Twine said the write-off removed the necessity for the municipality to attempt to recover money that was irrecoverable. |
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Fasten this to the wall with eye bolts three to four inches from the wall to allow for ventilation and space for the vine to twine. |
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Viro continued to swim madly for the near riverbank, the twine biting deep into his wrists. |
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The inch diameter 8-foot stakes, set 2 feet apart and leaning to the middle, are lashed together with twine near the top. |
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If the string is a cotton type, like sisal twine, you can leave it on the ball but remove it from the stem. |
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This twine is now roped with a small thread of cotton, hemp or flax to keep the ends from projecting. |
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Secure these with a raffia, string or green gardener's twine bow, before filling with your chosen arrangement. |
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Gently wrap the fillets together with caul fat or tie together with butcher's twine. |
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Her works often consist of accumulations of old-fashioned, everyday objects that have been meticulously wrapped in white twine or cotton thread. |
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Natural hemp twine turns wooden fruits into monochromatic sculptures for a subtle and sophisticated centerpiece. |
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The poles which make up the trellis walls are linked at the joints by lengths of twine threaded through holes. |
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I also got a ball of hemp twine for the garden and a wooden washing up brush with replaceable real bristle heads. |
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We used to carry baked goods home in pink boxes tied with string, and our mail often came held together with twine. |
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A good fisherman weaves his own nets with twine and a needle made of whalebone. |
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An empty plastic 2 litre bottle is tied to a rock, or bag of stones with strong twine or string. |
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American companies little by little took control of the Mexican supply, making sisal twine cheaper and more reliable than it had been. |
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Tie with a piece of butcher's twine to form a bouquet garni, In a saucepan, add the Port and bouquet garni. |
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The bottom should be drawn up tightly, with a needleful of raffia, and a ball of twine of some bright harmonious color slipped in. |
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So bits of twine, a broken bread knife and half-empty bags of last year's mouldy bulb fibre are squirrelled away in my shed. |
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They had already busted a lot of bales while haying because someone had bought cheap twine and it had molded and rotted. |
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First she makes a little roll of her precious letters, wraps them in oiled silk, and binds them with twine. |
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Fill each pig leg with the stuffing, secure with butcher's twine, and set aside. |
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He removed some chipboard, some wood, and produced a ball of twine, and then asked me to help him carry it. |
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Compared to swathers with conventional tines, twine tines guarantee optimum raking quality, even at high work speeds. |
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Plastic should be reasonably clean and free of debris, such as twine and netting. |
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Attach clusters of hypericum sprigs to a wire wreath form by overlapping them and wrapping them with waxed florist's twine. |
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Plastic waste could be recycled and used to make plastic pens, and plastic twine. |
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Simple and complex sentences twine together, crammed with pinpointed details that capture the senses. |
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She is tall, regal, and dressed in long robes of finely braided black twine. |
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The logs, laid horizontally across the iron frame, are lashed to the crosspieces with sturdy twine. |
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In summer, twine strung between posts supports vining crops like pole beans. |
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Ivy leaves are at the top of the stem, and ivy vines twine around the bottom and connect to ivy leaves at the join. |
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The cat immediately began to twine in and out of his legs, mewling pitifully. |
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Whether they twine, cling, or ramble, climbing plants enhance good architecture and camouflage the not-so-good. |
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Climbing types reach 6 feet tall and can gracefully twine up fences and arbors, or ramble over the ground. |
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I go back and find some odd things like rope and natural jute twine packaged for the crafts market. |
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The mechanical reaper and later improvements created a huge United States market for binding twine. |
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She tied her pocket closed with jute twine by lacing it through holes she punched in the corners. |
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In our southern California garden Mexican sage thrives so well that we bind it with twine so it grows up where the hummingbirds get to it easier. |
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Wire wrapped around the ladder gives the vine tendrils plenty of places to twine around. |
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Bo watched the baler start to work, punching out leaf after leaf of what was to be a hay bale held together by twine. |
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Passing under the breezeways, there was no sound but the scrape of plastic and concrete, twine and dry skin. |
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Tarred marline is jute twine treated with a tarred solution for water resistance. |
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These threads are woven into textile yarns to produce sacks, carpet base, mats, rope and twine and many other materials. |
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Drape it over the lid, folding into little pleats around the edge, and secure with waxed twine or embroidery thread. |
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Plant a seedling next to each stake, and as the seedlings grow, coax them up the twine. |
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In the net lofts along the ship canal they tar their seine twine with paraffin to protect against salt water. |
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I can still recall that man standing there, the turkey standing beside him, with a loop of binder's twine around its neck. |
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Each handle is hand-stitched using vegetable dyed English tan leather with beeswaxed twine. |
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The protruding scimitar handle was bound with some kind of dark twine with a dark stone mounted on the pommel, set in silver. |
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He was a droll sight, with a battered shako and trousers made of old gunny sacks tied up with twine. |
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He pulled out several pads of spent drawing paper, some bound with twine, others filled with loose pages. |
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Alan patted a small packet wrapped in brown paper and twine that protruded from his trouser pocket. |
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Cuscuta contains at least 158 species that no longer possess leaves, but their stems twine around host plants producing numerous haustoria to obtain nutrients. |
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This guy would be good in a crisis, the kind of mate who could fashion a rainproof shelter and a meal for four from nothing but roadkill and a ball of twine. |
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Two hands in an attitude of prayer are bound together with twine. |
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She had a small cardboard sign of her own hanging by some twine from her neck. |
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It was a tiny box wrapped in plan brown parcel paper and tied with twine. |
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Recycle beer or other decorative bottles into tumblers by soaking a piece of garden twine in kero and tying around the bottle at the point you want to separate. |
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It might be on a closet shelf or perhaps in the attic, wrapped tightly in thick twine. |
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But the traditional way of attaching them to the wreath ring is to bind them with one long piece of twine, wrapping it three times around the ring for each sprig. |
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As she uncomfortably lowered herself onto the chair on the guest side of his desk, he pulled a sheaf of parchment tied together with twine from a desk drawer. |
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So, armed with a length of twine, I set off to capture the dog. |
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On it, the frazzled remains of some poor beast were nicely complemented by rosti so thick and chewy it bore a strong resemblance to gardening twine. |
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The earliest-known kenaf production was in 4000 B.C., and the plant has traditionally been used in the making of rope, sacking, twine and matting. |
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Attaching food with skewers, toothpicks, fishing line, and twine. |
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A simpler version of the common bend with its ends in the same direction is used to join binder twine in a hay baling machine. |
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You plunge your hand exploringly into the drawer, and bring up a long roll wound thickly with twine of all kinds and colors. |
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Also, when fish gilled there wasn't as much extra twine to tangle in, so they were easier to release from the net. |
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Note each palm leaf section was only several lines, written longitudinally across the leaf, and bound by twine to the other sections. |
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Rope is thicker and stronger than similarly constructed cord, line, string, and twine. |
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The graveyard wall was in good repair, although, surprisingly, the narrow gate's sneck was smashed and it was held-to by a loop of binder twine. |
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Attach a piece of wire or twine at the back of the wire frame as a loop to hang. |
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Stretch twine across a board or wall and decide where you want to place thumbtack or nail. |
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Cover in chicken wire or criss cross in twine so that you can suspend it via ribbon or wire. |
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A few leaves are sometimes tied with twine and other herbs to form a bouquet garni. |
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Note that the burlap and twine are often nylon and totally rot-proof and will eventually choke roots and plant stems. |
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In bowl, shitakes and ginger mixture and stir to combine, line chicken cavity with a shiso leaf and top with rice mixture Roll chickens tightly and tie with butcher's twine. |
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This strong jute bag is packed full of goodies, including a harvesting knife, dibber, stainless steel trowel, twine, seeds and more so is perfect for those just starting out. |
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The man's carrying basket is often split at the back from top to bottom and loosely laced together with a twine, enabling the carrier to expand his load if desired. |
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When dodder seeds germinate in spring, thin, yellowish stems twine around whatever plants they touch, extracting water and nutrients from them through rootlike haustoria. |
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