vessels of up to 200 tonnes. |
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As there was no physical space or urban structure to accommodate hundreds of noblemen who arrived suddenly, many inhabitants were simply evicted from their homes. |
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Historically, only larger ships could accommodate such requirements. |
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To this end, Galileo proposed the celatone, a device in the form of a helmet with a telescope mounted so as to accommodate the motion of the observer on the ship. |
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Inaugurated in 1989, the center has facilities to accommodate 5,000 people in 7,000 m2, an exhibition hall of 12,000m2, a business center and parking for over 800 vehicles. |
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