Nor does it count as an explanation of today's rainstorm to claim that it rained because a barometer reading decreased yesterday. |
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The barometer readings calculated in mega watts per hour indicate that the use of green electricity is increasing. |
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The barometer was not developed to measure atmospheric pressure as it is used for today. |
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Drinking, and particularly the ability to hold a drink, is traditionally a barometer of masculinity. |
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Weekend box office numbers have become the barometer by which a film's success is determined. |
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It's also a useful barometer for you and us to use in measuring our standards. |
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The restaurant trade might well be a barometer of how the local business community is faring. |
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As the barometer had indicated, the storm swiftly arrived, but not from the expected direction. |
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In Italy, Torricelli did research which led to developing the barometer and the measure of air pressure. |
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The DNS Pro models also have a barometer, altimeter and weather-forecasting capability. |
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The atmospheric pressure on each experimental day was recorded using a barometer. |
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Before departing, the master of the Koombana had noted the low barometer, and had said he expected a slow trip to Broome. |
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The way the new leader organizes the inaugural Cabinet will act as a barometer indicating the direction of the new government. |
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In many ways insurance companies are as good a barometer as any that climate is becoming ever more treacherous. |
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Florida in fact provides a useful barometer for gauging the American political mood. |
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The odds are a barometer by which to measure your expertise and challenge your sanity. |
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She says she began to understand that the voice coming out of her is a barometer of her self-image. |
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Although the amount of time spent on homework is easily measured, using time as the only barometer for success can be deceptive. |
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The next week or so will be a barometer of just how far Houllier has travelled in his mission to return Liverpool to greatness. |
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If the show can be taken as a barometer of visual art in this country, there is much to be excited about. |
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The resilience of household finances is probably a more important barometer of the near-term spending outlook. |
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The French songstress later exploded the applause barometer as she accepted the award for Best French Female Artist. |
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They had to be waited on hand and foot and the size of their household was a barometer of wealth and status. |
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The law and order scenario in a society can, generally, be used as a barometer of good governance and social health. |
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Their treatment has become a barometer by which we can measure the essential justice of the war on terrorism. |
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He had no idea the value of the barometer but it looked easily stealable and was insecurely fastened. |
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All that was salvaged from the ruin was a brass barometer with its front glass cracked. |
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That should be a good barometer of whether it's really time for us to strike camp once and for all. |
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Actually, I've found situations like this are an almost perfect barometer of idiocy. |
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It is also a useful barometer of the loyalty and pliability of Labour and Lib Dem back-benchers. |
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If the current pop culture barometer is any indication, I may be one of the coolest people alive today. |
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The success of the barometer led to the development of primitive air pumps. |
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Empty planes, deserted airports and bankrupt airlines are a useful barometer of their fear. |
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Love them or hate them, the red tops remain the barometer of public opinion. |
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If there's something that sets my tolerance barometer to nought it's people suggesting presents for people they don't know. |
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On July 17, 1929, he flew the first instrumented payload, consisting of an aneroid barometer, a thermometer, and a camera. |
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What could be a better barometer of the spiritual health of a community than a fond desire for a lingering horrible death? |
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We have text on how a barometer measures air pressure that you might be interested in. |
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And make no mistake, money is the only barometer of success the industry ultimately cares about. |
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As early as 1670, a French scientist, observed a bluish phosphorescence in the Torricellian vacuum of a barometer, after the mercury column had been shaken up and down. |
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The barometer is dropping, so we may be in a blizzard by midday. |
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It may be argued that the degree of disturbance of these areas is a barometer of the success or failure of the policies adopted here for the past five decades. |
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Oddly, while the Stateside media has become suspicious of British press hype, their own tastemakers look to us as a type of buzz barometer for US bands. |
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A stock market index like the Dow and the SP 500 may not be the best barometer of national well-being. |
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If Fox News is any barometer, Gingrich has not been hammered on the channel where months ago he was a commentator. |
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He designed the pyrometer, the mountain barometer and the large theodolites which were used in the American Coast Survey of 1815, and base-line measuring apparatus. |
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These include the thermometer, the barometer, and the hygrometer. |
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This is a great barometer for Cork to measure their progress this year. |
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But Lara is adamant that their first match, against South Africa, will provide an accurate barometer of just how far his callow and inexperienced team have come. |
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A biometric sensor is embedded in the wrist band, and the assembly also houses a GPS receiver, a barometer, a depth sensor and a thermometer. |
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It's a barometer of how seriously the whole article should be taken. |
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Evangelista Torricelli, the inventor of barometer, made various advances in optics and work on the method of indivisibles. |
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If last night is any barometer, the naysayers will go empty. |
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The GDP report profits the broadest barometer of economic performance. |
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The barometer compares in-resort prices for a shopping basket of eight items including drinks, sun cream and a meal for two. |
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But just as the eventual arrival of Harvey Nichols was seen as a sign we had 'arrived',' a Waitrose is viewed as another barometer of our poshness. |
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At the top end of the market are designs such as the Georgian bowfront barometer, one of the most desirable forms developed during the 18th century. |
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The first instrument used to measure atmospheric pressure was the mercury barometer, invented in 1643 by Italian physicist and mathematician Evangelista Torricelli. |
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For instrument systems that vary with pressure, record barometric pressure readings from the point-of-care instrument and from a mercury barometer installed in the same room. |
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Based on equipment, the market is segmented into barometer, anemometer, hygrometer, rain gauge, thermometer, sling psychrometer, and weather balloons. |
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The National Television Awards are still the best barometer of viewers' favourites, but this week it's the Bafta Awards, which are, perhaps, a little snobbier. |
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This survey was introduced in 2005 in the belief that employers track graduate quality, making this a barometer of teaching quality, a famously problematic thing to measure. |
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Gross domestic product measures the value of all goods and services produced within the United States and is considered the best barometer of the country's economic standing. |
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