Rigid chairs and bland decor did not encourage us to linger over coffee, mugged or otherwise. |
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Rigid self-control went hand-in-hand with a precise and exacting formality. |
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Rigid and impermeable boundaries maintain and protect our disconnection from others. |
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Rigid foam board insulation is tacked onto the exterior sheathing, fortifying the thermal shield. |
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Rigid foam panels can be used to insulate both interior and exterior walls. |
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Rigid with fear Alf began to jog down an alley where the trees hung over to form a canopy beneath the lights creating a shadowy, menacing passageway. |
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Rigid board insulation is made to be used in confined spaces such as exterior walls, basements, foundation and stem walls, concrete slabs, and cathedral ceilings. |
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Rigid sigmoidoscopes were employed in the diagnosis of distal lesions but were not used for screening. |
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Rigid cystoscopy through the urethra revealed an exophytic mass on the left lateral wall of the bladder, which was covered in keratinous debris. |
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According to the Tennessee Daily Times, the layoffs affect the can sheet operations in the Rigid Packaging Division. |
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Rigid Nonmetallic Conduit, including PVC and fiberglass, are now allowed in residential dwellings not exceeding three stories. |
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Rigid foam or fibrous insulation board is used to insulate exterior walls or roofs during construction or when adding siding or reroofing, and to insulate crawl space walls. |
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Other smaller amphibious craft such as the Offshore Raiding Craft, Rigid Raider and Inflatable Raiding Craft are in service in much greater numbers. |
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If your attic has metal joists, you may want to place rigid foam insulation between the joists and the ceiling drywall. |
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After a long moment, her shoulders, which had been rigid with tension, suddenly slumped. |
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This season, part of her winning philosophy has been put down to a new rigid fitness programme. |
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It's a myth that goes back to the revolution and the triumph of America's ragtag guerrillas against the rigid, hierarchical British army. |
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The school is testing digital whiteboards, one of many new technologies that officials hope will help shake up the rigid education system. |
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I have a feeling that Horton's style wasn't as rigid as the way that it has been passed down. |
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Cells are laced with a network of fibres more rigid than the rope-like structural proteins collagen and keratin. |
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To make a roll, spread the fingers of the opposite hand wide apart and make them rigid. |
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We now offer stepped bore rigid couplings with standard keyways in each bore. |
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It was an act of rebellion against the rigid strictures of both the contemporary social mores and the strict code of ballet. |
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The windage of many oscillating halyards is infinitely greater than that of a single rigid one. |
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However, we may consider a simple model in which the feather is assumed to be an isolated, flat, rigid object in a uniform airstream. |
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In 1903 he published Geometrie der Dynamen which considered euclidean kinematics and the mechanics of rigid bodies. |
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The assembly is strong and rigid, with no ring or scope movement from recoil. |
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It is conceivable that the channel is not a rigid conduit but is subject to motions that form pockets separated by labile constrictions. |
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Until a week ago, he was demented, rigid, incontinent, unable to talk, swallow or blink his eyes. |
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Planning will be iterative and collaborative rather than sequential and linear, more a framework for learning and action than a rigid template. |
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She was rigid, staring blank at the screen, though her heart beat with excitement. |
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High wages and rigid labor rules have hurt productivity, eroded earnings, and made companies reluctant to hire. |
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Automated programs follow a rigid set of rules that may not adequately reproduce the common sense we humans use when reviewing a page. |
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So they often run the risk of becoming dogmatic and overly rigid in their thinking process. |
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The photographic image of the furry toy contrasts with the rigid stylization of the linear Chinese Court Style drawing. |
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Through the end of the twentieth century, Kenyan households maintained rigid rules concerning women's roles within the patriarchal household. |
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Almost like a wave starting from her toes, her muscles began to tighten in sequence until she was rigid. |
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In pursuit of this passion, all have put themselves through a rigid training course to qualify as pyrotechnicians. |
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Building stone and roof tiles have to conform to rigid specifications, and must be locally sourced. |
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The engine blocks have no water and the water jackets are sometimes filled with concrete to make the engine bores more rigid. |
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Besides wearing his lucky jockettes every week, he stuck to a rigid pre-match routine of eating hamburgers. |
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With stifled sobs, she unfolded the single leaf of paper from within and began to read the rigid, soldier-like writing. |
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Like plaster piece-moulds, they require a rigid mother mould made of plaster or a synthetic resin. |
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The man sat calmly in the rigid plastic chair, his hands paced lightly on the cheap desk in front of him. |
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You have to make a cut at categorising these things and it is a matter of judgment rather than following a rigid rule book in many cases. |
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Charlie looked down at the eager young man sat on the edge of his seat, pawing at the rigid pleat of his trouser leg. |
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The whole grid should be rigid, its angles and distances fixed and proportionate. |
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He was almost physically pained by rigid doctrinal systems, and mildly revolted by the idea of discipleship. |
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Intrauterine devices, also known as coils, are rigid contraceptive devices that are inserted into the uterus by a doctor. |
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Long and thin rigid elements make good levers that have high speed and displacement advantage. |
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This can happen through leverage by rigid levers, or it can occur in pliant hydrostatic cylinders of constant volume. |
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By using flexible fabrics instead of conventional rigid molds, concrete elements can vary in volume according to structural requirements. |
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It looked to be some sort of leathery tissue, but in a strangely rigid shape. |
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It's flexible polymer clay that hardens into rigid plastic after a spell in your kitchen oven. |
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Although the nanostructure looks like a spring, it is actually rigid, rather than elastic, and holds its shape even when it is isolated. |
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Among them are lidding film for rigid cups, flexible pouches for pet foods and beverage pouches for juices. |
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The halls extended for about 30 feet in each direction before turning at a rigid edge to fit the precise triangular shape of the ship. |
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The cabin has plenty of storage spaces, but the door pockets would be much more useful with flexible sides instead of rigid ones. |
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Some farmers add rigid plastic part of the way up the sides of the greenhouse if using roll-up sides. |
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The law is not, perhaps, ferocious, but the tests are rigid and factual, and the cases that result are easy and automatic. |
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Open toleration of such attitudes became problematic as Jim became more rigid. |
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This indicates that the bargaining model in Italy is not rigid, but flexible and adaptable. |
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For a while he tried to get along with social services, but they were too rigid. |
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Diminishing fiscal flexibility and a relatively rigid political system in China put constraints on the credit ratings, however. |
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These people follow a strict, rigid code of social custom and behavior, and judge the people who do not follow the rules. |
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A more rigid work schedule has forced changes, and now the main meal is taken in the evening. |
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She clenched her teeth and stayed motionless, waiting for his reply, although her entire body was rigid with pent fury. |
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Immediately, he sat up, his body taut and rigid as he strained to listen to their conversation. |
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They're rigid about their proposals and strategies, but compromise on their core values. |
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His body was rigid, his gaze unmoving, fixed on some point on the wall behind the German, his expression entirely unreadable. |
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A ten-year programme was introduced to wipe out the liability by introducing rigid controls on expenditure relating to the upkeep of churches. |
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The honeybee can have a similarly rigid reaction to redness because most redness indicates flowers in the bee's normal environment. |
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The inclusion of a rigid rule against capital controls in a trade agreement makes things even worse. |
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No less interesting has been the enthusiastic reception of several recent political plays that steered clear of rigid political reductionism. |
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The realistic portrayal of the conservative and rigid Koro is in vivid contrast to his warm and loving granddaughter. |
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She sent Daniel an apologetic look, but he was regarding Melvin with rigid steadiness. |
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Similarly, at the upper end of the alimentary tract, rigid instruments were used for the examination of the oesophagus and for the stomach. |
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His shoulders were rigid with anger, but at the same time, a tear escaped his eye. |
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They contend that large swathes of the population are becoming more rigid in their political allegiances. |
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It is the relatively opaque idioms which tend to be fairly rigid in their form. |
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His hand movements alternated between fluttery flocks of birds and rigid Godzilla claws. |
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It must be rigid enough to promote near zero surface tensions during the alveolar compression. |
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In fact, among surfers there's a fairly rigid code of beach behavior, which includes a strict pecking order. |
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They are setting up rigid control processes with high levels of IT security. |
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Laser resection can be carried out under either local or general anesthesia with a flexible or rigid bronchoscope. |
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Because unions and management, alike, have been rigid and inflexible. |
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I turned around and marched away, my body unexplainably stiff and rigid. |
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Components such as keel, engine beds, mast step, structural bulkheads and rigging loads are all connected to the grid, resulting in a very rigid and strong structure. |
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And Lula would likely have to shelve plans to reform rigid labor laws, overhaul a dysfunctional judiciary, and streamline a bewildering tax system. |
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A willingness to listen to and at least partially incorporate the other point of view has replaced the rigid and uncompromising attitude of the past. |
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He is a unit in a line rushing on the enemy with the one idea of riding him down and transfixing him with his rigid saber, held at the position of charge saber. |
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The racer was originally built with two parallel interplane wing struts and these were replaced with single rigid I struts but even these did not solve the rigging problems. |
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His blue eyes pierced me and made my body feel suddenly rigid with fear. |
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Her body went rigid, and the moan became a rattle deep in her throat. |
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And so there Miss Johnson sat, rigid with disbelief as two of her least subservient students gazed into her watery eyes and grinned wolfishly beneath little lambskin cloaks. |
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Her mind was completely void of emotions and her body was rigid. |
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Our rigid weldmesh panels are available in galvanized lengths which can be powder coated to suit your requirements in a large selection of almost any colour. |
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Like a sea the waste stretched out before her, ending only as the jags rose to breathtaking heights to become the rigid range of mountains called the Crown of Thorns. |
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Tyro found himself rigid, unable to move, and unable to breath. |
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The rigid social, moral and behavioural codes imposed by the group included severe restrictions on women's freedom of movement, expression and association. |
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Most of them are cast in a somewhat soft and pliable plastic and at first I was disappointed in this thinking that a more rigid plastic would have been preferable. |
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She was also notorious for her rude comments and rigid opinions on style. |
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You, and I myself, grew up in a rigid society, unchanging except for War. |
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The laws of supply and demand are as rigid as the offside law. |
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Bound together by mutual distrust, both sides end up lashing themselves to the mast of rigid law. |
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Designers are flexible and intuitive rather than rigid and exacting. |
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Its personality cult, rigid conformity and fire-breathing rhetoric notwithstanding, North Korea is not a monolith. |
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Your most recent book, The Golden Cage, is about three brothers whose rigid ideologies lead them astray. |
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What started as a schoolgirl rebellion against Japan's rigid conformity is now causing ripples of admiration from the beau monde of international fashion. |
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Her body was completely rigid, and her hands were clutching her sheets. |
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They are a plain looking, solid sort of shoe with a chunky heel, quite rigid support and come in an infinite range of colours and limited editions. |
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They had an overly rigid interpretation of Marxism and Leninism. |
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In the 1950s, antitrust law was a sleepy domain filled with rigid rules and nonsensical results. |
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To move beyond rigid rules and roles, the twenty-first century nurse must not only understand nursing and medical language, but use it confidently. |
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Unlike the normal school year, the summer is filled with a crowd of instructors that is unfamiliar with the rigid rules usually inflicted upon the students. |
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Don't make any wrenching, heaving movements on rigid door knobs and tight screw-top jars. |
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Susan Bennett sat rigid, smoothing her skirt round her chumpy thighs and fixing her gaze on the wall above Marissa Caldwell. |
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The Kiowa has a two-bladed semi-rigid seesaw all metal main rotor and a two-bladed rigid delta hinge all metal tail rotor. |
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The white eyeballs and white teeth of the horse, the panting flanks, the rigid legs all stood out eldritchly. |
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Like any arthropod encased in a rigid exoskeleton, a trilobite must periodically moult, or exuviate, in order to grow. |
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There was little point in grommeting the hole, since the wrapping was already as rigid and tough as its invisibility permitted. |
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There is a whole gradation of more or less rigid determinisms and more or less free indeterminisms, as they have been given in various theories. |
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The extrication devices are short, moulded, rigid boards which are placed along the spine and strapped to the patient. |
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Undergraduate curricula tend to be more rigid than in the United States and there is little room to take classes outside one's major. |
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It encouraged the rejection of harsh, rigid Calvinism, and promised a new blossoming of American culture. |
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At some stage in the nineteenth century, the rigid swords were replaced by flexible rappers. |
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This pursuit of freedom was largely a reaction against conservative values entrenched within the rigid heroic couplet. |
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Such rigid sails are typically made of thin plastic fabric held stretched over a frame. |
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The solo stepdance is generally characterised by a controlled but not rigid upper body, straight arms, and quick, precise movements of the feet. |
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The plan was a rigid, ordered grid, which fitted in well with Enlightenment ideas of rationality. |
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Although the Luftwaffe correctly interpreted these new ground control procedures, they were incorrectly assessed as being rigid and ineffectual. |
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Can lusty diet, and mollicious rest, bring forth no other fruits but faint desires, rigid thoughts, and phlegmatic conceits? |
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In their original form, Newton's laws of motion are not adequate to characterise the motion of rigid bodies and deformable bodies. |
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Duplex locomotives with two engines in one rigid frame were also tried, but were not notably successful. |
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The relatively rigid poses of figures relaxed, and asymmetrical turning positions and oblique views became common, and deliberately sought. |
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The superciliary whiskers above the eyes and the genal whiskers on the cheeks are less rigid and distinctly less mobile than the mystacials. |
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He was a man of such rigid refinement, that he would have starved rather than have dined without a white neck-cloth. |
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During the Cold War Era, the relationships between the First World, Second World and the Third World were very rigid. |
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Status in early Ireland was not entirely rigid and it was possible for a family to raise its status. |
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The strong box structure of the biplane provided a rigid wing that allowed the accurate lateral control essential for dogfighting. |
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If two rigid sections of a glacier move at different speeds and directions, shear forces cause them to break apart, opening a crevasse. |
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This coupling between rigid plates moving on the surface of the Earth and the convecting mantle is called plate tectonics. |
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Referred to as an ophiopluteus, these larvae have four pairs of rigid arms lined with cilia. |
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The test is rigid, and divides into five ambulacral grooves separated by five interambulacral areas. |
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Earth's volcanoes occur because its crust is broken into 17 major, rigid tectonic plates that float on a hotter, softer layer in its mantle. |
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Foreign body aspiration may require otorhinolaryngology consultation for rigid bronchoscopy. |
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Whale ribs loosely articulate with their thoracic vertebrae at the proximal end, but do not form a rigid rib cage. |
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Whale ribs loosely articulate with their thoracic vertebrae at the proximal end, but they do not form a rigid rib cage. |
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In 1895 Count Ferdinand von Zeppelin attempted to interest both the army and navy in his new rigid airships, but without success. |
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The wall paintings done in the service of the Pharaohs followed a rigid code of visual rules and meanings. |
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The lithosphere is cooler and more rigid, while the asthenosphere is hotter and flows more easily. |
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Earth's lithosphere is divided into several rigid tectonic plates that migrate across the surface over periods of many millions of years. |
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The mechanically rigid outer layer of Earth, the lithosphere, is divided into pieces called tectonic plates. |
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As the oceanic crust moves away from the ridge axis, the peridotite in the underlying mantle cools and becomes more rigid. |
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The crust and the relatively rigid peridotite below it make up the oceanic lithosphere. |
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The reef is the rigid structure of carbonate platforms and is located between the internal lagoon and the slope. |
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Hang gliders most often have flexible wings given shape by a frame, though some have rigid wings. |
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Larger aircraft have rigid wing surfaces which provide additional strength. |
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Crocodiles have a palatal flap, a rigid tissue at the back of the mouth that blocks the entry of water. |
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While the engine and suspension layouts described here for scooters and underbones are typical, they are not rigid definitions. |
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Milk is extracted from the cow's udder by flexible rubber sheaths known as liners or inflations that are surrounded by a rigid air chamber. |
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When bagged in this way, the lower mold is a rigid structure and the upper surface of the part is formed by the flexible membrane vacuum bag. |
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On the lower side is a rigid mould and on the upper side is a flexible membrane made from silicone or an extruded polymer film such as nylon. |
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Plutonians who are negatively inclined are often very guarded and rigid, afraid to let others get close. |
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Far from being guaranteed to blow your mind, We Will Rock You is guaranteed to bore you rigid. The show is prolefeed at its worst. |
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Merinos have an almost linear hierarchy whereas there is a less rigid structure in Border Leicesters when a competitive feeding situation arises. |
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Syntax was also simplified somewhat, with word order patterns becoming more rigid. |
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The emphasis on rigid adherence to established forms led to substantial injustice. |
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The solution of these equations of motion defines how the configuration of the system of rigid bodies changes as a function of time. |
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The formulation and solution of rigid body dynamics is an important tool in the computer simulation of mechanical systems. |
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Delineation of jobs was rigid and communication would be through the means of coloured slips of paper written on in indelible pencil. |
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Metalworking lathes evolved into heavier machines with thicker, more rigid parts. |
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If an airway becomes obstructed by cancer growth, options include rigid bronchoscopy, balloon bronchoplasty, stenting, and microdebridement. |
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Taoism differs from Confucianism by not emphasizing rigid rituals and social order. |
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The leaf blade of a butterwort is smooth, rigid, and succulent, usually bright green or pinkish in colour. |
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A sunflower, four more, one bowed, and horses in the distance standing rigid and still as toys. |
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Further, the joint-glands themselves grow rigid, and secern less of their proper humour. |
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At that time there was no rigid sequestration on the islands, and lepers, if they chose, were allowed to go free. |
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Stem rigid, emitting near the floral leaves a spiciferous branch with coriaceous leaves. Internodes equal in length, 4-5 cm. |
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In the rigid foot with fixed deformity, a wedge tarsectomy or triple arthrodesis with tibialis posterior transfer is necessary. |
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Mark uv absorbers include substituted benzo-phenones for rigid and flexible PVC, polyolefins, and other resins. |
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Medical Scale Co. offers both rigid weighboard and stretcher style scales to weigh your bedridden patients. |
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Unlike the kouros, the figure is completely clothed, although both have the same rigid stance, arms by sides, and wiglike hair. |
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A wide range of materials was used for windbreaks, including rigid bark sheets inserted in sand, piles of grass or foliage, and stone walls. |
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Recently, I walked into our living room and was greeted by an ashen-faced guest, rigid with fear, the tea-cup in her hand trembling. |
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Methane is abundant in Titan's thick atmosphere and cycles between the moon's atmosphere and rigid surface, much as water cycles on Earth. |
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A transfer-matrix approach for estimating the characteristic impedance and wave numbers of limp and rigid porous materials. |
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In Section 2 we saw that Nuosu manifests two rigid word orders conditioned by a cluster of aspectual features. |
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All kitchen units to be of rigid construction, pre assembled and to comply with BS EN 14749 2005 Domestic and kitchen storage units and worktops. |
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In this way, the average amide segment length was constant as was the rigid segment content. |
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Nontoxic calcium and zinc stabilizers for food-contact PVC, especially for rigid or flexible compounds, available in solids, pastes and liquids. |
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The Snapshots report gives an instant overview of the UK truck market and covers rigid, Two-axle artics and three axle artics trucks. |
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The MEMS transducer is a condenser microphone with a flexible poly-Si membrane and a rigid reference electrode manufactured on SOI substrate. |
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Others are relatively automatized and rigid, like an instance of a paw withdrawal reflex and a male stickleback's attack display. |
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The test involves the insertion of a rigid fiber-optic rhinoscope into the patient's nasal cavity. |
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This one-piece rigid coupling is ideally suited for use in line shaft applications and for instruments requiring highly precise shaft alignment. |
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The seat leather is overprocessed, and the plastics are rigid and rough-grained. |
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Bill had been a sheet metal worker and an engineer by trade and had helped make the rigid safety chains which are in place all around the dock. |
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On the other hand we see a literary culture breaking free of rigid models of biculturalism. |
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Beyond that, how will China evolve its rigid Internet policy? |
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Additionally, CNCs have a rigid rod-like nature in solution and surface charge resulting in lyotropic liquid crystalline behavior when they are dispersed in polar solvents. |
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He was a member of a small, rigid sect known as the Sandemanians. |
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Logicist images of mind have failed because they are too rigid and because they presume a complete knowledge of context before effective action can be taken. |
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Although firmly grounded in contemporary sciences of mind, cognitive ecology thus has little in common with the rigid rationalist logicism of classical forms of cognitivism. |
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A massively rigid bonded aluminum chassis, huge engine compartment cross-brace and cabin-visible FIA approved roll cage hint at its race heritage and structural rigidity. |
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Amina,Tunisian activist denied entrance to Lebanon Oh Lebanon, you're city people are so Liberal but your government is still as rigid as a Lebanon Cedar. |
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Without a rigid Islamist ideology, the ayatollahs would become irrelevant. |
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Ideal for use on rigid silicon panels throughout PV applications, this enhanced junction box features a standardized exterior box geometry for automated assembly. |
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Normally more cost-effective than amines for rigid urethanes. |
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The Supreme Court, being the rigid institution it is, has proven extremely reticent to ever overturn such decisions and delegate them to the wastebin of history. |
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Carbon blacks are characterized by their aciniform morphology or grape-like structure comprised of particles fused together as rigid structures termed aggregates. |
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Throscids resemble very small and stout click beetles with rigid bodies. |
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I had like pains all over and felt I could sick up and at the same time not sick up, and I began to feel like in distress, O my brothers, being fixed rigid too on this chair. |
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It was inhabited by a sapient humanoid race, and some of them were civilized enough to put it in Class V, and Colonial Office doctrine on Class V planets was rigid. |
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The more the backstay is tightened, the less the headstay will sag off to leeward, forming a rigid and more efficient arc along the luff of the genoa while beating to weather. |
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If a structure must be very rigid, concrete of very high strength may be specified, even much stronger than is required to bear the service loads. |
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A machine tool is a machine for shaping or machining metal or other rigid materials, usually by cutting, boring, grinding, shearing, or other forms of deformation. |
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The dynamics of a rigid body system is defined by its equations of motion, which are derived using either Newtons laws of motion or Lagrangian mechanics. |
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Incrementalism is the antithesis of intrusive central planning, which can create rigid work systems unable to deal with the actual problems faced at the grassroots level. |
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One area in which the Court of Chancery assumed a vital role was the enforcement of uses, a role that the rigid framework of land law could not accommodate. |
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Early law of the United States inherited the traditional English writ system, in the sense of a rigid set of forms of relief that the law courts were authorized to grant. |
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The Fundamental Constitutions of Carolina established a model in which a rigid social hierarchy placed slaves under the absolute authority of their master. |
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Cossack family values as expressed in 21st century Russia are simple, rigid, and seem very traditional compared to those of contemporary Western culture. |
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Gilbertsen reported on a long-term follow-up of rigid proctosigmoidoscopies of 21,140 adenomatous polyp patients attending a cancer detection center. |
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The longitude systems of most of those bodies with observable rigid surfaces have been defined by references to a surface feature such as a crater. |
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Due to rigid state planning and bureaucracy, the Soviets remained far behind technologically in chemistry, biology, and computers when compared to the First World. |
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A bone is a rigid organ that constitutes part of the vertebrate skeleton. |
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Whether flexible or rigid, most wings have a strong frame to give them their shape and to transfer lift from the wing surface to the rest of the aircraft. |
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The rigid shell means that turtles cannot breathe as other reptiles do, by changing the volume of their chest cavities via expansion and contraction of the ribs. |
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Turtles have rigid beaks and use their jaws to cut and chew food. |
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In polyatomic molecules, the molecule motion can be described by a rigid body rotation and internal vibration of atoms about their equilibrium position. |
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The crust and the cold, rigid, top of the upper mantle are collectively known as the lithosphere, and it is of the lithosphere that the tectonic plates are composed. |
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They form in early autumn and remain rigid during the winter. |
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After a stressful event, the histrionic patient often manifests swings from rigid overcontrol to uncontrolled intrusions and emotional repetition. |
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They dive with their bodies straight and rigid, wings tucked close to the body but reaching back, extending beyond the tail, before piercing the water like an arrow. |
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It was characterized by a rigid hierarchy and centralization. |
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However, in practice, this separation is not as rigid as it appears. |
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The themes continued largely unbroken into the 17th century, when artists such as Nicolas Poussin and Charles Le Brun represented of the more rigid classicism. |
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At the instigation of Colbert, whose rigid honesty was scandalised by Fouquet's large-handed and prodigal corruption, Louis determined to curb these soaring aspirations. |
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Again, these dates are meant as a tool to help understand the types of procedure in use, not as a rigid boundary where one system stopped and another began. |
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In geology, Eurasia is often considered as a single rigid megablock. |
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The two gownsmen lowered the rigid body. It lay straight as a board, supported by no more than its head on the chair-back, and its heels on the ground. |
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A sculptor's ideas must, I should guess, be somewhat rigid and inflexible, like the materials in which he works. Besides, Nollekens's style was comparatively hard and edgy. |
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High pressure directly ahead of and beside the projectile nose comminute and fracture the sand media, forming a rigid, conical false nose on the front of the projectile. |
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But we should not forget that the world was yet too young to have arrived at the rigid and sharply-defined systems of polytheism or allotheism to which we are accustomed. |
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