Then they noticed his cane, a long white stick that he folded up as he sat down. |
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There was an archway, and there was his father coming toward him, walking with a cane. |
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When you first learn millefiori in polymer clay, everything becomes a pattern you can cane. |
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An innovation confined mainly to Britain was treacle or molasses from sugar cane. |
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After the meeting, Mr Jones said that in some cases people wanted to see a return to capital punishments like the birch and cane. |
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She was roughly five feet tall, dressed in a modest green gown, and holding on to a polished black cane. |
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To cut down on expensive oil imports, Cuba has started turning this, sugar cane, into the substitute of black gold. |
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And Monsieur, I am most honored to introduce to you Mistress Clara, Master Nicholas, Master Brian, Master Tennyson, and Master Cane. |
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She props up her skeletal frame, wizened beyond her 48 years, with spindly arms wrapped around a twisted cane. |
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His brother has been sentenced to six years and four lashes with a rattan cane. |
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Encourage the stem that will form the new plant to grow straight by gently bending it into an upright position and attaching it to a cane. |
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When he stood up his natty blue and white striped pants hung on his bony legs as he leaned on his cane. |
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Last night, in a fit of pique, just to show me up for a liar, she took her first steps with the cane. |
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Made with cachaca a clear spirit made from first-pressed Brazilian sugar cane, the cocktail is the next big Latin thing. |
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A visitor to the home could leave a hat, cane, umbrella or wrap on the Victorian hall tree. |
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He handed her a large candy cane, which Conner knew would mean a sugar rush as soon as she had her first lick. |
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One patient was sitting in his hip chair, a blanket thrown about his shoulders, eating a candy cane. |
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It's a tradition to see Santa every year, tell him what you'd like for Christmas, and get a candy cane. |
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Now Alex observed that the third leg was much skinnier than the other two, like a tree branch or a cane. |
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These materials, as well as wicker and cane, have low moisture absorption capability. |
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You can also do a lot with a group of small baskets, metal or cane, hanging from a sturdy hook in the ceiling. |
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Alternatively, construct the chair's carcass like this but weave the seat from strips of hessian or wicker-type cane. |
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The same soothing mix of wood, cane, cotton, and thatch prevails in the resort's beachfront courtyard. |
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It is a hut supported by poles, with walls of palm fronds, cane, clay, or boards. |
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He used his stave like a walking cane, swinging it before him with a tap of his boot. |
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No one knows for sure who put the red stripes on candy cane, or when. |
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As the marines followed Green in, led by Major Russell with his rattan cane, one of them was shot in the face, and another killed. |
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Once when Willa was three, a few months after Christmas, she was eating a piece of candy cane. |
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One man hauls himself along on a three-wheeled skateboard, propelling himself with his one leg as his opposite hand uses a flat, iron contraption as a cane. |
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The elephants were in a deep nullah, hidden among the reeds and cane. |
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Each supply slip entitles a farmer to deliver 42 quintals of cane. |
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Tie silverware and napkins together with festive ribbons and a candy cane. |
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The sheer magnitude of the workload, from planting, harvesting and milling the cane, to boiling and curing the sugar, meant that the plantations had a huge workforce. |
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She poked along with her cane, scanning the grass for chipmunk holes. |
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We know that the ancient Austronesians grew rice, millet, and sugar cane. |
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An overweight widower in declining health, he lives alone, walks with a cane, treats himself to good cigars and talks to photographs of his dead wife. |
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Brazil is one of the largest producer of oranges, coffee, sugar cane, cassava and sisal, soybeans and papayas. |
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Further into the interior, however, one would often find colonists consuming whiskey, as they did not have similar access to sugar cane. |
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Remove only dead flowers, not the living bloom stalk, which is actually a pseudobulb commonly called a cane. |
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Planters expanded their importation of enslaved Africans to cultivate sugar cane. |
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The plants stooled out well, and yielded a heavy cutting of rather tough cane. In its young state it should make good silage. |
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One long, lanky man, with long hair and a big white fur stovepipe hat on the back of his head, and a crooked-handled cane, marked out the places. |
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The virgin fiber for the machine will be mainly indigenous bagasse, a waste product from the production of sugar from sugar cane. |
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Lucas withdrew the cane. Its polished ferrule flashed in the lantern glare. |
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He went gentlemanly dressed in East Virginia style, wore a high-top silk hat, as had lawyer Park, and sported a gold headed walking cane. |
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Beyond tea, her arrival brought and promulgated goods such as cane, lacquer, cottons, and porcelain. |
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To this day McClellan is almost completely blind and uses a wheelchair, although he has regained some movement and can walk with a cane. |
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That compares to levels produced by Brazil and India, the two largest producers of sugar from sugar cane. |
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Keramat brought out a murha, a low stool made of woven cane. He squatted on the earth beside me. |
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As fate would have it, an Ologun who had been on patrol in the area saw the commotion and rescued the Old man with the cane. |
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In the proposal, it was also written that at the milling rollers there has to be four women to feed in the cane, two pulleys, and a carcanha. |
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As Victoria was riding in a carriage, Pate struck her with his cane, crushing her bonnet and bruising her forehead. |
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Major crops include onions, okra, tomatoes, oranges, grapefruit, cucumbers, sugar cane, lemons, limes, and sweet potatoes. |
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Both were dedicated to the crop of sugar cane, and the settlers managed to maintain alliances with Native Americans. |
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The British built good public roads and introduced the cultivation of sugar cane, indigo and fruits as well the export of lumber. |
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Most of the commercially important crops are perennials, such as cacao, coconut, oranges, bananas and sugar cane. |
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Mr. Creakle... showed me the cane, and asked me what I thought of THAT?... Did it bite? At every question he gave me a fleshy cut with it that made me writhe. |
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A Jaggery is completely unrefined sugar from the juice of the sugar cane. |
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They often carry a hollow cane, which they use to both till and fight. |
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The Dutch established a small colony on the island in 1638, from which they exploited ebony trees and introduced sugar cane, domestic animals and deer. |
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Historically, Florida's economy has been based primarily upon agricultural products such as cattle, sugar cane, citrus fruits, tomatoes, and strawberries. |
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Other crops, like sugar cane, kidney beans, and certain spices would have been familiar to slaves through contact with British colonies in the Caribbean. |
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Agricultural produce includes fruit, vegetables, sugar cane, livestock and poultry, and industries include rum distillation, construction and boat building. |
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During the summer, the apple snail's small pink eggs can be seen in clusters clinging to bulrush, maiden cane, pickerel weed, duck weed and aquatic grasses. |
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A case of polio, contracted while doing undergraduate field work in Mexico, forced Martin to rely on a cane, which restricted but did not end his field work. |
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Diamond Candles' Holiday Collection comes in some wonderful seasonal scents, including Christmas Kitchen, Candy Cane, Winter Festival, Mistletoe, and Cinnamon Pinecone. |
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Turbinado is usually made by squeezing the juice out of crushed sugar cane, then spinning what's left after evaporation through a huge centrifuge. |
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By incorporating nanotechnology, Pelusi creates a negative charge to ward off future dirt and oil with whortleberry, sugar cane, sugar maple, orange and lemon. |
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