But the couple could see the potential behind the floral wallpapers, printed borders and kaleidoscopic carpets. |
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Many lamas came to India as refugees around the time Khandro Rinpoche was born in 1967, and settled in the areas close to the borders of Tibet. |
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Wide shrub borders edged with low hedges can lead your eye in the direction of a water feature, garden seat or piece of statuary. |
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Countering accusations of dullness, the insurer's job often borders on the surreal. |
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Climbing roses, jasmine and honeysuckle were trained up the walls and rosemary and lavender borders lined the flower beds. |
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The Japanese cedar is a handsome specimen for windscreens, borders and groupings on large properties. |
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These borders indicate the early acceptance of the idea of a frame as a way to set off, isolate and distinguish a drawing or painting. |
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Manicured lawns, weeded borders and pruned shrubs may be easy on the eye, but they're not necessarily great for encouraging wildlife. |
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On the symphyseal side, the concavity abuts a ridge that borders the straight symphyseal surface of the plate. |
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There is more grumbling among Americans that illegal aliens should be deported and the borders fully closed. |
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The scrub that borders the tracks is overgrown with kudzu, an imported plant that strangles the natives. |
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It will recapture the excitement of crossing national borders that the euro eliminated. |
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His refusal to give de Valera credit for his international diplomacy in the 1930s borders on the absurd. |
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Perhaps it's there to prove that Arabs are streaming over the borders to fight the invading force. |
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For some children starting kindergarten is an exciting adventure, for others the experience borders on the terrifying. |
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The poems are alliterative, disjunctive, unpunctuated, fabular, and also political, based as they are on maps and their borders and flags. |
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Most bands gain local renown but struggle to win respect beyond their own borders. |
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The idea that raw-milk cheese poses a public-health menace in the same category as cigarettes borders on the absurd. |
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The comments are your usual online argument that even borders on Godwin's Law, yah, whatever! |
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The land is wooded with pines, aspens, and junipers, and borders the Targhee National Forest. |
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Administrative and political life is corrupt, and the bureaucracy often borders on the absurd. |
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It borders on the absurd for the mourner to dance gleefully while his parent lies dead in a fresh grave. |
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The more we open up our borders to imports, the worse our trade deficit gets. |
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In Milan Kundera's clumsy new novella, a portentous, worn-out philosophy that borders on the ironic and absurd stands in for real thinking. |
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Both Ecuador and Brazil have stepped up military operations in the dense Amazonian jungles where they share borders with Colombia. |
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But the French Army rallied, the enemy was driven back and the borders of Revolutionary France began to expand. |
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State laws vary widely, with some allowing specific forms of gambling within their borders. |
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International borders becoming more legally defined was largely the result of the establishment of the Westphalian sovereignty system. |
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She envisaged a future where borders between the two countries would become irrelevant. |
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Duke hunted along the dashboard for a pen and jotted a few things in the borders of a curling menu. |
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One reason why absolute monarchs in Europe in the seventeenth century required large standing armies was to defend their extensive borders. |
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You can use wallcoverings to create panels and borders to highlight pictures and mirrors. |
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In Kashubian tradition the borders between everyday life and work and folk art are blurred. |
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What function do borders have in a global democracy, and what entitles people to a right of abode? |
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Some may, indeed, be rascals when out on the town, but the extent of grooms' devotion to their horses often borders on the obsessive. |
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Regimes may change, borders may be redrawn, billions of euros and dollars may be spent but in the end nothing really changes. |
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These may well be the same birds at times congregating on flooded pits at Tottenhill on the fen borders. |
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Jeff showed the twins how to weave the twig wattle fence that borders the deck. |
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In particular, the regime demands formal U.S. and international recognition of the permanence of the borders under its control. |
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Emanuel is a national figure, and dart, for now, is scarcely known beyond the borders of Cook County. |
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Due to serial online pranking which borders on civil disobedience, the wealthy Efram is expelled from multiple schools. |
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John offers a constant and persistent whine that borders on sedition. |
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There should be no provisional status until we have locked down our borders and implemented E-Verify in a satisfactory manner. |
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Just the way societies and individuals are currently beginning to converse across traditional borders, around the globe. |
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Jumbled emotions, from considered melancholia to improvised celebration, are conveyed by the contrast between the sepia-toned photographs and their jazzily patterned borders. |
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Martin's presumptuous and unproven speculation borders on the absurd. |
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After the wall or ceiling has been kalsomined, it is possible to decorate it with figures or borders, using, as paint, kalsomine of suitable colors. |
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Their silk and lambswool blanket has silk borders on all four sides. |
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An avid, fearless cyclist, Smith often scoured the flat, sprawling borders of Los Angeles on one of his bicycles. |
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The French firm of Tassinari et Chatel used this fabric as a guide when reweaving the silk lampas and decorative borders in the original colors of blue, taupe, and cream. |
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Ghanaian soccer player Michael Essien, who plays for ac Milan, has been the subject of what borders on fear mongering. |
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Illegal aliens come from all over the world to converge on the Arizona, California, and New Mexico borders. |
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On the other hand, this prize does afford us a chance to broaden our horizons beyond the borders of whatever country we live in. |
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There is also a large patio area that borders the kitchen and dining room. |
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Stopping sleepers before they are activated and strike will require greater vigilance at the nation's borders, good intelligence, and citizen watchfulness. |
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When partition came in 1947, the Pashtun demanded the redrawing of the old borders of the Raj so as not to bisect their homeland. |
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Both exotic and indigenous species were acclimatised, and specialised sections, such as rosaries, ferneries, borders, and cactus gardens, developed. |
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Both borders are patrolled by UN peacekeepers, missions that all parties disparage as weak and biased. |
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Because the aim, as I see it, will be for embassies to get all the ex-pats and tourists home before borders are closed to us and we are quarantined. |
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His apparent absorption in his own thoughts borders on the rude. |
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And as this community broadens in spread and significance, we are effectively implicated in the relativization of the rest who remain on the outside of its borders. |
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Tenbury Wells is a small ancient market town situated in the very north west of Worcestershire on the A456, close to the borders of Herefordshire and Shropshire. |
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As cultural ambassador of the town of Cottbus, the groups is carrying the Wendish customs beyond the borders of their homeland into the whole world. |
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Moreover, they gave the impression that they were not serious in making the yagna a success when there were war clouds on the borders with Pakistan. |
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The areas round the house, where the borders are filled with herbaceous plants, were the territory of his wife, Elisabeth, an equally keen gardener, who died last year. |
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In reality, the Iraqi borders had been arbitrarily drawn and disregarded 2,000 years of tribal, sectarian, and nomadic occupation. |
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Secondly, U.S. Secretary of State Kerry has recently pushed the Arab League towards flexing its intransigent position on borders. |
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To the north, Jowzjan borders on the amu Darya River and Turkmenistan, a former part of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. |
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From the very beginning this new youth culture crossed national borders. |
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In the seven months since the epidemic began, Ebola has spread across borders, countries, and now continents. |
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As an adulthood now living out his passion, his dedication sometimes borders on obsession. |
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The country's borders are artificial, and were set with no consideration for the various ethnic groups in the region. |
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Interlace can vary from simple two-strand twists used as linear borders to three or four-strand bands which can form roundels, knotwork, or squares, or fill entire panels. |
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Whoever praised Frederick within the borders of his realm did so from necessity, to evade the indignation of a prince who wreaked stern vengeance upon every foe. |
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When you think of the disruption at the Canadian and Mexican borders, not being able to get airfreight into the country, what these guys did was just incredible. |
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It was born 50 years ago, and the world has to live with it just as it does with the borders of Europe, that are redrawn every time there is a war or political upheaval. |
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During the November 2015 Paris attacks, France introduced full identity and nationality checks at its borders. |
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Border zones are areas near borders that have special restrictions to movement. |
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In the European Union, the frontier is the region beyond the expanding borders of the European Union itself. |
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Situated in the northern edge of Eastern Arabia at the tip of the Persian Gulf, it shares borders with Iraq and Saudi Arabia. |
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One of these small Amorite kingdoms founded in 1894 BC contained the then small administrative town of Babylon within its borders. |
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The speed of trains, as well as the number of passengers that crossed multiple borders, made enforcement of passport laws difficult. |
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Border trade, in general, refers to the flow of goods and services across the international borders between jurisdictions. |
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California borders Oregon, Nevada, and Arizona to the north and east, and the Mexican state of Baja California to the south. |
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Other of the city's tourist attractions include Three Frontiers, where the Argentine, Paraguayan and Brazilian borders meet. |
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The foreign affairs in the monarchy were basically related issues with the countries of the Southern Cone with which Brazil has borders. |
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Portugal's maritime borders, also known as the Exclusive economic zone of Portugal is currently disputed by Spain in the Savage Islands area. |
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This treaty established the border between Portugal and Spain which is one of the oldest borders in Europe. |
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The country has land borders with Sweden to the northwest, Norway to the north, and Russia to the east. |
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The country shares land borders with Papua New Guinea, East Timor, and the eastern part of Malaysia. |
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Indonesia shares land borders with Malaysia on Borneo, Papua New Guinea on the island of New Guinea, and East Timor on the island of Timor. |
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Domestic policy are administrative decisions that are directly related to all issues and activity within a nation's borders. |
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It was in the later medieval era that the borders of Scotland reached approximately their modern extent. |
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Roman influence was therefore continually extended as the borders of their conquered territory shifted significantly several times. |
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The languages are also sufficiently similar in writing that they can mostly be understood across borders. |
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The stoat was a fundamental item in the fur trade of the Soviet Union, with no less than half the global catch coming from within its borders. |
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People around the world cross national borders more frequently to seek cultural exchange, education, business, and different lifestyles. |
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The Lomond Hills Regional Park borders and enters the town to the north and east. |
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Equally, the EEC was unsure about which way these countries were heading and wanted to ensure stability along its southern borders. |
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Wallonia borders Flanders and the Netherlands in the north, France to the south and west, and Germany and Luxembourg to the east. |
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The Saxons were furious with him for strengthening the borders of Wallachia, which interfered with their stranglehold on the trade routes. |
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It borders Tyne and Wear to the north east, Northumberland to the north, Cumbria to the west and North Yorkshire to the south. |
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The borders changed over time, but it is generally thought that its lands originally lay between the Afon Llwyd and the River Towy. |
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Gwynedd borders the counties of Conwy, Anglesey over the Menai Strait, Powys, and Ceredigion over the River Dyfi. |
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In 1146 he captured Mold Castle and about 1150 captured Rhuddlan and encroached on the borders of Powys. |
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It is named after the historic county of Flintshire which has notably different borders. |
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The fact that the borders of normality are on a statistical continuum, and always moveable, accounts for the historical dynamic of normalism. |
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It borders the unitary authority areas of Monmouthshire and Torfaen to the east, Caerphilly to the west and Powys to the north. |
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It has, apart from minor realignments, identical borders to the former county. |
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In the same year the King placed George Home, 1st Earl of Dunbar in charge of pacification of the borders. |
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Display books of the Gothic period in particular had very elaborate decorated borders of foliate patterns, often with small drolleries. |
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The borders of modern France are roughly the same as those of ancient Gaul, which was inhabited by Celtic Gauls. |
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From the 250s to the 280s AD, Roman Gaul suffered a serious crisis with its fortified borders being attacked on several occasions by barbarians. |
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Some countries have borders where drivers must switch from LHT to RHT and vice versa. |
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The union with Norway was peacefully dissolved in 1905, leading to Sweden's current borders. |
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Submarine thresholds and continental slopes mark the borders of these basins with the adjacent seas. |
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The population continued to grow, and the pirates looked further and further beyond the borders of the Baltic, and eventually into all of Europe. |
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During its course from the Alps to the North Sea, the Rhine passes through four countries and constitutes six different country borders. |
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Tyne and Wear either has or closely borders two official Met Office stations, neither located in one of the major urban centres. |
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Sometimes border controls exist on internal borders within a sovereign state. |
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The state ceased to owe an obligation to any feudal lord beyond its borders. |
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The city began building a defensive wall around its borders. |
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And I will make thy windows of agates, and thy gates of carbuncles, and all thy borders of pleasant stones. |
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Mostly contentious, borders may even foster the setting up of buffer zones. |
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The Atlantic Ocean borders the west coast and the North Sea is to the east. |
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A special case in recent times was the neutral zones that were set up along parts of Saudi Arabia's borders with Kuwait and Iraq. |
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In modern times, marchlands have been replaced by clearly defined and demarcated borders. |
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For the purposes of border control, airports and seaports are also classed as borders. |
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Some borders require presentation of legal paperwork like passports and visas, or other identity documents, for persons to cross borders. |
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Most countries prohibit carrying illegal drugs or endangered animals across their borders. |
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Political borders are often classified by whether or not they follow conspicuous physical features on the earth. |
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Natural borders are geographical features that present natural obstacles to communication and transport. |
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Existing political borders are often a formalization of these historical, natural obstacles. |
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Throughout history, technological advances have reduced the costs of transport and communication across these natural borders. |
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Some maritime borders have remained indeterminate despite efforts to clarify them. |
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The presence of borders often fosters certain economic features or anomalies. |
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Some borders were broadly defined by treaty, and surveyors would then choose a suitable line on the ground. |
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Frontex is an agency of the EU established to manage the cooperation between national border guards securing its external borders. |
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It borders South East England, South West England, North West England, Yorkshire and Humber, East of England and Wales. |
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The area which this kingdom covered included most of Southern Northumbria, roughly equivalent to the borders of Yorkshire extending further West. |
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Peace left the boundaries unchanged and opened up two centuries of peace and largely open borders. |
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In addition to fish the sea also provides amber, especially from its southern shores within today's borders of Poland, Russia and Lithuania. |
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His information about Mercia came from Lastingham, in Northumbria, and from Lindsey, a province on the borders of Northumbria and Mercia. |
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The concepts of Europe and Asia as distinct continents date back to antiquity and their borders are geologically arbitrary. |
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These are thought to indicate territorial borders and a desire to increase control over wide areas. |
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Expansions were infrequent, as the emperors, adopting a strategy of fixed lines of defense, had determined to maintain existing borders. |
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In most cases, the city borders are coterminous with the borders of their respective municipalities. |
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With his northern borders secured, Edward felt free to continue his major offensive against France, laying siege to the town of Calais. |
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Along with amnesty, our borders were to be secured once and for all. |
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After Napoleon's defeat in 1815, Europe's borders were redrawn at the Congress of Vienna. |
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In this regard, Prussia was restored in its former borders, and also received large chunks of Poland and Saxony. |
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The latter assured the envoy that the Vistula River represented the natural borders between French and Russian influence in Europe. |
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In some cases, borders were altered or districts were combined during this reorganisation. |
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The reason for this was the decision of Casimir the Great to quarantine the nation's borders. |
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The urban area expanded beyond the borders of the City of London, most notably during this period towards the West End and Westminster. |
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In 1603 the King placed George Home, 1st Earl of Dunbar in charge of pacification of the borders. |
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Newry is the only city in Northern Ireland that does not have a Church of Ireland cathedral within its borders. |
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Although Barnsley Metropolitan Borough also borders Sheffield to the north, the town itself is a few miles further away. |
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Pakistan had wished to foment an 'Islamic Revolution' that would transcend national borders, covering Pakistan, Afghanistan, and Central Asia. |
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During renewed sectarian unrest in Rakhine State in 2012, Bangladesh closed its borders amid fears of a third major exodus from Myanmar. |
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The head of the Vatican's Department of Technical Services robustly rejected challenges to the Vatican State's right to build within its borders. |
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Despite its name, for much of its history the Empire did not include Rome within its borders. |
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Panels of interlace and other Insular motifs continue to be used as one element in borders and frames ultimately classical in derivation. |
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Much of the confusion that springs from them comes from their ability to straddle the play's borders between reality and the supernatural. |
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Borrowings into Rock music have often resulted from the fluid borders between Folk and Rock performers and audiences. |
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Their newly developed training ground is in Bulls Cross on the northern borders of the London Borough of Enfield. |
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It was not until the 1938 Polish ultimatum that Lithuania restored diplomatic relations with Poland and thus de facto accepted the borders. |
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The borders of the Black Country can be defined by using the special cultural and industrial characteristics of the area. |
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The Black Country Society defines the Black Country's borders as the area on the thirty foot coal seam, regardless the depth of the seam. |
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During the Allied occupation of Germany after World War II, internal borders were redrawn by the Allied military governments. |
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Macau lies across the delta to the west, and the Chinese province of Guangdong borders the territory to the north. |
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It is crucial that our two countries work closely together to ensure our borders are stronger than ever. |
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Unlike most other borders in the EU, the Irish border is not officially marked by either government. |
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Border controls are measures taken by a country to monitor or regulate its borders. |
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The Enabling Trade Index measures the factors, policies and services that facilitate the trade in goods across borders and to destination. |
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National borders were redrawn, with several independent nations restored or created, and Germany's colonies were parceled out among the victors. |
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On 4 August, after Belgium refused to permit German troops to cross its borders into France, Germany declared war on Belgium as well. |
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At the war's conclusion in 1945, Poland's borders were shifted westwards, resulting in considerable territorial losses. |
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The main purpose of the establishment of the Schengen Agreement is the abolition of physical borders among European countries. |
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The English coastline varies a great deal by the seas and regions it borders. |
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The British settlers along the coast were upset that French troops would now be close to the western borders of their colonies. |
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Similarly, several long land borders made an effective domestic army imperative for any French ruler. |
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The Allies disagreed about how the European map should look, and how borders would be drawn, following the war. |
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It shares land borders with Guinea and Liberia and is bordered to the west by the Atlantic Ocean. |
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International trade is the exchange of capital, goods, and services across international borders or territories. |
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Without international trade, nations would be limited to the goods and services produced within their own borders. |
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Chiba Prefecture borders it to the east, Yamanashi to the west, Kanagawa to the south, and Saitama to the north. |
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Nova Scotia has a long history of social justice work to address issues such as racism and sexism within its borders. |
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At the time, many of the oral ballads from the borders and the North East were written down. |
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A novel approach was the granting of rights across the national borders of states adhering to the directive. |
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These countries look to remove their temporary restrictions soon and reopen their borders to other Schengen states. |
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The Schengen Borders Code requires participating states to remove all obstacles to free traffic flow at internal borders. |
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Greece, Iceland and Malta do not share land borders with other Schengen member states. |
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Open borders appeared to have impeded Germany's ability to provide for very large numbers of persons seeking refuge all at once. |
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Divided from each other by administrative borders, they form a single ecological entity. |
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Some of the dialects had until recently extensions across the borders of other standard language areas. |
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This difference resulted from the High German consonant shift, with the Uerdingen and Benrath lines being two notable linguistic borders. |
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This division largely defines the popular perception and understanding of Western Europe and its borders with Eastern Europe. |
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After the development of Amsterdam's canals in the 17th century, the city did not grow beyond its borders for two centuries. |
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It borders Greater London to the north west, Surrey to the west and East Sussex to the south west. |
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It borders the River Thames and the North Sea to the north, and the Straits of Dover and the English Channel to the south. |
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Frankish incursions over the Rhine became so frequent that the Romans began to settle the Franks on their borders in order to control them. |
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It touches France to the west near the coast, and borders the Netherlands to the north and east, and Wallonia to the south. |
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Flanders shares its borders with Wallonia in the south, Brussels being an enclave within the Flemish Region. |
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Bluebells are widely planted as garden plants, either among trees or in herbaceous borders. |
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Today, Africa contains 54 sovereign countries, most of which have borders that were drawn during the era of European colonialism. |
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James Cook's account of his second voyage implies New Caledonia borders it. |
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It does not exactly correspond to the cultural borders of its various types of constituents. |
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Part of Namibia's borders with Botswana and South Africa are defined by the meridian. |
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The Automotive Products Trade Agreement of 1965 opened Canada's borders to trade in the automobile manufacturing industry. |
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These borders are regions of intense seismic activity, including frequent earthquakes, occasional tsunamis, and volcanic eruptions. |
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It is landlocked and borders the counties of Dorset, Somerset, Hampshire, Gloucestershire, Oxfordshire and Berkshire. |
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Henry had the support of most of the neighbouring counts around Normandy's borders, and King Philip of France was persuaded to remain neutral. |
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Henry responded to the French and Angevin threat by expanding his own network of supporters beyond the Norman borders. |
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Towns that were split by historic borders and were unified in one administrative county include Banbury, Mossley, Tamworth, Todmorden. |
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The Balkans, or the Balkan Peninsula, is a geographic area in Eastern and Southeastern Europe with various and disputed borders. |
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Croatia and Slovenia started negotiations to define maritime borders in the Gulf of Piran in 1992 but failed to agree, resulting in a dispute. |
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In fact, Lower Saxony borders more neighbours than any other single Bundesland. |
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The Kievan Rus' were marking out their territory, a Great Moravia was growing, while the Angles and the Saxons were securing their borders. |
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The names of the people and settlements confirm Dacia's borders as described by Agrippa. |
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A number of Austrian actors were able to pursue a career, the impact of which was sensed beyond national borders. |
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Metalwork is commonly of a much more widespread distribution than pottery and does not conform to these borders. |
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Cologne is located on both sides of the Rhine, near Germany's borders with Belgium and the Netherlands. |
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Jovinus was dead by 413, but the Romans found it increasingly difficult to manage the Franks within their borders. |
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In recent years, a nation state's claim to absolute sovereignty within its borders has been much criticized. |
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Satellite imagery of the Gulf of Guinea showing borders of states on its shores. |
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Pippin had to hold the Avar and Beneventan borders and fought the Slavs to his north. |
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The Hellenic Eastern Empire, based in Constantinople, continued to hold a substantial portion of Italy, with borders not far south of Rome. |
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Most of the Alemanni were probably at the time in fact resident in or close to the borders of Germania Superior. |
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This convention recognizes the Sami as one indigenous people residing across national borders in all three countries. |
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Most Sami languages are spoken in several countries, because linguistic borders do not correspond to national borders. |
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The development of the borders between the Finnic peoples and the Balts was under way. |
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To the east the region borders Russia and on the west the Canadian coastline can be seen from Greenland on a clear day. |
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This resulted in a common labour market and free movement across borders without passports for the countries' citizens. |
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It is recorded in several poetic and bardic sources, although its borders are not described in any of them. |
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In all, 160 different other ethnic groups and indigenous peoples live within its borders. |
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The current borders of Sweden were not settled until 1809 with the loss of Finland to Russia in the Finnish War. |
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Switzerland's borders have not changed since, except for some minor adjustments. |
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At the end, there was little difference between the Roman military and the barbarians across the borders. |
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Athanaric wanted to fortify the borders, but Hunnic raids into the land west of the Dniester continued. |
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They are constantly changing in population size and power because of the limited restrictions of their borders. |
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There was no readily applicable definition for who the German people would be or how far the borders of a German nation would stretch. |
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The circulation of cultures enables individuals to partake in extended social relations that cross national and regional borders. |
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The borders of the Empire evolved significantly over its existence, as it went through several cycles of decline and recovery. |
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Before crossing to Asia, Alexander wanted to safeguard his northern borders. |
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The eastern borders of Alexander's empire began to collapse even during his lifetime. |
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Although the sea ban left the Ming army free to extirpate the remaining Yuan loyalists and secure China's borders, it tied up local resources. |
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There were renewed tensions in 2005 as hundreds of African migrants tried to storm the borders of the Spanish enclaves of Melilla and Ceuta. |
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Southeast of the Atlas mountains, near the Algerian borders, the climate becomes very dry, with long and hot summers. |
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South of Agadir and east of Jerada near the Algerian borders, arid and desert climate starts to prevail. |
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Ban Chao expanded his conquests across the Pamirs to the shores of the Caspian Sea and the borders of Parthia. |
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In aviation, it is the right to operate within the domestic borders of another country. |
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Following over a century of native resistance, Ghana's current borders were established by the 1900s as the British Gold Coast. |
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It shares land borders with Zambia and Angola to the north, Botswana to the east and South Africa to the south and east. |
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The only perennial rivers are found on the national borders with South Africa, Angola, Zambia, and the short border with Botswana in the Caprivi. |
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Namibia does not have any enemies in the region although it has been involved in various disputes regarding borders and construction plans. |
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Her reforms and those she made with her husband had an influence that extended well beyond the borders of their united kingdoms. |
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It is bounded on the east by the Atlantic Ocean, and to the west it borders the province of Misiones, Argentina. |
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Locals sometimes divide it today by the political borders, giving rise to the terms Argentinian Chaco, Paraguayan Chaco and Bolivian Chaco. |
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The treaty was renewed no less than nine times, but did not restrain some Xiongnu tuqi from raiding Han borders. |
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Both diplomats secured the rightful borders of the Song Dynasty through knowledge of cartography and dredging up old court archives. |
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Most species were gathered from the coldest places in Tierra del Fuego, mainly sites with tundra borders. |
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It is the only state that borders both the Gulf of Mexico and the Atlantic Ocean. |
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It is the only state that borders both the Atlantic Ocean and the Gulf of Mexico. |
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After his advance was stalled near Murom, Safa Giray was forced to withdraw to his own borders. |
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In the later years of Ivan's reign, the southern borders of Muscovy were disturbed by Crimean Tatars. |
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Constituting the westernmost bulk of the archipelago, it borders the Arctic Ocean, the Norwegian Sea, and the Greenland Sea. |
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The west coast borders the Gulf of Carpentaria and the east coast borders the Coral Sea. |
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By the 18th century, Cossack hosts in the Russian Empire occupied effective buffer zones on its borders. |
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During this time, the Habsburg Empire sometimes covertly hired Cossack raiders to go against the Ottomans to ease pressure on their own borders. |
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He attracted support both in Russia and outside its borders, particularly in the Polish Commonwealth and the Papal States. |
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The Great Wall was also expanded, while series of military conquests and diplomatic maneuvers further pacified its borders. |
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All nations in North and South America have populations of indigenous peoples within their borders. |
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This area borders lands of the Huasteca and Pame groups, and there have been conflicts among the three. |
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In the United States exists eleven megaregions that transcend international borders and comprise Canadian and Mexican metropolitan regions. |
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It also shares maritime borders with Nunavut, Prince Edward Island, and Nova Scotia. |
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The borders of the 13 original states were largely determined by colonial charters. |
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Once established, most state borders have, with few exceptions, been generally stable. |
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Western New York is considered part of the Great Lakes Region and borders Lake Ontario, Lake Erie, and Niagara Falls. |
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New York is the only state that includes within its borders parts of the Great Lakes and the Atlantic Ocean. |
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Trade into and outside the kingdom's borders was subject to toll fees or duties. |
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International trade is the exchange of goods and services across national borders. |
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They argue that the picket line is symbolic of a wound and those who break its borders to return to work are the scabs who bond that wound. |
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In some places, the borders between cities in the central Ruhr are unrecognizable due to continuous development across them. |
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As a result of the changing relations to Finland, the northern borders of Norrland have shifted. |
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It borders Douglas, Mendon, Millville, Northbridge, and Sutton, Massachusetts, plus the Rhode Island towns of Burrillville and North Smithfield. |
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Watertown borders Soldiers Field Road and the Massachusetts Turnpike, major arteries into downtown Boston. |
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Pooley Bridge is a village in the Eden District of the northwestern English county of Cumbria, within the traditional borders of Westmorland. |
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To the north the pass is flanked by Whinlatter fell, while to the south the Whiteside, Hopegill Head and Grisedale Pike fells borders the pass. |
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The Conservatives hold all 11 Parliamentary constituencies within the county borders. |
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As the provincial borders have not always been stable, this practice has resulted in some confusion about exactly where the montane borders are. |
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Over the centuries these borders have varied, mainly at the expense of Tuscany. |
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The Roman name and borders fell into disuse and by the Dark Ages it was part of Sapaudia. |
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It is bounded on the east by the North Sea, and has borders with Northumberland to the north and County Durham to the south. |
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The SSSI extends over the borders into Greater Manchester and West Yorkshire. |
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It is close to the county borders of Greater Manchester to the north, Derbyshire to the east and Staffordshire to the south. |
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During the wars, the livelihood of the people on the borders was devastated by armies from both sides. |
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The county borders Derbyshire, West Yorkshire, North Yorkshire, the East Riding of Yorkshire, Lincolnshire and Nottinghamshire. |
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The prairie round about is wet, at times almost marshy, especially at the borders of the great reedy slews. |
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To the south, though, the explosive-crammed pod rushed over spivvy streets, directly above a barricade at the borders of Aspic and Barrackham. |
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