This will defeat the object of a by-pass which will soon become full with short distance commuters. |
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The hoop-petticoat daffodils have large funnel-shaped cups and tiny petals and have become popular and more easily available in recent years. |
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After a minute of two of stalking around the room, shaking and gibbering, I started looking around to see what had become of the chemical. |
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Any defaulter as per the above criteria was excluded from the study if she had become pregnant during the particular quarter. |
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However, the beam will become progressively defocused, thus limiting the thermal energy to the deeper structures. |
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The road cutting would become the most prominent monument within the World Heritage site. |
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Patients with chronic liver disease and signs of decompensation should be assessed for transplantation before they become critically ill. |
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A child who has diarrhea from giardiasis may lose too much fluid in the stool and become dehydrated. |
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While he and his once-youthful collaborators have become modern icons, Baldry draws his inspiration from the masters of an even earlier era. |
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The skills he acquired from Arthur would later become apparent, particularly in his gilding on glass. |
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Many teenage girls had babies, so it seemed normal to become a teenage mother. |
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It will become even harder to swing public opinion behind humanitarian interventions if war profiteers and racist thugs are direct beneficiaries. |
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Tourism should not be allowed to become another football for the tiresome and futile political arena. |
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Although they have surprisingly sharp cutting edges when freshly knapped, flake tools soon become dull. |
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By June 1776 their efforts had become hopeless and a committee was formed to compose a formal declaration of independence. |
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Perhaps there should be a rule that princes only become monarch if there are no princesses, and that all Governors General be female? |
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They grow upward from the basal branehes and only become decumbent after they have grown a few centimeters. |
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The story of what happens next has been told innumerable times, to the point of having become a ghoulish soap opera. |
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Does he protest when baseball or tennis players become pros right after high school? |
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The argument between the government and the BBC has become so arcane that most of the general public feel submerged beneath the pros and cons. |
|
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With even individual users being drawn into lawsuits, the legal waters have become very choppy indeed. |
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As substantive policy issues become more difficult to explore, journalists are more likely to probe such information. |
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Having eclipsed the record of Anand to become the youngest grandmaster from the country, the chess prodigy is now gunning for greater glory. |
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Having appeared in and produced numerous films and tv dramas in the US he will become the new consultant, Harry Harper. |
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Quick-thinking reactions become a definite asset during the fighting sequences. |
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The promotion has become the only profit center for the major carriers today. |
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An example is sickle cell disease, where the red cells become rigid and deformed and break down more readily, leading to anaemia. |
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As more and more of us live longer, and become more affluent, the race for new pills and potions to combat the effects of ageing is speeding up. |
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For Indonesia in general, and Bali in particular, tourism has become a major foreign exchange earner and economic backbone. |
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Requests for a photo along with the CV, though frowned upon by the Employment Service, have become common. |
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The fruity gravitas of the traditional actor's declamation had become a liability rather than an asset. |
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Eight months later, and following several declarations that he would not stand, Howard had become convinced that his time had finally come. |
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After fourteen days, there begins to appear the first traces of what will become the central nervous system of the embryo, the primitive streaks. |
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One of the female elders added that the fuel oil would become stiff and was difficult to use with the Primus stove. |
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Over time, the regional economy can become decreasingly dependent on a narrow staple export base and growth can become self-sustaining. |
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They also believe the spirits of the dead become ghosts that may haunt their families and animals, make them sick, or even kill them. |
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We need a new fresh start, and within 5 years, we could become a shining star and a power broker. |
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The school has closed and finally the long popular hotel was closed and the village seemed destined to become a ghost town. |
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On nights when the Kings are on their game, the talk of how the NBA has become hard to watch should be muted. |
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As a group, then, we were predisposed to cross boundaries and become collaborators. |
|
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In the pros, players become even more specialized and don't have time to worry about playing other positions. |
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In addition, the pro fitness contest might become a pro figure event instead. |
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The Court's reasonings, such as they are, have become a study in personal opinions and predilections. |
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Upon his death, his will would get probated, and you would become the owner of the home. |
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Indeed, as the ecological crisis deepens, this will surely become an ever more important issue. |
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Predictability and planning become ever more important as farming becomes a more sophisticated science. |
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Chemoprophylaxis may soon be advanced if Malarone, primaquine, or Tafenaquine become licensed for this indication. |
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But then, with the growing interest in gypsies, and in fortune-telling, many gypsies stopped travelling to become showmen. |
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Uniformed lawyers now assigned to defend the detainees have become among the most forceful critics of the system. |
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Maybe I'll become a regular on the show and then I'll be a gazillionaire just like them! |
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In the case of the serine proteases, they are synthesized as proenzymes, larger molecules that require modification before they become active. |
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Perhaps if the girl gives herself airs of grandeur, we should encourage her in her ambitions to become the proper lady. |
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Their makers hope the phones will become popular promotional giveaways, like phone cards emblazoned with corporate logos. |
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This has become a profitable business for a few, and an effortless one for that. |
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In many instances, they become rough, deformed and severely reduced in size. |
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The crude items of every day use that were the few meager processions of the poor have become the prestige consumption of the affluent. |
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As you putter across the 200 yard channel in the old diesel ferry, the lines of pinpoint lights become knee-high lamps lining the stone pathways. |
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More recently, weather and climate have become sources of equally fantastic futurist doomsday scenarios as well. |
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With small portable devices that function as if they were a true extension of our minds and bodies, we all become cyborgs. |
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He hasn't become a millionaire filmmaker by being too fussy with the facts. |
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You can become a cyborg, get involved in Cyber Rights, cyberdemocracy, cyberpunk, cyberdrama, even cyberpsychology. |
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Sounds improbable, but Dave Bassett has become part of the furniture at Oakwell. |
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Further examinations saw him become first Smith's prizeman and he was elected a fellow of Peterhouse. |
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In Dartford our new hospital has been put forward as a prime candidate to become a foundation hospital. |
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Where the irises become skeletal by the end, the roses continue to retain their fullness. |
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He will become one of only a handful of former prime ministers to have written a book about subjects outside politics. |
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The fund aims to help string players through further education to become teachers or performers. |
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Since 1976, the Foreign Ministry has declassified diplomatic documents when they become roughly 30 years old. |
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And whoever got 15 or 20 and was the high vote getter would become the governor of California. |
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According to the company, cyanoacrylates are reactive monomer liquids that become polymer films when they react to moisture or certain chemicals. |
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It seems that in situations such as this, politics become incompatible with conscience, principle, decency and self-respect. |
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Of noble birth, she entered religious life at the age of 14 and rose to become prioress of her convent at Disibodenberg. |
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So Labour should be prepared to reduce income tax levels to encourage all taxpayers to aspire to become high-income earners. |
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Intonation, a command of decrescendo and true unison, and just plain running out of breath become the technical challenges singers must meet. |
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Sooner or later everyone become convinced of how earnest and truthful he was. |
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When talking to Mr. Horsfield, who will become her lover, she powders her face, appearing to Horsfield as controlled, furtive, and calculating. |
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He's a paediatrician, not a cook, but in the last year, during his stay in Malawi, he's become a dab hand around the kitchen. |
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If something isn't done soon, more shops will close, Kendal town centre will die and the place will become a ghost town. |
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The report states that this area could easily become cleaner with a little more effort. |
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My son has become a challenging pre-teen and my easy-breezy daughter is quite the dramatic 7-year-old. |
|
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The district in the east of the city centre is shrugging off its rundown industrial image to become a boom area for city centre living. |
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He dammed the loch, built a power station, and began installing what was to become the most sophisticated fish farm in the world. |
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They stood by a gallows holding ropes which were strung over a pulley to become a noose holding up a body. |
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The county-run centers, which cater to the elderly poor, plan additional courses to allow licensed practical nurses to become registered nurses. |
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Many historic buildings in Moscow have become giant billboards advertising the latest eau de toilette. |
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The lesson has certainly helped me rethink my politics and become more pragmatic and realistic in terms of our own struggle. |
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So in what I hope will become an annual tradition, I will precede any prospect list with a look back at the finds of the draft. |
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The defendants are justified in their contention that the remedy of the party damnified by the solicitor's misconduct will become illusory. |
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Ironically, its biggest threat is the very real danger that it could become the victim of its own success. |
|
How conscious people have become about skin and acne and about hair and dandruff. |
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The deal was that Sishera would become a woman that served under the dark power. |
|
So pop's most daringly artificial moments constantly become its new lingua franca. |
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Sara's blue eyes darkened as she watched his expression become somewhat haunted. |
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He would go on to be knighted and become a celebrated portraitist, the darling of society and a very rich man. |
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They were learning how to become gas fitters and they wanted to set up their own companies. |
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This is his home town, and it will become part of his constituency at the next general election. |
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At the same time, our mind has the potential to become completely free of defects and limitations. |
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He had just been released from a two-year term for offences including procuring a woman to become a prostitute. |
|
Rochdale Railway Station could become the gateway to the town under new plans disclosed this week. |
|
It is clear that he will come under renewed pressure from within his own party to ensure the issue does not become a dead duck. |
|
|
Strangely, it was his comparatively slight Short Story that rose to become the season's dazzler. |
|
Upon deactivation of the 112 th, he moved on to become the Command Sergeant Major of the U.S. Army Intelligence Center and Fort Huachuca. |
|
Of course, certain institutions are necessary to become economically productive too, but these are not necessarily political. |
|
As the deficiency worsens children become pale and weak, eat less, and tire easily. |
|
Providing music and movement classes for preschoolers and primary-school children has become a New Zealand success story. |
|
Procrastination was on the list to become the eighth deadly sin, but they couldn't make up their minds. |
|
Along with its sister laboratory in New York, it has become one of the leading gemmological institutions in the world. |
|
One hopes that this is just the first edition of what will become the definitive textbook in the field. |
|
It is believed that the vast majority of these students will eventually become proficient. |
|
It is fascinating to watch a complete novice become proficient in a specialised job in a mere four weeks. |
|
Stag and hen nights have become weekends and even whole weeks of debauchery and indulgence. |
|
The area had become barren because it was deforested and had lost the thin layer of rich soil. |
|
A different option is to become earnest and join a political party or a pressure group. |
|
Revealing a weak spot was a death sentence, and he had become the sentencer. |
|
For many in the new generation it has become a debased form of personal power seeking. |
|
By the end of the 9th century, the colonisation of Orkney had been so successful that it had become a Norwegian earldom. |
|
Has it become distant and cold to its fellow pies, like the earthy apple pie and the hearty pot pie and the homespun pumpkin pie? |
|
Cinema-goers paid 20p each to become the inaugural customers at the 10-screen multiplex. |
|
You will not become addicted to preventive medicines for asthma, even if you use them for many years. |
|
Books are priceless treasures that will never become old or obsolete, no matter the advances in technology. |
|
|
For the majority, however, signing away moral rights is likely to become the unwelcome price of doing business. |
|
A message board, for example, can become a valuable source of intelligence and might even help a cyberstalker locate new victims. |
|
We've become a nation of germophobes, battling to obliterate every bug in our environment. |
|
This prima donna's behaviour has become so appalling that her colleagues have started making official complaints about her. |
|
She will be one of three women deacons in the diocese, but only until June 24 when the other two become priested. |
|
Evergreen leaves exposed to UV-B generally increase in thickness and lignin content, whereas deciduous leaves tend to become thinner. |
|
They emerged from 1960s radical chic to become America's most wanted fugitives. |
|
The world has become too large and complex to accept the predominance of one power. |
|
Jones has been trying to run a curate's egg in an industry that has become increasingly specialised. |
|
I thought Kent had become timid after Kareem decked him with one punch during his rookie year. |
|
Such steps are needed, but they should rapidly become mandatory if full compliance is lacking. |
|
In addition the full balance of all outstanding monies under your tenancy will become immediately payable and due. |
|
However, the refrain that Australia should not become involved is gaining wider currency. |
|
The trend, growing over the years, toward a curtailment or studied regulation of night-time recreation, is likely only to become more pronounced. |
|
Concepts like century roses, starlines, cusps, Myiepan spores, among others which become clear by the end of the novel. |
|
By the 1980s, all these new movements had become divided internally between what the German Greens called the fundis and the realos. |
|
Although influenced by the fundamentalists in developing an architectural language, he has become an opponent of modern works. |
|
Modifying or customizing a vehicle has also become a trend among car enthusiasts nowadays. |
|
While the funeral home business is often passed down from generation to generation, Starry never imagined she'd become a funeral director. |
|
Otherwise, what happens is that the edges become all fluffy and furry and the potatoes absorb too much water. |
|
|
These currents become progressively stronger when the depth of the liquid in the cuvette is increased. |
|
Pigeon flocks have almost become a part of the furniture in York, with the birds gathering in most squares and open spaces. |
|
Murders, rape incidents, dacoity and burglaries had become the order of the day. |
|
But if you're not active, you actually become more deconditioned and that makes symptoms worse. |
|
The remaining smaller portions of the spectrum have become more difficult to deconflict. |
|
Too often, at this stage of the project, it's easy to become tired and to end up rushing through the interior design and decoration process. |
|
It will become the latest place for fashionable New Yorkers, who will push the pot roast around their plates while nibbling salads. |
|
From the illnesses of Cynanthropy and Lycanthropy, many change into dogs, their eyes become fiery, with threatening teeth and a sharp nose. |
|
In the span of a few short minutes, her skin had become a ghastly shade of blue and she felt deathly cold. |
|
These failures become apparent through the absence of first-year birds in the winter gaggles. |
|
The department horticulture research officer said the area had the potential to become a major income earner. |
|
After hatching, they invade into the body cavity and become cysticercoid larvae, which are infectious for humans. |
|
Instead of being profits related, your earn-out will become totally sales related. |
|
Collins' goal is to become the best-connected gaijin in Japan, an insider in a system where insider status counts for everything. |
|
Instead these have become fronts for big corporations and the military of the imperialistic powers in their drive for global domination. |
|
Farmers said the once lush grazing had become fields of death for livestock, with carcasses scattered all over the area. |
|
Since graduating, Mr Wildman has become a dab hand at using the Internet, word processing and especially emailing. |
|
The leaves are strongly decurrent and apparently did not become detached readily. |
|
Any song can become an earworm, but his research has shown that some are better suited than others. |
|
I've become more than a little addicted to my Lomo-LCA, a Russian built camera which encourages a kind of Dadaistic way of taking pictures. |
|
|
More recently, the gall midge has moved into the Houston area and become a cause of bud drop. |
|
Such wide subjective definitions can and do easily become charters of abuse. |
|
The life of this wrecked if gallant woman has become, not the cautionary tale it was in 1970, but an achievement to applaud. |
|
In this configuration, one power has become dominant in each of the East and West. |
|
In more recent years, Sarti's has become an excellent location for late-night daftness over a couple of bottles of Barolo. |
|
Then, you become even more gallant and chivalrous in order to appease them before they revolt. |
|
It has now become so much harder for a Tory leader to persuade a dubious electorate that his policies are practicable and viable. |
|
But the dairy industry, has become more flexible and proactive, as the marketing gains of the past year show, said Rovey, an Arizona dairyman. |
|
Now that you've given over the dining room to become a family office, do you want your eat-in kitchen to appear more formal? |
|
But in any war over ideas, symbols matter as much as practicalities and foundation hospitals have thus become totemic. |
|
Many musicians become compulsive practicers, because they need the increase in serotonin that compulsive practicing can produce. |
|
Religion is practised passionately with many a young boy aspiring to become a Buddhist monk. |
|
Can Dr Ken save the day, or will his occasional sexual dalliance become the next victim of The Psycho Lover? |
|
As bearing surfaces in scan mirror galvanometers age, they can become nonlinear and result in distorted spatial representations. |
|
Called the Painted Ladies, these colorful gingerbread houses have become emblems of the city's eccentricity and charm. |
|
Consider the time I had a Swedish house guest, a woman who would later go on to become one of Key West's most popular ecdysiasts. |
|
Fortunately, with a gamepad the game's controls become slightly less complicated. |
|
Similarly, the ecclesial intuitions of the Eastern and Reformed churches could become a very profitable complement to the Roman vision. |
|
Gamification has plenty of critics, and the debate over its future could become an epic battle. |
|
Future research should focus on such traits of cowbird relatives and on how these traits preadapted a particular lineage to become parasites. |
|
|
Before the conference, he spoke about why gamification has become a hot topic at the White House. |
|
Dust mites and animal dander are problematic when they become airborne during vacuuming, making beds or when textiles are disturbed. |
|
Too many attitudes will have become ingrained, too many old moral precepts will have disappeared. |
|
What the Danish, who have become heavily dependent on wind generators, have found is that the wind sometimes does not blow. |
|
This air cools significantly to become supersaturated with respect to ice, and some of the moisture precipitates out in the form of ice crystals. |
|
Birds who eat the infected earthworms may become infected with gapeworm larvae. |
|
The two become entangled in conversation, revealing deep, dark secrets about themselves. |
|
Working from dawn until dark can become the breeding ground toward poor health in both mind and body. |
|
The estate of Eusebi Guell was originally to become a hilltop garden city in the early twentieth century. |
|
As the first venture develops it is the precursor of what may become a new niche in the travel industry and in holiday home real estate. |
|
States that fail to link up their databases will become ineligible for federal money. |
|
At sufficiently large frequencies, the dashpots become nonresponsive, and the force division becomes entirely dictated by the springs. |
|
With lightning-fast blade servers becoming more common in today's data center environment, two issues become paramount. |
|
Between the water draining, the cool water pouring in, and her skin deadened from sensation, the pain started to become tolerable. |
|
The media last week picked up on the story of a biology lecturer who has become a gas fitter because the pay is better. |
|
Among the genres to become established north and south of the Alps was portrait painting. |
|
Among the items that had become opaque were datelines and bylines, which were sometimes close to a lie. |
|
For many, religion per se has become a curious historical anachronism, a dated relic of the old days. |
|
In recent years, percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy has become the intervention of choice when oral food intake becomes unsafe or inadequate. |
|
The Millfield roundabout on York's ring road has become the gateway to a number of potential snack spots. |
|
|
As technology sectors develop, advanced products carrying premium prices become commodities. |
|
For my remaining four years I was a day student since JC had become a day school only. |
|
Too many of us have become caught up in the day-to-day struggle to survive and in our private lives. |
|
While still in high school in the late 1990s, he used his college fund to become a wildly successful day trader. |
|
Unlike so-called direct deposits, which actually take two days to process, the funds on prepaid cards become available within seconds. |
|
At this time she decided to become a deaconess in the Methodist Church and worked towards that end. |
|
Girls risk getting into Single White Female territory when they start to become jealous or let their girl crush take advantage of them. |
|
The road, having become steadily narrower, came to a dead-end right by the visitor's centre at the Gibraltar Point nature reserve. |
|
It did not take me long to become a true tie-dyed Deadhead, and in fact I have often wondered why I was such a late arrival. |
|
Simultaneously, they have become a large demographic, the next generation of the Deadheads. |
|
Second, international law will become a dead letter, to be broken by powerful states at will. |
|
Unfortunately, the guideline made in the 1980s to control the height of new buildings has become virtually a dead letter. |
|
There are many anecdotes about carp swimming in his grandmother's bathtub, soon to become gefilte fish. |
|
Unless pollen is transported to another plant, geitonogamous self-pollinations therefore become more likely when plants are visited. |
|
Yet, no one would suggest that by using it the public might acquire prescriptive rights and that the land might become a town green. |
|
The freezer case is getting a little more crowded as consumers become acquainted with gelato and frozen custard. |
|
Once the domain of royalty, precious gems have today become a part of almost everyone's jewellery. |
|
In my time this had become two bedrooms and a bathroom with an oddly shaped passage, and anybody who slept there remarked on strange presences. |
|
Vinyl hasn't simply become a symbol of cultural preservation or nostalgia, however. |
|
It may not be possible for all of us to be experts, but we can, with practice, become reasonably proficient. |
|
|
If your genes code for grey hair at a later time, you will become grey as you get older. |
|
She was born a man and underwent gender reassignment surgery 20 years ago to become a woman. |
|
She came to The University of Chicago from Wellesley College to become the dean of women. |
|
The battlefields had become a quagmire of blood, gore, mud, miles of trenches and poor generalship on both sides of no-man's land. |
|
We seem too anxious in the crafts to become generically contemporary and banally global. |
|
As far as foreign investors are concerned, China has become a land of profitless prosperity. |
|
Unknown to him, it became the genesis of a new film that has taken 14 long years to become a celluloid reality. |
|
And when yellow split dal is cooked in the pressure cooker for three whistles and allowed to cool on its own, will not the dal become too gooey? |
|
I'm trying to become a better writer, because it's something I love, but I'm not trying all that hard to write deathless prose, here. |
|
If there is no foreign DNA at the crime scene then the death sentence should immediately become a non-option. |
|
But it does so through the methods of politics, however corrupted and debased these have become in our country. |
|
With the genomic revolution, new tools have become available to study human diversity at the DNA level. |
|
During cold glacial times, desert regions become more arid and the production of silt increases and its transportation is enhanced. |
|
Glass concedes it is harder not to become more cynical about the game as he gets older. |
|
What had once been high art, fashioned by the Romans or Michelangelo, has become debased, mass-culture kitsch. |
|
You just become someone walking around in freedom, no longer a pretend celebrity with a wallet to be taxed. |
|
As they approach that limit they become preternaturally intelligent and violently paranoiac. |
|
By the end of that decade, any pretensions to national independence had become thoroughly discredited. |
|
But it has become increasingly clear to them that the pretexts for the war were false. |
|
A derby match is seldom a pretty affair, with so much at stake games become scrappy. |
|
|
Others worry that the plan is an excuse to gentrify areas that have become valuable in the years since public housing went up. |
|
She would like to become an equine practitioner specializing in preventative medicine. |
|
Germany had become by far Italy's most important trade partner during the two last decades of the nineteenth century. |
|
This will become obvious by the beginning of the next decade, as the results of the 2010 census begin to rearrange the electoral map. |
|
Security-shy residents are allowing themselves to become easy prey for burglars. |
|
Should we fumble, should we fall in the middle of the road, we will become easy prey. |
|
After a brutal price war in the late '90s, many have become more focused on the bottom line. |
|
A new fight for hegemony over both land and sea has quietly begun, waiting to become the new face of global geostrategy once the war ends. |
|
Her shirt clung to her petit frame, causing the skin to prickle and become clammy. |
|
England will become Germanized or Americanized by this process alone, and the English gentleman will become as extinct as the British yeoman. |
|
Three members of the congregation at St James' Church in Devizes are to undergo training to become Anglican priests. |
|
The priest blesses the couple, and they officially become husband and wife. |
|
It was an old fortress that had been turned into a school for young children singled out to become priests and priestesses. |
|
He is the first prison inmate to become a candidate for ordination to the priesthood in the Episcopal Church. |
|
Why has this term become common currency amongst students of international politics? |
|
I feel optimistic that Buy Nothing Day, and culture jamming in general, will become a force to be reckoned with. |
|
He had refused to give up is job in the financial sector in order to become a full-time rugby professional. |
|
And, if you think that once you become a mom, you suddenly turn into a frump, you are in for one very dull ride. |
|
The metal in the cupel melts and will be observed to become smaller as the process proceeds. |
|
As the samples become molten, the base metals, including the lead, vaporize or absorb into the cupels, leaving only the precious metal on top. |
|
|
When she eventually recovers, she apprentices to become a curandera, and in a slow, agonizing manner, falls in love with a native American woman. |
|
Every dog in office is obeyed with such unquestioning meekness, that every dog in office is tempted to become a cur. |
|
Now that she has become a fugitive from justice, the townspeople see an opportunity to exploit her. |
|
Privatisation has become a social echinacea, a mysterious healing serum being touted as a cure-all for everything from Medicare to education. |
|
May my fasting and prayer become a time of growing intimacy with you as I await the fulfillment of your promises. |
|
Stalls displaying various kinds of glass furniture, wooden curios, clothes, etc., have become a regular feature of such shows. |
|
In drawing, Cocteau's characteristic line, often curlicued but rarely having to rethink, has a bravura which become a visual signature. |
|
He also thinks the city should become a big employer, guaranteeing full employment. |
|
To seal my parents promise that I would become a pirate, Joe put a curse on me. |
|
The new movie is just the tip of the iceberg for what is about to become a full-frontal assault of American army flicks. |
|
Faure may soon be obliged to give up the day job and become a full-time musician if the committee decides against her. |
|
In spring and summer these become home to thousands of sea birds like guillemots, razorbills, puffins, fulmars and kittiwakes. |
|
Their reach for notoriety predicated on that fulsome mediocrity of talent detailed above has become frozen in their faces. |
|
So the Senate rule that liberals fulminated against for decades has become sacrosanct. |
|
I also have become very ill from inhaling the fumes from the exhaust diesel gases that come from the buses. |
|
And what has become of the manager's reputation for being an argumentative cuss? |
|
When life has no higher purpose, entertainment and fun become the over-riding goal in life. |
|
As people become more attuned to ordering custom vehicles, we feel this trend will grow. |
|
If Gaia didn't luck upon the right system for that problem on the first try, things would quickly become grim. |
|
It's only when mums and dads dress their offspring as cut-down versions of themselves that those same vanities start to become a little worrying. |
|
|
The fur and feather trade has caused some species to become extinct and pushed others to the brink. |
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The idea to become a priest had been germinating for several years. |
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The historical territory of the Bohemian state did not become more Germanized over the centuries because of the anti-German feelings of the Czechs. |
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Over its fourteen-year history the military government has become adept at exploiting Burma's geostrategic position and at manipulating the concerns of its regional neighbors. |
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As we discussed in previous weeks, scandals become geopolitically significant when they affect the ability of the president to conduct foreign policy. |
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He claims that south-facing peaks in the Derbyshire Peak District, which has the same geology as Greece, will become warm enough to support grape growth within 50 years. |
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People like myself who are long-term residents of the area have themselves become gentrified, and that's really symptomatic of what's happened here as a whole. |
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The threadbare plot of the film concerns a song-and-dance man who retires from showbusiness to become a gentleman farmer but finds country life more demanding than he thought. |
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This whole Internet thing has gone right to his head and he's become a prima-donna about being regarded an expert on safety and an Internet celebrity. |
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Can you foresee that the U.S. will become a major profit center? |
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No one could have predicted how debased higher education would become. |
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Great aristocrats no more become gentlemen of the bedchamber out of subservience than they became grooms of the stool out of a desire to wipe the royal bottom. |
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The company plans to become the brand custodian for various brands from Disney, Aqua, and Lego, and launch collections for pre-teens, both boys and girls, over the next year. |
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Individuals can learn to act politely, but they cannot become genteel unless their gentility is publicly acknowledged by persons who are themselves genteel. |
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It really has become an increasingly debased process of making art. |
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If we do not thank God for God's blessing, then we become like ingrates, those who presume upon the goodness of those who give them gift after gift. |
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The principle of ministerial responsibility has been debauched by its invocation on any conceivable occasion, to the extent that it has become almost meaningless. |
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This morning I was filmed for what will become the electronic press kit. |
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Sarah had become the dearest friend I had ever had, and I hers. |
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He told the senior air instructors his dream was to become chief of the general staff and that some day he would move divisions and brigades across the field of battle. |
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