That the large financial institutions, which invest the insurance funds, have been able to provide finance for all comers. |
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In a clear and lucid way, he was able to offer instruction about drawing the human form. |
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One of the tragedies of documentary filmmaking is not being able to include everyone in the movie. |
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Thus, they know us well and, indeed, our respondents made great efforts and we were able to devise a formal instrument for them to complete. |
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Charles will be 57 this year and we still haven't been able to find a good work experience placement for him. |
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Based on experimental evidence he was able to conjecture certain laws which were not verified until many years later. |
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Ms Reed is hoping that once she has graduated she will be able to find a job as interesting. |
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If people want to find God or religion, it is something they ought to be able to do themselves, and should not be pushed or hassled into it. |
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It's fun to learn magic tricks and be able to do close up conjuring, and it's also an interesting learning process. |
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I hope to be able to manage the combination or integration of these databases. |
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Mr Clarke said he walks to work when the weather is fine but in the winter he appreciates being able to call on a lift. |
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However, it is intended that directors will be able to elect to keep the old rules in place. |
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So far we've been able to finesse it, but so far is never a promise of how it's going to end. |
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For one to two weeks after that, you'll be able to move the top two joints on your fingers, but your knuckles must remain still. |
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Yen knew without a doubt that even if the squeaky clean Don had something to do with it, they'd never be able to finger him. |
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Most patients were able to interact directly with the computer, and assistance was provided as required. |
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Winners will be able to enjoy a delicious finger buffet prior to the start of the movie, and will also receive a Coke and popcorn voucher. |
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He said that two organisms belonged to the same species if they are able to interbreed and produce fertile offspring. |
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He has told me of a dispute regarding whether he should be able to possess and use firearms. |
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Viewers should be able to see 100 or so meteors per hour, some of them fireballs. |
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Their success consists in being able to discuss their differences without letting it destroy the rest of their relationship. |
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Mrs Southworth, who has had a metal pin and plate inserted into her foot, is on crutches and will not be able to walk unaided for many months. |
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Yes, I know you may not even be able to pronounce it, but we have worked like the devil on this case and all her ulcers healed previously. |
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The Knight, encased in plate armour, was heavy, but Doremi was able to drag him out to safety. |
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He leapt back out onto the fire escape and decided to head for the roof and hope that he would be able to jump to a building. |
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Adults will be able to try their hand at computing, art, interior design, guitar, massage, nail art and much more. |
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At least the anointed will be able to indulge in conspicuous displays of moral vanity as they fulminate publicly. |
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But the more drunk she got the more constant her interjections became and the less actual material the comics were able to do. |
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You must have a fire hydrant near to your home to be able to put out the fire. |
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Mary and her conspirators openly discussed their plans in these encrypted letters, as they believed no one else would be able to read them. |
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One is the performance advantage of being able to interleave commands to different physical spindles. |
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Like the Dalai Lama, she would then be able to work the relevant political and media constituencies. |
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If the primer were indented from the base of the canister, the firing pin may not be able to properly strike the primer. |
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Students who have formally intermitted are able to seek permission to continue to have access to the MBBS program and email facilities. |
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Officers were able to use the new order on the first day it was implemented. |
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In November 2002, the UK media made great play of the fact that a passenger was able to travel to Zambia on her husband's passport. |
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Joey had internalized the language from our session, and was able to access and transform it for use in a later conversation. |
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A person who is internally happy will be able to get past life's obstacles. |
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Being able to use the Internet from anywhere in or around your house is fantastic. |
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Patricia Dillon pointed out that since his statement last May, Dunlop would have been able to consult his diary. |
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Beyond adapting humans to low gravity environments the biggest need is to be able to produce consumables for longer term living. |
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She backed out of the office barely able to contain herself from skipping and jumping about like some demented grasshopper. |
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Firemen then were able to contain that blaze, preventing it from spreading to neighbouring businesses. |
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I think you can use rough interrogation, you may be able to use trickery, questions. |
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Wouldn't it be nice if sport fishermen were able to drag up catches like that from our waters? |
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Legally, you'll be able to rant away, apparently to yourself, in your car, and the plod won't trouble you. |
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They should also be able to easily receive contraceptive counseling and contraceptives. |
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The more slowly muscles contract, the more force they are able to deliver, which is why heavy weights can only be lifted slowly. |
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In this departure from the norm one was able to identify the possible source of a severe future economic contraction when the asset bubble burst. |
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If he made a plow blade just a little bit off, the farmer who bought it would not be able to till his fields properly. |
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I was an experienced farmer, able to plow the land, plant, fertilize, weed and cut the sugar cane. |
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It would probably take them a week to be able to shovel out a snowplow so it can plow the main roads, never mind the secondary streets. |
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You will have an intravenous drip to maintain your bodily fluids until you are able to eat and drink. |
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I had thought earlier that I might be able to get to sleep, but after 2 hours of trying fitfully, I am giving in. |
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It provides the coldest tone and the greatest contrast I have been able to achieve with the camera. |
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To be able to understand that better, we need to compare and contrast it to Mercury itself. |
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All this really means of course is that if someone wants to find out about you in intricate detail they will be able to. |
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Ideally, anyone plugged into the system should be able to go down the checklist and create a desired result. |
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Like Charlie, I hope and pray that everyone is able to get out there and vote. |
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If, on the other hand, members of organisations do engage in acts which contravene the criminal law then the law is able to deal with them. |
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This is because to refuse treatment would contravene the principle that people should be able to move freely to work in another EC country. |
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And we introduce another device which would allow the surgeon to be able to see where on the heart they're working. |
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Caroline, who is a singer and takes part in local talent competitions, was never able to get up on stage and introduce her own songs. |
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Can anyone imagine that they would shovel that cash to their friends and campaign contributors the minute they were able to do so? |
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You are unlikely to be able to fit your sink yourself, as a plumber needs to connect the pipework. |
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The more alcohol you take in, the less able you are to control your behaviour. |
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Because of your medical condition you weren't able to control yourself properly. |
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Section 3 requires that the accused should have made reasonable efforts to control himself within the limits of what he is reasonably able to do. |
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We were able to control statistically for differences in clutch initiation date. |
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She said the value of houses has plummeted so low landlords are able to buy property at rock bottom cost and then rent them out for profit. |
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We're trusting our intuition a lot more and being able to rely on each other's intuition. |
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Ostreids were also able to fix themselves to movable objects such as driftwood or cephalopods, thereby further facilitating their dispersal. |
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British firms were able to plunder raw materials and labour, make profitable investments and sell their products. |
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We have tried using a bucket of water and a plunger and finally are able to force everything down. |
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Why shouldn't an NHS patient be able to book an appointment for an operation at their convenience, just like they could if they paid for it? |
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A sum of over 800 was raised, which means that the committee will be able to send two invalids from the parish on the diocesan pilgrimage in May. |
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A pluralist, able and fairly vigorous in the discharge of his duties, he was unfortunate in the political circumstances of his early episcopate. |
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The Elizabethan pluralist clergy were able to concentrate their agricultural efforts to good effect. |
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All conventioneers will be able to attend these talks, because the speaker will be the only session scheduled in a particular time slot. |
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She asked, inventing a street name so that the girl would not be able to say without looking at the map. |
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She suggested to Irving that he might be able to buy the plates, since they were not listed on the archive inventories. |
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By 1683, the committee was able to reconcile shipments, with inventories and trade, and asked why certain quantities were being requested. |
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They are able to keep the fizz inside because the contents of the can are under higher pressure. |
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Given enough plutonium or enriched uranium, he thought they might have been able to produce a bomb in two to three years. |
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During the final half-hour, it fizzled out as a contest, neither side able to break the deadlock. |
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He lost so much fat that he was able to transform his flabby body into a shredded physique complete with ripped abs! |
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Forward contracts guarantee that a company will be able to convert a specified sum of money on a certain date. |
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Those enterprises that have managed to maintain good investment-grade credit ratings may be able to raise capital by selling convertible bonds. |
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We were then able to start our feasibility trial in the United States for an investigational device exemption. |
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It is also how we want to see racing go forward and to be able to convey our wishes. |
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Upon completion of this course you will be able to communicate with spirit and convey the information you receive. |
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You may be able to extend the tower, provided you do it with flair and sensitivity. |
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Freedom to escape means being able to go beyond the conventional means of mediation and to interact more directly, more convivially, with others. |
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These companies, which convoyed daily, were able to provide their own security. |
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With abandoned ruins pockmarking the countryside, he was able to collect the building material at no cost. |
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A pod of whales was reported off Back Beach earlier this week and those quick enough were able to catch a glimpse of them. |
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You'll be able to subscribe to the podcast for free or listen to a streaming audio version. |
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Louie wasn't able to drive it, but he lived his dream in bringing up his brother and the other people he's been involved with. |
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They were both fluent in sign language and were able to maintain a loving relationship for over 60 years. |
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She admits it was thanks to the club's coaches that she was able to reach the heights of the Olympic podium. |
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No one is going to be able to get that document so in the end we're having to deal with some indisputable facts and some poetic licence. |
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Judging from the way his nostrils flared, I wouldn't be able to change whatever set route he was on. |
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I like big noses, especially when the person is able to flare the nostrils at will. |
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Thru a small telescope you may be able to make out the fact that it is actually a disk and not a point of light. |
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For example, the human eye should be able to tell apart two points of light an inch apart at a distance of about a 100 metres. |
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Perhaps, if he had reverted to the Irish language, he might have been able to make his point more clearly. |
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However, sophisticated readers have always been able to track and utilize rapidly changing points of view in print narratives. |
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If we don't stop these groups, tomorrow you won't be able to milk cows or keep chickens in coops. |
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He therefore has much less of the baggage that converts often bring, and he is able to write in a largely irenic and fraternal manner. |
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With a flat-bottomed boat you should be able to surf as well sideways as you do frontwards or backwards. |
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They are not known for being politically cohesive, for being able to work cooperatively. |
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She as well able to deal with male chauvinism while losing none of her dignity and poise, Mr McCarthy said. |
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I don't pretend to be able to explain the bizarre political attitudes now poisoning much of Europe. |
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Nations under the iron-handed control of dictators have been getting ever closer to being able to produce their own nukes. |
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To succeed at the top levels of poker you need your head, your heart and your groin to be able to take it. |
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After copping, they may then not be able to obtain new syringes because local pharmacies and needle exchange services may be closed or far away. |
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Bill Taylor wants everyone to be able to afford a big flat-screen television. |
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With a little help from my poles I was able to cruise down valley for another mile or so. |
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He's yelling something about not being able to find the copha, so I'd better go. |
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The prices for single copies and subscriptions were relatively high, but the elite audience was able to pay the price. |
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Since an intelligent designer is not restricted to incremental change, he is able to create irreducible mechanisms without any difficulty. |
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Not only did he understand the new tactics, he was also able to put them into practice using a smaller army made up of irregular troops. |
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Yours truly knocked over twenty bottles and woke up next morning able to take Gold in the pole vault and long jump, and then run a marathon. |
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Part of pole-vaulting's appeal lay in its not being something we were able to do ourselves. |
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We could send in some of our specially trained police dogs who may be able to tackle someone in this situation. |
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On the first postoperative day, the patient was able to pass flatus and tolerate a regular diet. |
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We will be able to continue to manage without Ken's irrepressible scaremongering for the foreseeable future. |
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Previously, through coppicing and replanting, estates were able to sustain their timber supplies into the indefinite future. |
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It was a joking reference to the Hispanic flavour of the venue, but even being able to joke at this stage of the game is a display of confidence. |
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Any flaws in my plan that he is able to spot will be corrected before implementation. |
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Breeding couples are generally able to successfully fledge a chick only once in nine years. |
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Should you manage to purify yourself, your will still be able to journey to paradise. |
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No one has ever been able to demonstrate this, for the simple reason that it isn't true. |
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As the name suggests, succulents store water in their thick, fleshy leaves, thus being able to go for lengthy periods without any water. |
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The plant's shiny, fleshy leaves, stems and underground tuber store water, so it's able to go weeks without water. |
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John's own interest is rugby but he is well able to appreciate a good game of polo. |
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All these bones articulate with other bones and are able to make tiny interdependent movements, as well as bend or flex themselves. |
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Critics charged that the nation was no longer able flexibly to meet its strategic obligations. |
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Because we kept our schedule flexible, we were able to return to the plaza again and again. |
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The little gnome was scatterbrained and flighty, barely able to hold a conversation. |
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He is able to get outside his flinty, tightly wrapped personality just enough to convince a majority of voters that he deserves another chance. |
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This means that the user will be able to combine italics, bold and underlined font if needed. |
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But sometimes your personal data is loaned out to third parties, and that's the weak spot where crackers are able to break in. |
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Then again, I probably wouldn't have been able to hear much ukulele over Johnson's overdriven polyrhythms and unusual Dorian modes. |
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They will be able to tell you which farm their beef came from never mind the flipping country. |
|
Sugar surveys the great lake of lavender before her, and measures it against a pomander of petals such as she might be able to hold in her hand. |
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For once, the lineout maul was regenerated closer to the posts and O'Gara was able to float his pass towards an overlap near the left touchline. |
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I've just deleted a very long and somewhat pompous sociology essay that you probably wouldn't have been able to bear reading all the way through. |
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I've also put in some pondweed, and the water's murky enough that they should be able to find food in there. |
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His eyes adjusted to the lack of light automatically, and he was able to see details as if they were under the light of a flood lamp. |
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They will be able to relax in the plaza during the day and at night when the city's ancient walls will be lit by floodlights. |
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From next October, Irish dealers will be able to dip into the much larger pool of cars supplied to British dealers. |
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Under the old system the Council was able to correct errors in an application by simply contacting the applicant. |
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During that period I was able to have an insight into the game of pool and snooker as well. |
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I had hoped to be able to train in power tumbling, because the tumbling surface is not as hard on the ankles as beam and floor exercise. |
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For about 10 years Bacon had no personal contact with the outside world although he was able to correspond by letter. |
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Searching around the internet, I wasn't able to find anything to corroborate this statement. |
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Hillary is glad you have been able to unburden your soul, but you are making a few false assumptions yourself, my poppet. |
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Only look at it if you don't have to be anywhere for hours, coz you won't be able to tear yourself away. |
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By now, everyone should be able to do a flow chart or a diagram describing the whole process. |
|
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They were gentle people who went quietly about their lives, always willing and glad to be able to lend a helping hand to neighbours and friends. |
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You may be able to turn my mother and sister's heads with your flowery speeches but not mine. |
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The cosmopolitans are able to project their vision out from New York and Hollywood, but people aren't listening anymore. |
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For a while, Dean was able to shake off the flubs, but he was peaking too soon. |
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If there is an appeal, then we would be able to recover our costs against the legal aid fund. |
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With some professional help and regular self-therapy, he was able to develop fluency in most speech situations. |
|
Living in a foreign land, not being fluent in the language, yet still being able to communicate can be quite an accomplishment. |
|
For that same reason, arrays of bent nanotubes should be able to detect fluidic flow, he says. |
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Being able to prevent costly repairs is crucial on such expensive machinery. |
|
Open source software that can be ported to a variety of systems might be able to engender those more general supercomputing ecosystems. |
|
But not everyone would be able to slide from bottom-space to performance mode as fluidly as Jae does. |
|
They would not be able to survive on those types of wages, given the cost of living. |
|
People are used to being able to set up completely customized news sites using various portals or news aggregators. |
|
Visitors to the Richard III Museum are still able to operate the portcullis's mechanism, and it could be lowered if necessary. |
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To create a medieval feel, the towers will have arrow slits and cars will be able to drive under the archway beneath a raised portcullis. |
|
Residents are also less able to diversify their investment portfolios internationally or to make use of exchange rate futures and swap markets. |
|
We were able to hire experienced blade shearers who stayed in the cottage on the farm. |
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It is through their portraits and their stories that I am able to tell another. |
|
The author deftly portrays Mitchell's cavalier attitude toward the proceedings and his consequent massacre at the hands of an able prosecutor. |
|
Or at least reporters would be less able to portray the movement as divided. |
|
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Those who were a little more flush with cash might have been able to invest in a burger and carton of chips before thumbing their way home. |
|
If operators are able to place a dish flush against a wall, whispers can be discerned. |
|
The boat's engine had coughed and wheezed for a good ten minutes before he had been able to coax it into working order. |
|
Janet was able to find his letters from the Mediterranean that alluded to his illness, as he asked for cough sweets to be sent to him. |
|
She now wants to use her qualifications to be able to counsel other people who suffer with clinical depression. |
|
But he counsels caution, and insists that patients should be able to make a free and informed decision before undergoing the treatment. |
|
Yes, I think post 2010, it's only post 2010 that we will be able to see the impact of positiveness in our country. |
|
When Carroll rejoined, the track had gone off and it took a couple of tours before the flying Irishman was able to put in another quick lap. |
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It is because of this that we are able to see the hint of the possibilities of some real solutions. |
|
I would wish, if possible, to be able to get to Canberra by lunch time on Monday. |
|
One must be able to withstand both the physical and mental attacks directed towards them, and be able to counter with their own attacks. |
|
Well, if I were able to get it published, I'd likely be arrested, possibly beaten, and probably imprisoned. |
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Couples will also be able to post notice of their impending marriage anywhere in the country, rather than in the area where they live. |
|
Only one in five of the major global pharmaceutical companies posting results last week was able to announce an increase in profits. |
|
The Royal Mail has told him they would continue to deliver his post when they were able to do so. |
|
I didn't want Sunday to have an early warning of my arrival so that she would be able to fob me off with pre-planned excuses. |
|
The company was not able to commit to providing any more jobs in these postcodes or in our part of London. |
|
Jenn, there is no way you would be able to tell me that this wasn't a counterfeit bill. |
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I knew he didn't mind, this way him and Porsha would be able to fog up the windows without having to worry about me being there. |
|
Before the tanks had set off, this order was countermanded once it was clear that they would not be able to reach Charleroi fast enough. |
|
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Fermanagh teams would fold when the finishing line was in sight, they wouldn't be able to cross it. |
|
Paul changed the blog to P.739 in order to be able to discuss postal issues from a postie's point of view. |
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He added that the council may be able to plant foliage to make the rocks look better. |
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It was a joy to be able to show the athletes and their mentors the Museum and the national folklife as depicted here in the Museum. |
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Others, however, will not be able to ignore the relevance of this story to current counterterrorism operations. |
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Functional mobility was measured by Timed-up-and-go and the number of days post-op that the subject was able to walk 500 feet independently. |
|
No one had been able to isolate stem cells from the hair follicle in this way before. |
|
The supervisors may be able to exert political pressure, but have little other power over the county's transportation plans. |
|
We had not yet been able to find the way to overcome this obstacle to the revolution in our countries. |
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If only he had been able to go to the country when he wanted, instead of having to wait nearly 12 agonising months. |
|
Imagine being able to count on your club qualifying for the postseason through one-quarter century. |
|
Patients should be able to participate in treatment and long-term follow-up. |
|
A councillor frustrated at not being able to give a pot of cash away to people in Bolton is overjoyed after 14 groups applied for the money. |
|
Frame six of a match King eventually won was literally a comedy of errors, neither player able to pot black and kill the frame. |
|
In order to be able to join in, they were required to contribute some precious ration coupons and a tablespoon of sugar. |
|
But as the progressiveness of the illness takes its course, they will not be able to hide it. |
|
The inference seems to be that coursework always benefits the student, that it is a means by which slow students are better able to succeed. |
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It is important that it be able to act in a timely manner if there are problems to do with scrapie, mad cow disease, or foot-and-mouth disease. |
|
Knights now had to be more than just brave warriors, but also polished courtly gentlemen, able to converse with and entertain ladies. |
|
Once or twice her feet lost their footing, but with a firm grasp of the rope, Charlie was able to regain her balance, and continue downward. |
|
|
Her grip and footing slipped numerous times but she was able to reach the top. |
|
Soccer develops great footwork because you have to be able to use either foot. |
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Can stop and start without losing momentum and is able to work back inside with good footwork and the use of club and rip moves. |
|
Readers were able to vote for their favourite and the tough decision came down to the judges. |
|
You will be able to draw on your company scheme while working for the same firm. |
|
Women want to be respected for being women, and they want to be able to respect a man for being a man. |
|
In exchange for this, you also lose the chance of being able to benefit from a temporary fall in price. |
|
Students have been able to have water bottles on their desks for three years. |
|
God will get you in the end, the devil will not be able to save you from his fury, and then you will be for it. |
|
So instead of potentially being able to use the copter as cover you have to expose yourself to attack. |
|
Eventually, with the help of the British Epileptic Association, they were able to arrange cover. |
|
Many have been selling shares that they don't own in the expectation that they will be able to take stock in the placing to cover their position. |
|
I do feel that they are getting a bad deal in terms of coverage and I was glad that I was able to do a little bit to put that right. |
|
But if Levitt's data is as solid as he makes it out to be, he should be able to get a cover story in a major magazine. |
|
However, they did not realise that the DNA test would also be able to expose their attempts at a cover-up. |
|
Surely everyone must have been able to hear the erratic pounding of her coward heart. |
|
The more cowardly completely lost courage, but the more able and subtle did not think it necessary to give up. |
|
This man has carried out a cowardly attack on an elderly woman who he knew would not be able to defend herself. |
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Even the Texans were able to cowboy up in holding the Dolphins' defense without a sack. |
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Past generations of economists were able to make forecasts based on trends in industrial activity. |
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You should also be able to demonstrate a visible order book underpinning your financial forecasts. |
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Rather, she would be able to pay off the lender if you don't pay, and then she could go after you and foreclose on the house. |
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That is, neither we, our forefathers, nor our progeny would have been or would be able to survive if one followed this rule. |
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At that point my mind went to mush and I wasn't able to compute very much info. |
|
The blondes of this world can convey an innocence us dark-haired chicks will never be able to pull off, even when we wear our hair in pigtails. |
|
Thirdly, he may be conscious and able to comprehend what he is doing but due to his mental condition be unaware that it is wrong. |
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Only when we understand that will we be able to help them comprehend why it disturbs us so much. |
|
I understood and comprehended what would take most children years to take in and be able to use. |
|
When smaller, more powerful computers became available, astronomers were finally able to examine data more comprehensively. |
|
We learnt this from an old ferryman who was able to take his small boat over to deliver supplies from nearby farms. |
|
The new plant is now fertile, able to disperse and reproduce, sometimes beyond the ranges of its parents. |
|
However, for Kate Wilkie it will be the first time she will be able to enjoy a festive celebration in four years. |
|
Fungi are not able to ingest their food like animals do, nor can they manufacture their own food the way plants do. |
|
One of Mrs Wilson's biggest regrets was never being able to pilot an aircraft. |
|
It is well able to deconstruct political spin and identify truths which are being concealed or denied. |
|
While the movement lost support and membership internally, it was able to conceal this from the public. |
|
Yesterday Allison was able to fuel me with soup and hot chocolate and occasionally mop my fevered brow with the damp sleeve of her dressing gown. |
|
The Thals are one of the very few powers in this world able to make me root for the Daleks. |
|
If we lose or draw, then I wouldn't see us being able to make up that ground in so few games. |
|
Luckily for me I had a three pin connector around from a much older case and was able to make my own adaptor. |
|
|
Warner was able to portray himself as a courageous politician by raising taxes while at the same time pinning the blame on the Republicans. |
|
Ann says her son is now able to focus and concentrate in school, making his life a lot easier, and giving her hope for his future. |
|
But all too often you're not able to take full advantage of your eccentric capabilities because you fail concentrically first. |
|
We are actually able to keep our costs down through our volunteers and doing things in-house. |
|
I respond becoming even more unnerved, not one bit liking the idea of her being able to read my innermost thoughts. |
|
The Ravens could have pounded the ball twice and, if unsuccessful, still been able to stop the clock for a field goal. |
|
Whenever she is able to keep her hysterics in check, it sounds as if she's trying to present herself as innocently doe-eyed as possible. |
|
He observes innocently that the governor won't be able to marry them the next day. |
|
Come fair weather or foul, the people of Milnrow and Newhey have always been able to rely on Dave Ainley for their daily pinta. |
|
Visitors will be able to trace innovations in the design of chairs over the last hundred years and even sit on some of them. |
|
Being able to focus on the target instead of the handgun's sights enhances your field of vision. |
|
It should be open to innovative ideas and must be able to deal with urban reform issues from time to time. |
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Some of them we will only be able to play three times before they come inoperative. |
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Finally, rate how well the ceilings have been able to retain their appearance and condition. |
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Children, the old and people in weak physical condition or with an impaired immune system are less able to resist such diseases. |
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Officers will be able to call in from the scene to an inputter who will put the crime details onto the computer system. |
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At least I was able to satisfy my inquisitors that I wasn't a Freemason, something which evidently bothers the powers that be a good deal. |
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He never interrogated anyone in inquisitorial fashion about their beliefs and condemned them, but was able to look into their hearts. |
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Why a beautiful women would want to work around mentally insane men all day was something Rachel would never be able to figure out. |
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I believe that couples should be able to split their incomes fifty-fifty for taxation purposes. |
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To be brutally honest, if England weren't able to muster a fightback in this match then they should be forever branded as the worst to tour. |
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After leading the team out the boys will then be able to watch the game at pitchside before returning home on Monday. |
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The group were also able to walk down the tunnel to the pitch side and touch the famous 'This Is Anfield' sign. |
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Ideally, he'd be able to claim that the Democrats' filibusters are unprecedented. |
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I made it because I needed it, and it's nice that it was able to fill a need for others as well. |
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As exciting as that is, it leaves fans here at home wondering when they'll be able to get their fill of the willowy musician. |
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In many instances, a single trial or set of trials will not be able to address all the issues of interest to both agencies. |
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I mean pretty soon instead of being able to pick who we want to marry others will be picking for us. |
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I have more hair than I would've thought for a pixie cut, but I'll be able to figure it out better once I've washed it and styled it myself. |
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In due course I was able to enjoy a tasty and filling snack with adequate green salad to accompany it. |
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He said as an independent company he was not able to compete with supermarkets or other petrol filling stations that are part of a large chain. |
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She said her colleague said she could not deal with him that day and was eventually able to placate him. |
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Less, because consumers are now more willing and able to shop online, which may result in fewer in-store visits. |
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As well as a huge range of stalls and a car boot sale with about 150 pitches, people were able to enjoy entertainment provided by majorettes and a falconry display. |
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During the year, researchers are able to develop their knowledge of the UK broadcasting market and learn about writing programme proposals and pitching ideas. |
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Software and hardware configurations keep most of the intruders at bay, but being able to recognise abnormal activity when it occurs seems to be the best method. |
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I would like her to be able to conversate in our native language. |
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Her fluster taken out of her by his kind words, Ral was only able to stare up at him, her crystal blue eyes searching for any malice that he might have. |
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Pennies are a completely useless coin, not able to be used in vending machines, toll roads and perhaps not least importantly, Las Vegas coin counters. |
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Such cases of resale of computer will be difficult because the buyer will not be able to insure them against theft without an invoice in their name. |
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