I mean, you know, irony's funny and all, but if all you do is make fun of other things, you get this kind of cankered, empty feeling. |
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I'm a 37-year-old graduate student who's having the usual dating difficulties common among those of us who are old and grey and cankered. |
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Spring shoot growth on diseased canes is weak and stunted above the cankered area. |
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Many infections can occur on a single stem producing a severely cankered stem and a stunted plant. |
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Ascospores are produced in spring and early summer and are forcibly ejected from red fruiting bodies on the cankered bark in response to rain. |
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Conidia are produced in a gelatinous matrix from small cushion-like fruiting bodies on cankered bark and spread by rain splashes. |
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In warm, wet conditions, a whitish mucoid bacterial ooze may exude from infected shoots, petioles, cankered bark and infected fruit and blossoms. |
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Pruning out diseased and cankered limbs and dead wood during the dormant season is an important practice to reduce the inoculum sources. |
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In this respect the breed seems to suffer to an extraordinary degree from cankered teeth. |
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The strategies used by Candice Breitz to recycle media-related material tally our present-day era, cankered by the media's self-referentiality. |
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Many larger trees showed cankered boles and parasite-bloated boughs. |
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Because of Adam's sin, the whole mass of mankind is cankered at the roots. |
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The appearance of cankered areas is the first sign of the disease. |
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His wife's spade struck a jagged hunk of metal so cankered with rust from its century underground that he did not realize what it was until it exploded. |
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The cankered trees have lost their potential value for cabinet making and for seed production, thus reducing the availability of beech nuts to wildlife, especially black bears. |
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Because the cankers caused by the fungus prevent sap circulation, the disease symptoms include leaf yellowing, followed by leaf withering above the cankered parts. |
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In international trade, M. populorum is liable to be carried on infected seedlings, cuttings or cankered bark of older trees, or infected bark on logs or sawn wood. |
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