The color alternations intensify at various moments, as though attempting to overwhelm the viewer's sensorial apparatus. |
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The so-called sleep movements of leaves are determined by the daily alternations of light and darkness. |
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Ghana's subequatorial climate is warm and humid, with distinct alternations between rainy summer and dry winters. |
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She has published on verb alternations like decausativization, cognate objects, and resultatives. |
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He plays with sharp alternations of mood, from the high-spirited to the melancholic in a single sentence or musical cue. |
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These alternations result from vowel sequences which are unique to derived verb stems. |
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Even when produced by the same manufacturer, each was subjected to unique alternations. |
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There are alternations as regard falsehood and simulation in Gaius and Flaccus. |
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Side agreements, amendments and alternations of this portal user contract require the written form to be effective. |
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Warranty expires, when the claim was caused by alternations by unauthorised personnel or using parts of foreign origin. |
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Stratification also may result from successive flows of liquid lava or alternations between flows and ashfalls. |
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Generally, the alternations of refrains and intervening episodes tally with alternations of the tutti and soli groups, respectively. |
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Revolving door alternations between civilian and military rule continued in countries ranging from Nigeria to Burundi, Chad to Congo. |
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Hausa morphology is characterized by complex alternations of sound and tone sequences. |
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Compared with many land birds, therefore, most seabirds are accustomed to alternations of feast and famine. |
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The human spirit thrives on alternations of toil and rest, pain and relief, hope and satisfaction, danger and security. |
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The expected service life of the standard design is around 1 million load alternations. |
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It is the town of lordliness, absolute harmony and alternations. |
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Indeed, the Valjoux 7750 does not usurp its tractor reputation: 28000 alternations per hour and 42h of power reserve. |
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Careful design alternations during the refabrication process can facilitate this option. |
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Characterized by an impeccable finishing, it is a certified chronometer, which beats 28.800 alternations per hour. |
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Other, shorter cycles linked to star movements punctuate climate alternations. |
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If history is any guide a lot of this diplomacy was doubtless clumsily done, in alternations between proffers of carrots and threats of the stick. |
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This Chronograph model is fitted with the L705 automatic selfwinding mechanical movement, producing 28,800 alternations per hour and offering a power reserve of 46 hours. |
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From here Beethoven propels us through a sonata-form movement of bold harmonic changes, startling alternations of loud and soft, and an obsessive display of the pervasive rhythmic motif often described as dactylic. |
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Perturbance that may have ecological consequences can include increases or decreases in abundance, changes in spatial or seasonal distribution, and other kinds of alternations that need to be assessed on a case by case basis. |
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Its technical characteristics make it familiar with its cousin, with a 60-hour power reserve in spite of its thinness, 21,600 alternations per hour, shockproof, but no accurate setting. |
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All of these serve to eliminate the various alternations in the Old French verb paradigm. |
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This produces a number of orthographic alternations in verbs whose pronunciation is entirely regular. |
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Forms throughout the inflectional paradigm usually exhibit morphophonemic alternations. |
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In PIE, vowel alternations called ablaut were frequent and occurred in many types of word, not only in verbs. |
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Not having a past tense at all, they obviously also had no vowel alternations between present and past. |
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However, as in all other strong verbs, consonant alternations were almost entirely eliminated in favour of the voiceless alternants. |
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The problems stem from complex but regular alternations and mergers among the above phones in various positions. |
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Apophony is exemplified in English as the internal vowel alternations that produce such related words as. |
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Various prosodic elements, such as tone, syllable length, and stress, may be found in alternations. |
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Due to the large number of load alternations, the service life of the brake is determined both by the mechanical components of the brake itself and the useful life of the rotor, which is based on friction energy. |
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Your songwriting is quite rich: dissonances, alternations between clear and metal vocals are fully part of your music, but guitar solos can hardly be found. |
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There are occasional exceptions where alternations between the hard and soft sound occur before different suffixes. |
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Only in the areas with distinct seasonal alternations between wet and dry conditions kaolinite was found. |
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The spirit of the original text has remained virtually unchanged and the latest amendments passed at the Tunis Congress in June 2003 make no substantial alternations to its essence. |
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This also applies to products already on order provided that such alternations can be made without subsequential changes being necessary in specifications already agreed. |
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Without the ability to pursue alternative social and economic policies, governments and parties are simply alternations of competing alliances of ethno-political patronage networks. |
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The change in the average realized price for other species is mostly attributable to alternations in the mix of products included in that category. |
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The concept that fits it enjoys pleasant alternations between dark and meditative moments, and unceasing whirlies led by their undeniable sense of narration. |
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Prosodic alternations are sometimes analyzed as not as a type of apophony but rather as prosodic affixes, which are known, variously, as suprafixes, superfixes, or simulfixes. |
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These include specific processes that produce surface-level alternations, for example, palatalization, the status of glides, and vowel neutralization. |
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