A classic glacial relic, the tarn lies in a trough that was cut by ice moving across from Great to Little Langdale. |
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They are frankly tangential to the drama, and could have been cut from the story altogether without any great loss. |
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I've got two tangerines, a baguette cut in two, and a bottle of water in my side-bag. |
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That's because it's easy to point to the organization if a project tanks or gets cut off because of a perceived security hole. |
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Woody stemmed plants, like Buddleia and plants that ooze sap, like Asclepias, should be cut and placed in hot water. |
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But for businesses, foreign competition saps pricing power, forcing companies to improve efficiency and cut costs. |
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You'd be pretty angry if your salary didn't go up in line with inflation each year, because it would be tantamount to a pay cut. |
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Singapore Airlines and other carriers cut flights after visitors avoided the city and as many as nine in 10 hotel rooms were left empty. |
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In his address he complimented the huge turnout and afterwards he and the priest cut the tape to set the walkers on their way. |
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He created the buzz cut with regular-size clippers, leaving the top longer and tapering the sides. |
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Old wood cut open reveals dead sapwood extending from an old pruning wound, the point of entry of the fungus. |
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After the leader is cut, the top whorl and the sides of the tree are sheared to the desired cone shape and taper. |
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Now the measure would cut Pell grant awards at the same time that tuition continues to soar. |
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The region's timber draws truckloads of migrant workers who come to cut its prized mahogany, an expensive hardwood in high demand overseas. |
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The directors' faces look cut out, almost as if by hand, and fit awkwardly against the mountain backdrop. |
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From executive level to the mailroom, we are cut from the same cultural cloth. |
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It has also significantly cut its own prices for broadband, and claims to be making in-roads towards meeting its ambitious targets for users. |
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You may be able to cut the energy mainframes use but a lot of energy is still required to cool the machines. |
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Although it is close to the mainland, it used to be cut off for weeks at a time during stormy weather. |
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These mainsails are the more traditional mainsail cut with short length battens and slab reefing. |
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These illegal loggers cut with impunity, often working in plain sight along main roads. |
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The table tops, segmented in satinwood and mahogany, are from the same cut of veneer. |
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Scott can dazzle but has missed the cut in eight of the 15 majors he has played, including last year's Masters. |
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I also cut, have no self-esteem and tried to kill myself, nothing majorly serious, on a number of occasions. |
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A cut is made through the wall of the abdomen to one side of the main incision. |
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I like wafer thin sandwich ham, the hot dog, a slice of just cut saucisson. |
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I am very concerned about the likely world-wide depression that would ensue if the world were to be cut off from Saudi crude. |
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Parliament decided to use its army to cut off Rupert's lines of support and so moved off the moor and made for Tadcaster. |
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I made out I was a big time player, willing to provide some funding in return for a cut of the action. |
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What goes into sausages is top quality meat, cut away when we chop the prime joints from a carcass and then trim the special cuts in the shop. |
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Gradually the rigidity left his play and the trademark square cut began to beat out a tattoo. |
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Above a carefully cut animal skin, an arc of wood is stretched taut by a rope. |
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Banks lure in savers with headline-grabbing rates and then quietly cut rates once demand slackens off. |
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Second, lower prices for gasoline and other fuels are acting like a giant tax cut for both consumers and businesses. |
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The empirical results indicate that a tax cut produces revenue and incentives to save. |
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Clearly, lower taxes reinforced the spending splurge that generated the explosion in indirect tax receipts allowing taxes to be cut further. |
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He made the cut in his first six tournaments, finishing among the top 20 in three of them. |
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He finished with a fat five-over-par 77 that left him needing a decent second round just to make the cut. |
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The Government didn't want to reduce taxation as that would cut into the money it had to spend. |
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Most are very knowledgeable and savvy about business and know how to cut a deal. |
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Rather than be robbed twice, first by the crooks and then by the police, he decided to get a motorbike taxi home and cut his losses. |
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Mark the cut line on the board and position the saw with its blade on the line. |
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Mark the opening for the niche, and cut it out with a sharp utility knife or a wallboard saw. |
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Pruning saws have narrower blades with coarse teeth that are designed to cut on the pull stroke. |
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It helps to wrap an elastic cord around the whole bunch and use a saw to cut the old stems below the cord. |
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With a combination blade in your saw, set the depth of cut just to cut through the sheathing. |
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At the very least, the taxman should take a healthy cut and redistribute it to more worthy causes. |
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As the wood is cut, the heaviest sawdust is sucked down into the small bag. |
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With both his small hands Dominic had gripped tightly the end of each board jutting off the sawhorse as Mr. Russo carefully cut through it. |
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Place the marked sheet on sawhorses and cut along the penciled lines with a circular saw set to the proper depth. |
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This way you can save the charity tax, and higher rate taxpayers can even cut their own personal tax bills. |
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Holding the cloth in his teeth, he managed to cut jagged strips off for bandages. |
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Only a minority are cut into sawlog and made into high value furniture, flooring or building materials. |
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Last month the Victorian government announced that the number of sawlogs allowed to be pulled out of the State's forests will be cut by a third. |
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She cut out sugar, white flour and processed foods and drank only water and tea. |
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His hair was cut short in back, but long silver strands fell softly into his eyes. |
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Taking an intricate short cut through back alleys and abandoned buildings, she came out onto an empty, dead-end road. |
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Throughout the war years hay was cut and raked with horse teams pulling the equipment. |
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In winter, teams of horses dragged sledges loaded with cut logs across frozen lakes. |
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The driver was cut free, had a neck collar applied and had to be placed on a backboard. |
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Draw out your bedroom dimensions and on another sheet cut out your furniture to scale. |
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I cut out almost two dozen over the next 10 minutes, rolling and stretching where I must, patching a hole, a tear, a crack. |
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If the person is holding the stone or has the stone in his possession then he cannot be burned by fire, cut by a knife or killed with a gun. |
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We cannot go up into the upper atmosphere and pump ozone back in the ozone holes, neither can we plant a sapling for every tree cut in the past ten years. |
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You could cut the tapes and join them back together with cello tape. |
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The cowpea seedlings were carefully removed from the growth pouches and the few laterals, found at the basal portion of the taproot, were cut to leave only the taproot. |
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So far, the car manufacturer has managed to cut only 2,400 jobs, largely through voluntary redundancies and this is not enough to satisfy its creditors. |
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I cut and paste on my Sina Twitter account, readers retweet, and the nannies erase, all of us operating at a frantic pace. |
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While you're waiting go outside and cut the culprits down to their crowns. |
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Food stamps have already been cut, and congressional Republicans are hell-bent on cutting them further. |
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De Vries cut in from the left inside the penalty box, Freddy Dindeleux slipped going into the challenge, but even then the striker's shot was eminently saveable. |
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If a log were a perfect cylinder with uniformly thick growth layers, the figure on the surfaces of boards cut in tangential planes would be parallel markings. |
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The Scotland World Cup player has now made the cut in his past 18 tournaments and is beginning to attain the air of a serious contender at every event in which he plays. |
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The company has announced a savage price cut of its videogame system. |
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When we overlay Figure 4.2 onto Figure 4.1, we will see that the budget constraint will be tangential to some I-curves and cut across other I-curves. |
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No one outside his inner circle had been made aware, because the cut could be hidden under his skullcap. |
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As with the pills, it can be cut into eight doses, either used sublingually or mixed with water and snorted. |
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She's had her home phone cut off, she has lost her car because she can't afford to tax and insure it and she struggles to put food on the table for her kids. |
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He took hold of the gauze he had placed over the cut in his palm and held it in place while he unrolled several inches of gauze strip and some tape. |
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All of that I had done myself, and I still had to put approximately 200 savories into the oven to be heated, and cut up some cheese with crackers. |
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It is a good idea to also cut out a small opening above the bit for air-flow, and leave sufficient room in your table opening for sawdust to escape the cut. |
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Each family or group of families returned to a traditional location where they had stored utensils and had marked with an ax cut the trees they would tap. |
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But nonetheless, FIFA has recently cut its funding for anti-trafficking programs, skinner said. |
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Then the glue was applied to the bottom EPS foam strip and gently pulled taut and glued into place allowing the cut strips to stretch suspended over the black background. |
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The cut over his eye was half-healed and scabbed over, as were almost all of the wounds covering his body but they would be a long time healing in full. |
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Were these holes cut to support wooden beams for scaffolding? |
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It was a lovely afternoon, not too hot after all, so I sauntered down Swain Street, cut through the little alley-way to the Esplanade, and turned into the tea garden. |
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A bottoming tap is never used to cut threads in an unthreaded hole, as the cutting edges lack the taper required to successfully start into such a hole. |
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There were so many elements on the plate that there was barely enough room to cut the delicious steak, which had been seasoned to an incredible level of tastiness. |
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It would be cut and re welded multiple times, with each new weld producing a more homogeneous, higher quality steel. |
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In the 18th century part of the Industrial Revolution was the invention of the steam engine and cut nails. |
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Boring is used to achieve greater accuracy of the diameter of a hole, and can be used to cut a tapered hole. |
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Special cutters can also cut grooves, bevels, radii, or indeed any section desired. |
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The tool has to be lifted and retracted after each cut, due to which machining time increases. |
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This adjustability, coupled with the use of specialized cutters and toolholders, enable the operator to cut internal and external gear tooth. |
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Maudslay's invention about 1800 of a metal lathe to cut metal enabled the manufacture of standard screw thread sizes. |
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The saddle was driven by a screw through gearing which could be disengaged when the end of the cut was reached. |
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Bleach is also used for removing mildew, killing weeds and increasing the longevity of cut flowers. |
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The paper is then fed onto reels if it is to be used on web printing presses, or cut into sheets for other printing processes or other purposes. |
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Workers who cut, grind or polish concrete are at risk of inhaling airborne silica, which can lead to silicosis. |
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The cut cylinder is then placed in an oven where the cylinder unrolls into a flat glass sheet. |
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Engraving is a process that requires a design to be cut into a plate made of a relatively hard material. |
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When competition cut into the business he switched to carrying fish from the coast to Leeds and Manchester. |
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Competition from canals eventually cut into his profits and he retired in 1792 to live with a daughter and her husband at Spofforth in Yorkshire. |
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This could cause eye trouble, lung ailments, heat exhaustion, cut, and burns. |
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When needed, slices of hay would be cut using a hay knife and fed out to animals each day. |
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That would be Southeastern Conference commissioner Mike Slive, who made the cut after not being included last year. |
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Our native cardinal flowers love part shade and can serve as cut flowers, too. |
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Loose tenons eliminate the need to cut a tenon on the rail as in conventional mortise and tenon construction. |
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Because they could get quick and accurate measurements, operators found that they could cut tenons with just one pass through the tenoner. |
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Also, take a little time and cut a 45 degree angle or scribe at the corners using a tenon saw and mitre box or square. |
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If the weather is too wet, the cut hay may spoil in the field before it can be baled. |
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When growth is at a maximum in the pasture or field, if judged correctly, it is cut. |
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This approach will often be used where the legal issues and evidence is clear cut, and the parties bring documents they wish to use. |
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Never in history had the Senate been able to muster enough votes to cut off a filibuster on a civil rights bill. |
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Cheat a canape spread by getting a big, impressive centrepiece item that people can cut and share. |
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Before 2012, there were nine or twelve jurors, but this was reduced to cut spending. |
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New York exports a wide variety of goods such as prepared foods, computers and electronics, cut diamonds, and other commodities. |
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Any small candleholders that fit inside the jar will work, but you can also improvise, using a cut piece of copper piping, for example. |
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The sharp piece of footwear cut straight through her eyelid, and split her tear duct in half. |
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In 1640, the charter was revised to cut new plot sizes in half, and to allow any Dutch American in good standing to purchase an estate. |
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The Smith bill won several early tests in the House, which also voted to substantially cut the NLRB's budget. |
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When a principle becomes customary law is not clear cut and many arguments are put forward by states not wishing to be bound. |
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The Soviets for their part did not seek to cut off allied access to West Berlin through East German territory. |
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Trees are cut and hauled to the skid road and then taken to the landing, where the trees are separated and processed. |
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Opponents of minimum wages contend that increased labor costs force businesses to cut staff, costing jobs. |
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The executioner was proud that he kept his axe razor-sharp, so no prisoner would feel any pain when his head was cut off. |
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Methods were developed to cut screw thread to a greater precision than that of the feed screw in the lathe being used. |
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Lon Skutt, of Custom Engineering in Saginaw, Michigan, meticulously turned down the rim and cut new extractor cannelures. |
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Artificial fibres can be processed as long fibres or batched and cut so they can be processed like a natural fibre. |
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They eventually gave way to the Zagwe dynasty who are famed for their rock cut architecture at Lalibela. |
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A new hot-air method provides non-contact removal of microscopic, hair-like flash from molded, cut, and skived parts without open flames. |
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It embraces plain twilled cloth known as jean, and cut fabrics similar to velvet, known as velveteen, moleskin, corduroy etc. |
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He knew I was a Chicago guy, and he cut me absolutely no slack. |
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That's why I love the minute steak, or the foolproof steak as I like to call it, a nice thin steak cut from the sirloin. |
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Velveteen was cut the same way but had 32 ridges per inch so production would be proportionately less. |
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Despite early teething troubles, the system has also been credited with helping to cut gun crime by 17 per cent. |
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Two people were cut out of the car by firefighters and were taken to Milton Keynes General Hospital where they were to remain overnight. |
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One, until that law is changed, HHS has to get a big cut of the purse. |
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After four years of testing, SkySail believe they can cut fuel for large ships by as much as pounds 750 a day. |
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Synthetic fiber is most often measured in a weight per linear measurement basis, along with cut length. |
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Some might think that because the federal capital gains tax has been cut, these taxes aren't worth worrying about. |
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The steam supply was cut during the stroke, and the steam expanded against the vacuum on the other side. |
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Different pieces of wood cut from a large tree may differ decidedly, particularly if the tree is big and mature. |
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Slava Balasanov is 30, with a precise bowl cut and a surprising fondness for the plain black dress shoes of a bank teller. |
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One person would turn the wood work piece with a rope while the other used a sharp tool to cut shapes in the wood. |
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Don't cut corners and use water unless you want a sludgy, frozen mess on your hands. |
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But hay cut too late is coarser, lower in resale value and has lost some of its nutrients. |
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Hay can be raked into rows as it is cut, then turned periodically to dry, particularly if a modern swather is used. |
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Once hay is cut, dried and raked into windrows, it is usually gathered into bales or bundles, then hauled to a central location for storage. |
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Much hay was originally cut by scythe by teams of workers, dried in the field and gathered loose on wagons. |
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Many gravestones in the churchyard were cut from rock sourced at Worsley Delph. |
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Larch forests cleared for the reservoir were cut in winter when the trunks are frozen and easily snapped. |
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Ensiling of sheaves cut by a corn binder was formerly common in some regions but has become uncommon. |
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In northeastern Chinese cuisine, sweet potatoes are often cut into chunks and fried, before being drenched into a pan of boiling syrup. |
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The following year, about a dozen new shoots form from the roots, replacing those that were cut. |
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The distinction between inflection and word formation is not at all clear cut. |
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Her hair was red, cut punkily short. Her legs went approximately up to her chin. |
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The Spanish granted the British settlers the right to occupy the area and cut logwood in exchange for helping to suppress piracy. |
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The World War cut off contact with Germany, but the missions continued at a reduced pace. |
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The British made the situation much worse by imposing a tight blockade on every American port, which cut off almost all imports and exports. |
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Farnese cut off all access to the sea by constructing a bridge of boats across the Scheldt. |
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The value of the Canadian dollar dropped after the central bank cut its outlook for the economy because of oil price pressures. |
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Hair stylists are not mind-readers, and they want you to be happy with the cut. |
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Numerous southwest-trending, high-angle fracture zones and breccias cut the 250-foot wide by 600-foot long mineralized zone. |
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Grass hay cut too early will not cure as easily due to high moisture content, plus it will produce a lower yield per acre than longer, more mature grass. |
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The dimensions between the piece and the tool bit can be changed about two axes to cut both vertically and horizontally into the internal surface. |
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Adelie penguins, meanwhile, have their work cut out keeping their chicks safe from skuas, and a minke whale suffers at the hands of a family of killer whales. |
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Yesterday, dressed in academic robes that covered silver wrist bangles and skull-and-crossbone cufflinks, he still cut a slightly dangerous figure among the lecturers. |
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Because our kiosks have cut down on the time used during patient check-in, our staff members have more opportunities to interact more calmly and caringly with our patients. |
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The tenons on the ends of the rails were cut off-center in order to avoid interference between the tenons on the side rails with those of the front and back rails. |
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During the drying period, which can take several days, the process is usually sped up by turning the cut hay over with a hay rake or spreading it out with a tedder. |
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The ends are cut off and a cut is made down the side of the cylinder. |
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The partition between these Arches, running the whole length of the Tunnel, is cut into transverse arches, leading through from one roadsted to the other. |
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The character was cut in beech wood, which was then pressed into a soft clay to form a mould, and bronze poured into the mould, and finally the type was polished. |
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Manufacturers have started producing economically priced CNCs machines small enough to sit on a desktop which can cut at high resolution materials softer than stainless steel. |
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One was to hammer out wrought iron into plates and cut or slit the plates. |
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Drill hole three cut a 86 metre wide, strongly fractured and altered graphitic-pyritic pelite unit containing fracturing, grey clay and slickensides. |
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Have a piece of lumber cut down to your desired candleholder size. |
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Sleeping around just didn't cut it during hominids' start-up era. |
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Most commercial paper sold in North America is cut to standard paper sizes based on customary units and is defined by the length and width of a sheet of paper. |
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The cut stems are processed by scraping off the outer bark, then beating the branch evenly with a hammer to loosen the inner bark, which is then pried off in long rolls. |
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Intermarriage is seen as a deliberate rejection of Judaism, and an intermarried person is effectively cut off from most of the Orthodox community. |
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Roberts also manufactured and sold sets of stocks and dies to his range of pitches, so other engineers could cut threads on nuts and bolts and other machine parts. |
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The victim is talked into exchanging bank account information on the premise that the money will be transferred to him, and then he'll get to keep a cut. |
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The technology should be fully demonstrated by the end of the 2010s, in line with the timeline set, for example, by the EU to cut emissions significantly. |
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Following the success of his power loom, in 1825 he invented a slotting machine to cut keyways in gears and pulleys to fasten them to their shafts. |
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The ridges were manually cut, and the cloth sent to be finished. |
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The Cordless Duct Slitter is powered by a Makita 12V lithium-ion battery, and is engineered to cut slits at precise depths on conduits, ducts and innerducts. |
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A flap of skin on his upper leg had been cut back, exposing the muscles, and the exposed arteries had not been severed but were flattened, pulsing with Huskisson's heartbeat. |
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Mark Twain stated that several mutually incompatible religions claimed to be the true religion and that people cut the throats of others for following a different theology. |
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Stumps thus dug may actually remain a century or more since being cut. |
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Fitch cut Cyprus' credit rating by two notches to BBB on Wednesday due to fiscal slippages, saying the island state was likely to require a bailout to meet its funding needs. |
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These are preprogrammed subroutines that move the tool through successive passes of cut, retract, advance, cut again, retract again, return to the initial position, and so on. |
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A rope drum was attached to the flywheel with a channel cut for each rope. |
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On the Thames, there had been a proposal for a canal from Lechlade to Abingdon in 1784, and for a cut from Inglesham to Buscot in 1788, but neither had been built. |
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Staple is cut fibers, generally sold in lengths up to 120mm. |
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Blanch, then cut the sprouts in half, and colour in a little butter with the pancetta, chestnuts and pine nuts, adding a touch of honey at the end to aid caramelisation. |
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