The next stage was to have short curly hair kept back off the face as in the photo of Josie and a friend dressed for a formal occasion. |
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However, the Irish did not simply escape paying taxes at the same level as in Britain, for army regiments were garrisoned in Ireland. |
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In some locations they may form major deposits, as in the case of garnierite, a major nickel ore. |
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The hero's journey, however, need not be anywhere as simplistic as in the brief precis above. |
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Wool is almost invariably used in crewel work and colourways are not as elaborate as in chain stitch. |
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The person to the left of the caller starts the play, which is played and pegged as in normal cribbage. |
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The basic gameplay in Back to Baghdad remains the same as in last year's game. |
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In Legong Keraton, as in much Balinese dance, the movement is closely associated with the intricate rhythms produced by the gamelan ensemble. |
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This species is found throughout the Atlantic Forest, as well as in gallery forests of Cerrado vegetation from southern to northeastern Brazil. |
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The music is just as loud as in the previous films, and the gags and one-liners are more often lame than funny. |
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The primary difference is that the young are not raised in a special pouch, as in marsupials. |
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It produces over 2,000 pints of beer every week for free house pubs as far away as Cheshire and Nottingham, as well as in Yorkshire. |
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In Chomsky's interview, as in so many progressive analyses, the discussion ends there. |
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Elsewhere, the typical Roman cruciform plan of main streets was retained, or even introduced from new as in Oxford, Wallingford, and Cricklade. |
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Taxis are plentiful and can be found at major hotels as well as in main tourist areas or cruising the streets. |
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Katy chose to focus on design, as in functional contemporary design rather than fine art and sculpture. |
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The camp is back with all the usual mix of fun, activities and medical treatment as in previous years. |
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That curved lines as they can be varied in their degrees of curvature as well as in their lengths, begin on that account to be ornamental. |
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One can only hope that the opportunity will not be frittered away as in the past. |
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Receptive females usually show a preference for males with large size, large ornaments, and high courtship activity, as in the guppy. |
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Plants exhibit as much diversity in the warmth and length of time necessary to mature their fruit as in their frondescence and flowering. |
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Evidence of the Chinese talent for cooking abounds, in the humblest homes as in the costliest restaurants. |
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It is a group of presentations hosted by an artist curator or, as in one case, architect. |
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In a nutshell, the series went in favour of the team that was more professional and proficient in skills as well as in strategies. |
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They are seeking fulfillment in career pursuits as well as in their family life. |
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They can be used interchangeably to complement curries and simply cooked meats, fish, and poultry, such as in our chicken salad. |
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The articular surface itself is concave, not convex as in many chelonioids. |
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This phenomenon allows for a sectioning effect without using emission pinholes as in confocal microscopy. |
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The pints and quarts explanation sounds reasonable, provided that men in bars used to drink beer by the quart, as in fact they did. |
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The use of Pinyin poses problems of distinguishing homographs, as in the 24 etymologically unrelated forms spelt lian. |
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Less than two percent of the Chapman and Greenough river foreshores are regarded as in excellent condition. |
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Under the college rules, the Howardites were allowed to dribble around the court and, as in today's game, shoot at will. |
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And as in at least some other cases, this will be a pity because there will likely be some small nugget of usefulness to the deal. |
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In some instances, military means could be important, such as in the case of fighting the Taliban in Afghanistan. |
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Manet even kept the screen and drapery of Boucher's painting, but transposed them from right to left, as in a mirror image. |
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To more directly measure these effects, we deployed viral dosimeters in situ as well as in on-deck incubators. |
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He was as interested in the sacred as in the profane, in devotion and deviation alike. |
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It is found in leaves, etiolated tissues, seeds, roots, fruits, and tubers in the chloroplast as well as in the cytosol. |
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All of these characteristics are said to exist in individual attitudes as well as in institutional practices. |
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In this study, 12 animals were instrumented as in the mechanical ventilation study, but in addition, both hindlimbs were immobilized. |
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In cities in India, as well as in Brazil and other deeply divided countries, quite luxurious enclaves coexist uneasily with slum and ghettos. |
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It was a radical group of artists and poets who were interested in folk and primitive art as well as in spontaneous expression. |
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When the Congolese are prisoners, they generally are shown in striped shirts, as in the Colonie Belge paintings. |
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Rarely has the role of corporate money in buying congressmen and their votes been so nakedly on display as in the promotion of this measure. |
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I believe we should have a death row in this country, as in America, where murderers etc. can be kept for years. |
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In Hawaii today, as in Australia, many exotics are aggressive and pushing out the indigenous plants. |
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Matthew is held in great affection and esteem by public servants across Australia as well as in Canberra for his tireless work on their behalf. |
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These are old fashioned meat processing plants where they process a few animals a day, not thousands, as in factory farms. |
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This is just as true in all areas of domestic affairs as in foreign policies. |
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Does this mean oil prices haven't risen as dramatically in pounds or euros as in dollars? |
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Sometimes, in politics as well as in poker, playing safe isn't the best strategy. |
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However, as in Australia and Ireland, social discord erupted on the issue of compulsory military service overseas. |
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Language disturbance may be evident, as in dysnomia or dysgraphia and perceptual disturbances are common. |
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There may be a pun on suite, as in a set of pieces, but not on sweet, which is hardly the taste these playlets leave in the mouth. |
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Nowhere, perhaps, is this as exasperating as in the terrible continuation of massive hunger and undernourishment in India. |
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For thousands of years herbalists have been using and prescribing herbs both singly as well as in complex formulas usually in the form of tea. |
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As described, many of the commercial species are heliophile in the forest as well as in plantations. |
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Being contrarian is apparently OK as long as in being contrarian you agree with us. |
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The precise scope of this responsibility remains as gnomic as in the 1964 version, but the symbolism is obvious. |
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In Inuit culture, as in any other culture, language acquisition seems to occur naturally. |
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Yet Niebuhr also spent much of his life inveighing against the naivety of liberalism, as in his most famous book, Moral Man and Immoral Society. |
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It must draft its proposals with an eye to what will play in Parliament, as well as in the Council. |
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As South Africa's pocket battleship said, that philosophy applied equally well in sport as in life. |
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Monitoring electrocardiograms is useful in many in-hospital clinical situations a well as in everyday activities. |
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In some places, a smoking ban is justified for safety reasons such as in confined spaces or where flammable material is present. |
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In the past two quarters alone, we shipped almost as many megabytes of flash memory as in the prior fifteen years combined. |
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This issue is political dynamite, although not for quite the same reasons as in Britain. |
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It was one way of stressing the role of the co-op in the social as well as in the economic life of the people. |
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The depression is the scar marking the overlap of the jugal process of the zygomatic arch on to the maxilla, as in therian mammals generally. |
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With the Tories flatlining at the same level as in 2001, the Liberal Democrats and smaller parties have been the beneficiaries. |
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In poems written entirely in hexameters the break is possibly not quite so rare as in elegiacs. |
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I realize not everyone is like this, which is copacetic, as in fine, with me. |
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The main hindlimb artery in Oxyruncus is the ischiadic as in the Tyrannidae, whereas most cotingids possess an enlarged femoral artery. |
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Treatment durations and number of replications were the same as in the leaf shading experiment. |
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To kill one, whether or not with a crossbow, as in Coleridge's epic poem, was considered the ultimate omen of bad luck. |
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Either way, the second dummy is then exposed and the play continues as in Double Dummy Bridge. |
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These traces of identity pass by the spectator in ephemeral moments, reflected, refracted, and distorted, as in a funnyhouse mirror. |
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Advisory medical standards are in place for certain occupations, such as in the armed forces and police, railwaymen, and professional divers. |
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In writing, as in every other human endeavor, completion is not our business. |
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Such a role was played by the popular front movements in France and Spain in the 1930s, as well as in the Chile of Salvador Allende. |
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When he is in gadfly mode, as in this new study, he entertains and enlightens about writers including Kant and Ruskin. |
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Such writings could be in flowery language indeed, as in this excerpt from one spirit writing in my collection. |
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This week, as in previous years, a number of politicians some nice and some barely competent, have come to the end of the road. |
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When social mating systems were dichotomized, extrapair chicks were twice as frequent in monogamous as in polygynous species. |
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Thus, the pain of cost-cutting is not hitting workers as hard as in past business cycles. |
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Amputation is thirteen times more frequent in diabetics as in the same age non-diabetics. |
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A bride, as in early days, wears a white robe woven of white cotton by her uncles. |
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In fact, cataracts and glaucoma are twice as common in diabetics as in non-diabetics. |
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To their credit they never gave up trying and were equally gracious in defeat as in victory. |
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Looking is the avenue to satisfaction to this film, since the set and production design are as flawless as in the first movie. |
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Above all, don't let racial or religious hatred destroy democratic political institutions as in the post-bellum South. |
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By the Cretaceous, fossils with well-defined longitudinal ridges appear, as in modern species of Dentalium and its close relatives. |
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The weather was never as humid as in the Gold Coast, but hot during the daytime and cool in the evenings. |
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He counterposes images with voice-over narration in perplexing ways, as in Diary of a Country Priest. |
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Again, as in other pieces, the autumn poem uses quietude, fine enjambment and spacing, to convey the weight of the branches, the dying process. |
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This can result from physical or chemical injury, from burns or from hormonal causes, as in premenstrual syndrome. |
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It also definitely has a tribalism to its support as in many activities and most team sporting followings. |
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In both chapters, as in the entire coursebook, the materials view the state primarily in its relationships to the international system. |
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The use of faster dogs such as lurchers as in hare coursing would greatly reduce the suffering. |
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Hence, as in other frogs, the fundamental frequency of advertisement calls is a reliable and discriminable signal of male body size in bullfrogs. |
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Just as in the off-line world, online there is also an expectation of socially acceptable behavior and common courtesy. |
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A mere moment later, the sound of footfalls was heard tromping quickly up the stairs, as in emergency. |
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White-headed Woodpeckers forage for insects on trunks and limbs as well as in clusters of needles. |
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Genetic differentiation was strong in each region as well as in the concatenated data set. |
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Maybe, as in the past, the garrulous president's words were nothing more than political grandstanding. |
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As in Edinburgh, the enclitic negative is nae, ny, as in cannae can't, dinnae don't, whereas other dialects have na. |
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They sounded exactly the same as in the movie, with the radio crackle afterwards. |
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In forex, as in the stock market, any deviation from the norm can cause large price and volume movements. |
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The intricacy of the art lies as much in its dyeing as in the design. |
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In Germany, dimidiation is still a common method of marshalling, where one or both of two coats of arms in a combination will be halved, as in the arms of Loschau. |
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Because of the participation of a-ketoglutarate in numerous transaminations, glutamate is a prominent intermediate in nitrogen elimination as well as in anabolic pathways. |
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Only those with dyslexia had difficulty discerning the beat in continuous sounds containing sudden rises and falls in loudness, as in such speech transitions as sweet. |
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In this area, as in many, technology is empowering the little guy. |
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They are widely distributed from rainforests to the edges of dry and cold deserts, and they play an important role in human nutrition as well as in soil fertilization. |
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Here dwelt the Pillarists as in the Monastery of St. Simeon Stylites. |
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Thus, just as in the American South, Cherokee lawmakers would prohibit legal marriages between slaves and free people to preserve the institution of slavery. |
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Produce production can be instrumental in arresting the decline in the number of farms in some rural areas, as well as in providing an alternative to tobacco production. |
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Serbo-Croat cheese names frequently use a place name and sir, as in Mjesinski sir, a cheese made from ewe's milk and usually cured for a year in a sack or sheepskin bag. |
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There are many unsolved mysteries in the decorative arts, and, as in some detective stories, the clue to their solution has been in plain sight all the time. |
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Still as popular as in his playing days, and looking not a day older, Rhodes was plied with questions about his own career, and also about the current South African team. |
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Injections that block nerve transmission in the plexus may be helpful in the treatment of intractable abdominal pain, such as in cancer of the pancreas. |
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Chinese philosophers believe in the mutual convertibility of blessings and misfortunes and nowhere is this dramatized so vividly as in Chinese officialdom. |
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We find this quality in jazz and tap as well as in Euro-Afro dance forms such as flamenco and in world forms from Southeast Asia and the Indian subcontinent. |
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Just as in Bose-Einstein condensation, the Cooper pairs can fall into a single quantum state and thus cause a phase transition to a superconducting or superfluid phase. |
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Remote echographic diagnostics also have a role to play in remote and emergency situations such as in many parts of the third world, the polar regions and at sea. |
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It is the job of the Crown to prove its case beyond reasonable doubt, and, as in all criminal trials in Scotland, no crime can be proved without corroboration. |
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Certainly grotesque characters populate the world, as in all of the Coens' films, but a lot of the film ultimately centers on Ed's obsession with cleanliness. |
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The Santan Mountains study site is also primarily composed of granodiorite, but the boulders are not as extensive or foliated as in the South Mountains. |
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All these tombs had been laid out to a single design, a unified architectural conception of the king surrounded by his court, in death as in life. |
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As far as Bangalore is concerned, the erstwhile City Improvement Trust Board was the forerunner in developing housing layouts as early as in the nineteen fifties. |
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The same thing happens when the translation process is reversed and it happens, incidentally, in the case of free verse as easily as in that of metrical forms. |
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In addition, conformational changes may not occur to the same extent as in solution because they could be limited by intermolecular contacts in the crystal lattice. |
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If the critical point is late, as in endometrial cancer, screening is unnecessary because the disease is curable even when it presents with clinical symptoms. |
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The Bristol instrument and indeed Adrian Partington are at their most convincing when there is a constant flow of music, as in the fugal development to the sonata's finale. |
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In warfare, as in nature, you have to evolve to stay ahead of the game. |
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Just as in a ceremony there is an order of precedence, so also in news. |
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He adds that this immune defect may also be present in other diseases where a build-up of waste and plaques occur, such as in cardiovascular disease and Gaucher's disease. |
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This model is aimed at professional color processing use such as in digital photo editing, digital pre-press operation and various computer design work. |
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Pony is Cockney rhyming slang, you see, as in pony and trap, geddit? |
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We speak of someone as in delicate health, for example, which means that he or she has to take precautions that ordinary healthy people can disregard. |
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Hiccups in dogs, just as in people, are caused when a spasm of the muscular diaphragm creates a sudden inhalation followed by a closure of the glottis. |
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The picture he draws is not one of corporations denationalized by economic integration and states whose powers have been eroded, as in much current writing on globalization. |
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It is consequentialist overall, but in the conduct of life, just as in the conduct of a game, rules and principles have the paramount authority that deontologists wish. |
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Since a ship rarely sails for any length of time due east or due west, the difference in departure cannot ordinarily be found as in ordinary sailing. |
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Does the genetic variation of organelle DNAs in D. sinensis tend to become depauperate because of their small effective population size, as in many endangered species? |
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If they do not, there is a very real danger that, just as in 1991, they will be psyched out of a World Cup win, having paid too much attention to voices beyond the camp. |
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The authors noted that their respondents did not seem to recognize that they derogated women for behaviors they accepted for themselves, as in this comment. |
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The civil status of slaves in Tennessee, as well as in other states in which slavery existed, was such as to disable them from inheriting or transmitting property by descent. |
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Monologues are a true storytelling artform, as in actual storytelling around the campfire, and Neil seems to be more of a teller than a describer. |
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His deselection caused anger in the parliamentary party as well as in his constituency, but MPs are unwilling to rock the boat so close to the election. |
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A new system has also been introduced to keep grade inflation in check by ensuring a similar proportion of pupils achieve each grade as in previous years. |
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Bulgaria's industrial revolution did not bring levels of development as advanced as in other countries, but people acquired more leisure time for cultural pursuits. |
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Otherwise, play and scoring are the same as in two-handed euchre. |
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Both dummies are then exposed on the table, opposite their owners, and play continues as in Bridge, each of the players playing cards from their own dummy at its turn. |
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In the epidermis of third-year leaves, the densest silica deposition was observed in silica cells of both the adaxial and abaxial epidermises as in first-year leaves. |
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In this case, as in English common law, silence equals consent. |
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Since they leave an indelible black stain on everything they touch, they are perhaps best reserved for dyeing sheepskins black, as in the Rio Grande Valley. |
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The genealogy is close to star-shaped, so, as in the case of population growth, we expect an excess of rare variants in our sample relative to the standard neutral model. |
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Social formations and political institutions are examined as they operate within their own dynamics as well as in relation to Europe and world capitalism. |
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The hard parts may be mineralized, as in the shells of bivalves, or composed of organic material, such as the chitin that makes up the exoskeleton of arthropods. |
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Does it happen in extemporaneous speech as well as in reading? |
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Finally, the blade of the scapula in procolophonoids is not long, narrow and rectangular as in this specimen, and does not bear a longitudinal ridge on its external surface. |
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It was previously announced that a decline in channel sales, as well as in site licences for large accounts, was the main reason for the downfall. |
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Minor downwarp of reflectors over the edge of some concave-down features is noted, as in the case of the reflection associated with the base Tarrant Chalk Member. |
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And interwoven between all these are Colley's captives, a dramatis personae whose names and narratives gradually imprint themselves upon the reader as in a good novel. |
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There are no music examples, but, as in Professor Todd's biography, a number of plates that illustrate Mendelssohn's talent as a draughtsman and water-colourist. |
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Read his book as in a dream, and then read it again wide awake. |
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The sacchariferous tissues are developed especially in the root, as in the beet and carrot, in the rhizome, as in Gyperus esculentus, or in the woody stems, as in Acer and Syringa. |
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There are other cases where autophobia must be considered, such as in the movements of mechanical watches, where too much added lubricant can stick to the coils of the balance wheel. |
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One reason for this is, just as in India, the mergence of a middle class, currently estimated at around 250 million individuals. |
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As well in traditional as in modern laces, we are looking for the extraordinary to turn lace into real art! |
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One or both walls may be vertical, created by tectonic forces, as in the Annapolis Valley in Nova Scotia. |
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The one way of tolerating existence is to lose oneself in literature as in a perpetual orgy. |
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Canadian evidence suggests that poor timing decisions are not as significant as in the United States. |
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And finally, as in its origins, through the void we experience its fundamental quality, namely the presence of its absence. |
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Paco Rabanne: In France, during the 60's, we had a similar women's liberation movement as in America. |
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Indirect employment occurs mainly in the trade and handicrafts sectors as well as in fishing and, to a slight extent, agriculture. |
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Lady used to indicate a woman professional, as in lady doctor and lady lawyer, a genteelism that dates from a time when women were rare in such professions. |
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Microscopically, in deciduosis, the sheets of decidual cells are present within the connective tissue and do not usually affect its surface, as in the case of mesothelioma. |
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Aluminum is used in hulls, deckhouses, and hatch covers of commercial ships, as well as in equipment items, such as ladders, railings, gratings, windows, and doors. |
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Western cultures tend to praise those who make difficult tasks appear easy because of their own exceptional ability, as in the child prodigy phenomenon. |
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Indeed, in the premature baby, as in the full term baby, skin to skin contact may decrease rapid breathing into the normal range. |
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There are wide open spaces here as in Namibia so we can only hear and see the lapping of the river and no other campers. |
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Some A. P. I.'s, as in Google Maps, are open for the world to see and monkey around with. |
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The principles involved will be the same as in open water passage planning. |
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In a supercapacitor, as in a normal capacitor, energy is stored on the surfaces of materials in the form of static electricity. |
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In Norway, as in the other Nordic countries, register-based micro data is available for researchers on certain conditions. |
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How does one possibly undress the wrong way to take a siesta, as in 10 Across? |
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In Northwest Europe, as in Italy, Canadian units were under strength, with no trained men to fill the voids left by heavy casualties. |
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Pinch, as in pinch back those faded and dying blooms on your summer favorites, like Guinea Impatiens, geraniums, begonias and petunias. |
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In a sunny place at the boundary of the park, we have created a new kitchen garden with aromatic plants as in a pleasure garden. |
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The material is smooth, opaque and homogenous, in the unicolored as well as in the granite and terrazzo effect. |
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R and D managers have a key part to play in proposing projects as well as in carrying them out. |
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And here in Quebec City as in Montreal, every year we crowd together like penguins in our book fairs. |
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But in Lebanon, as in Iran, the longer-run trends seem to lie against the militants. |
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When will they experience again a time of great blessings, as in the present time, in which they came to earth to hear my word? |
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We need to raise productivity in hotels and retail as well as in biogenetics. |
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The signature Japanese flying cranes or seagulls stretch enameled wings, as in Lucien Gaillard's waterscape pendant. |
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The riser ends are colour coded for easy identification at take off as well as in flight for B Stall. |
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Others have good systems in place, but these are rendered ineffective because of chronic conflict, such as in north-east Sri Lanka. |
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He also said that the regional division is the same as in the AR4, with an addition of a chapter on International waters. |
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Jan Scholten has classified some of the Fabaceae into stages, as in the periodic table of elements. |
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So again, on this issue, as in housing, we feel Canada cannot pass the buck to Quebec. |
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It is a sure bet that, as in the previous Summer Paralympic Games, Canada will figure prominently on the medals scoreboard. |
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If, as in Denmark, the majority of applicants are given asylum or residence permits, then legitimate refugees are left in the lurch. |
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Further, related to this issue, legislation should make explicit provisions for supervised access and exchange, as in Australia and New Zealand. |
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Also, at the same time, we had the six windows in the pool room replaced with the same type of windows as in the living room. |
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These controversies can flame up overnight, or after months of calm, as in the case of the Danish cartoons. |
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Radioactive particles in the air can settle on the ground and on plants as well as in the water. |
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When the U.S. did intervene militarily, such as in the balkans, air power was the only real approach considered palatable. |
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The lived experience, today as in the past, is varied and this is important. |
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It is not to be entered upon lightly or unadvisedly, but reverently and as in the presence of God. |
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The main interest is not so much in the premises as in their consequences, which the investigator has to set out in due order. |
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Federal departments and agencies participated in the working groups as well as in the steering group that oversaw the process. |
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Are you looking for a board that's an easy ride, that's as comfortable on flat glassy as in small waves and breakers? |
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No religion will be the winner in that contest, just as in the fratricidal wars you now suffer, no one people will be triumphant. |
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Where there are only three digits, as in an air carrier, show the three-character code plus a hyphen. |
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The use of means that are disproportionate, that destroy those rights, as in Chechnya, for example, must never be allowed to happen again. |
|
In 2009, as in 2008, The Expert, Ukrainian economic weekly, named Crédit Agricole CIB Bank Ukraine the most trustable bank in Ukraine. |
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Sometimes, as we are also aware, funds were actually embezzled, as in the sponsorship scandal. |
|
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Wherever floors finishes are applied and maintained such as in institutions, convalescent homes, restaurants, hotels and motels. |
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Now, as in past years, Canadians of like mind and common purpose will join us in our endeavor. |
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Religious teaching has been deeply modified in its structures as well as in its methods and framework. |
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A fire in a high-rise apartment or office complex might endanger, say, 50 times as many lives as in their earlier counterparts. |
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In this matter, as in many others, Parliament has made itself look foolish. |
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The British atomic weapon project started informally, as in the United States, among university physicists. |
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The Quad-mountain bike is a discipline practised as well in a sports way as in leisure activity. |
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But politics, like nature, abhors a vacuum and it stands to reason that there must be a vacancy for a party of the right in Scotland, just as in every other European nation. |
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Deposits of nanometric dimensions can also be obtained by physical vapour deposition, or PVD, as in the case of cathode pulverization. |
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For accommodation, we offer more than 1000 different comfort levels as in hotel rooms, and in cozy cottages, and comfortable cottages. |
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The relationship may be direct, as in the case of the link between ascendants and descendants. |
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Cho Gyong is now striving to take care of the tramcar in a cultural way and in apple-pie order as similarly as in her girlhood. |
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In stud poker the limit is usually twice as much in the final betting interval as in previous betting intervals. |
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While counting in binary, the same rules are used as in denary counting, except that only two digits are to be used. |
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Art in writing, as in sculpture, often consists in the removal of surplusage. |
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In financial services as in other businesses, there are areas where risks naturally go up and down depending on external forces. |
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But although growth is not materializing as rapidly as in the recent past, economies are still recovering. |
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The 19-inch iS3000 module can be mounted in 19-inch server racks, as well as in a floorstanding or wall-mountable fashion. |
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It is possible that their significance lies as much in their placement at specific points in the cave as in their now undiscoverable symbolism. |
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I suppose so much of your job is delusional, that you can as easily have delusions when you're in old age as in your youth. |
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In such a case the injured party should be in at least the same position as in the case of a claim against the guarantee fund. |
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So long as in the eyes of the village she was now viewed as the mistress of the house. |
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I use a wheelchair when I have great distances to go such as in a shopping plaza or museum instead of using my canes. |
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So the ice over military ties may not thaw as easily as in previous cold snaps. |
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Children feel themselves as in paradise and they discover with all their organs of sence the fascinating many-sidedness of the nature. |
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Again, as in life, you just put in your best effort and try to fight as hard as you can to try to reach a goal. |
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Asking for help and advice is seen as cooperativeness not as incompetence, as in some eastern European countries. |
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The commemorative urge, in literature as in architecture, risks petrifying into the blandly monumental. |
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The Commission's services have also studied proposals to require payment account number portability as in the field of telecommunications. |
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In school, as in other relations in life, we are both self-controlled and interdependent. |
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The functions can be used in the mode of operation with low demand mode as well as in the mode of operation with high demand or continuous mode. |
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We work with any types of fabrics and are specilized as well in jacket as in party dress. |
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In summer as in winter, one can profit from the outdoor swimming pool also heated to 32°C and enjoy the slow river and its animated alveoli. |
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Errors of refraction, such as in short and long-sightedness, as well as astigmatism can be recognised and determined. |
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I suppose in this area, as in all other areas, the clause caveat emptor should always apply first and foremost. |
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In the fourth movement, as in the first, we again find an elaborate slow introduction presaging all thematic material to follow. |
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The Sherlock Holmes stories by Arthur Conan Doyle often visit riverside parts as in The Sign of Four. |
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The act of sending off a rocket vehicle under its own rocket power, as in the case of guided aircraft rockets, artillery rockets and space vehicles. |
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It might be very difficult to distinguish human trafficking from migrant smuggling, as in both cases persons may be moved illegally across borders. |
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Because learning Burgundy is like trying to commit to memory the sequence of the human genome, while, as in a science fiction movie, it's mutating. |
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He describes himself as an observer and analyst who does not shoot from the hip when making decisions, and as in no sense intellectual, but has his feet firmly on the ground, which is also apparent in his private ambitions. |
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Elsewhere these two women also do some real dancing, through the whole body, as vividly and connectedly rhythmical in its use of feet and legs as in its gestures and torso movement. |
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In the United States each year, about six times as many persons receive nonfatal injuries in accidents in the home as in motor-vehicle accidents, and about twice as many at home as in industrial accidents. |
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Ethiopia has been extremely successful in dialoguing with the government to a point where the government could play its role as key supporter, instead of distorter, as in some other countries. |
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And as in all skill development, there's no room for fudging the basics. |
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But as in previous periods of hot weather, some fraction of the population sought refuge in the one environment least likely to provide it: the stultifying streets of the breezeless city. |
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Not free as in costless, but free as in limited in its control by others. |
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To palliate this injustice, the rapporteur proposes that social security benefits for maintenance and family expenditure be paid to women, who will share out the income received, as in Portugal. |
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Anyone can maintain perspective when the markets are going well, but the individual who heeds professional advice and manages to adhere to sound investing philosophies in good times as in bad will finish on top. |
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Often, as in Amandou's case, the trafficker will approach the boy's parents in the guise of a religious teacher offering their child a free education. |
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We follow the same chain of reasoning as in the previous section. |
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The effect is an obvious anthropomorphizing of the vision of the dog just as in these types of animated films, animals are constantly and historically anthropomorphized. |
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And they say the pay is more than made up for by a tidier resolution of a financial debacle — or, as in G. M.'s case, the revivification of a wounded company. |
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Tristram Shandy emerges bumpily into the world as an Enlightenment child who must learn, as in Kant's famous dictum, to dare to think for himself. |
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A better approach for any chief executive is to assume that, in presidential politics, as in retailing, the customer is always right, and that the electorate's verdict will be consonant with history's consensus. |
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In Italy the Romanesque squinch form is either the conical type as in the church of Sant'Ambrogio at Milan or a succession of arched rings as in the 13th-century central tower of the abbey church at Chiaravalle. |
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I always have several projects in mind, and I let them come to maturity while I continue my search out in the field as well as in museums and through scientific publications. |
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The creatures aren't as anthropomorphized as in a Disney film — they don't talk, and their sheer size suggests that they aren't quite tamable — and the girls are not as idealized. |
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An iPad will cost about twice as much in Argentina as in the United States. |
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In addition, it is assumed that the parties will continue providing accommodation, meals and other facilities and services voluntarily as in previous years. |
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In the 1984 general election Mr Jeyaretnam held Anson with an increased margin. He was soon back in court as well as in parliament, accused of misstating the Workers Partyy's accounts. |
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While prices can vary due to supply and demand, geographic location and supply sources, this information is valuable in undercover operations as well as in importation investigations. |
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Analogously, the main banking groups, such as in particular Caisse d'Epargne and Crédit Mutuel, propose bankcard payment solutions that distributors can then use for the products and services that they have declared. |
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The Daoist settlements of sages, in forests and mountain glades as well as in the cities, are, at best, analogous to the eremitic type of proto-monasticism. |
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Their importance lies as much in the originality of their hilts, without equal in the period, as in the fact of being a genuine Nasrid production of luxury arms. |
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Colloquial Welsh inclines very strongly towards the use of auxiliaries with its verbs, as in English. |
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It is often burned in power stations near the mines, such as in Australia's Latrobe Valley and Luminant's Monticello plant in Texas. |
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Males often call during mating rituals to ward off other males and to attract females, as in the roaring of lions and red deer. |
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In Berlin, as in Paris, hippophagy appears to be on the increase. At the present time as many as twenty horses a day are cut up for food. |
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Sometimes the structures are still easily accessible, such as in a ghost town, and these may become tourist attractions. |
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To imagine the new is to foreconceive, as in the Heideggerian Vorlage, which can only be expressed in language. |
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The European scientific community enjoys a leading position in the two main disciplines of space science, i.e. astrophysics and exploration of the solar system, as well as in earth observation. |
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Many flat adverbs, as in 'run fast', 'buy cheap', etc. are from Old English. |
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A lion is debruised when a bend or other ordinary is placed over it, as in the cut. |
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The distinction between single and geminate consonants is attested in medial position as well as in absolute initial and final positions. |
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It took the Council of Ministers until December 2000 finally to decide to harmonise driving time at a maximum of 48 hours per week on average, even then with certain exceptions, as in the case of self-employed drivers. |
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The skiing is not as extensive as in other resorts, but its spectacular setting and wide range of alternative sports like husky rides, toboggan tracks, and curling more than make up for any lack of pistes. |
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Civil wars and internal strife in royal families was a common occurrence in the Middle Ages, in Norway as well as in other countries of Europe. |
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European agriculture and livestock farming are characterised by a wide diversity in production as well as in the structure and size of farms, and shape a specific and original agrarian model. |
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The over-unity energy production could be due to a gradual transformation of hydrogen to dark hydrogen in the same state as in water. |
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