A system with few clear boundaries and no real checks and balances is ripe for chaos. |
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Even her first marriage to Otieno, a Luo, stretched boundaries as she is a Kikuyu, famous rivals of Luos for political and cultural reasons. |
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It has redrawn the electoral boundaries, will use intimidation at the polling stations and has apparently falsified the electoral roll. |
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Every decade the state redraws its political boundaries to reflect population changes. |
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The Government wants the matter resolved quickly so electoral boundaries can be redrawn before the next State election. |
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That their way is not right or proper or any way within the boundaries of normal behaviour hardly matters. |
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Of course, the best researchers are flagrant scofflaws about disciplinary boundaries, but most of the rest of us scoff them at our peril. |
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They say that beauty is in the eye of the beholder and that art has no boundaries. |
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It is a negotiated relationship in which the submissive sets boundaries and a safeword to instantaneously stop the action is agreed on. |
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Discuss what is appropriate table talk and agree to keep the game commentary within these boundaries. |
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There are obviously many degrees of cultural self-assertion, cultural defensiveness, cultural porousness and cultural boundaries. |
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Weathered specimens can also break along the segmental boundaries and expose additional structures, the so-called segmental diaphragms. |
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The only boundaries these movies will break is in special effects, which is kinda cool but not a lot else. |
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Greater Manchester Police has a list of missing people from within its boundaries and from neighbouring areas. |
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Not all scholars are agreed on the boundaries and relationship between linguistics and sociolinguistics. |
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Could Thunderbird be configured to word wrap at the window boundaries so that the text doesn't extend off the page? |
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Which is a safe choice, but hardly the point of a festival about elbowing the creative boundaries a little. |
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Her response is to renegotiate the boundaries between spiritual faith and worldly economies. |
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Yet, these changes do not always simply reflect changes in firm boundaries. |
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As universities accommodated this changing clientele, boundaries weakened between regions, towns, classes, races, and the sexes. |
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Once the teaching element of the site is on-line, these efforts can be expanded far beyond the boundaries of our region. |
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Professor Byrne dealt with the question of how learning providers can play a binding role in uniting regions across county boundaries. |
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Gene pairs were grouped according to their K s values into bins of width 0.5 whose lower boundaries are indicated on the x-axis. |
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The beauty in relationships that transcend social and lingual boundaries is wonderfully depicted as Isa dances with locals in an Indian desert. |
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Andrew stood on the edge of the ruins that marked the outer boundaries of the city centre. |
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Redrawing district boundaries has the potential to affect the balance of power in the House more than apportionment. |
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Mineral grains are typically fractured and show dark alteration along grain boundaries and fractures. |
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Instead of complaining about constituency boundaries, the Conservatives should back a referendum on the alternative vote. |
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Teenagers are forever pushing out their boundaries as they strive to be independent and self sufficient. |
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Is it any wonder that his ambiguous hybrid art dissolves boundaries in such an equivocal manner? |
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The terraced landscaping on the entrance from the Tullow Road detracts the eye from some poor rear boundaries to dwellings on this entrance. |
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The laths occur in bundles or packets with low angle boundaries between the laths. |
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As the delinquent desperately struggles to test set boundaries, so does the apostate or apostatizing church. |
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Soldiers also learned to abide by the laws of war and set more humane boundaries for future military operations to mitigate extreme cruelty. |
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Unfortunately, its boundaries, both conchologically and zoogeographically, are a bit fuzzy. |
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As a young man, he farmed land originally within the reservation boundaries. |
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Primary care trusts are now charged with explicit responsibilities for all looked after children resident in their boundaries. |
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Summary maps of territorial boundaries of each resident bird were compiled monthly. |
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Logan had learned this tract was mistakenly omitted from the government's official demarcation of Zuni boundaries five years earlier. |
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Ever afterwards, they skirted the boundaries of our property as if we'd wired the perimeter with high-voltage electricity. |
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Unable to move beyond the fixed boundaries imposed on her by the chain restraints, exercise was difficult. |
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This heinous act of the murder of a little girl and the wounding of her peers go beyond the boundaries of reason and sanity. |
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All the important rivalries in Europe both antedated the ideological divide and crossed its boundaries. |
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He noted that the carnivores require vast territories and that some lion prides exist entirely outside park boundaries. |
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Hence, she crosses the boundaries between a retriever of ancient treasures and a finder of local Americana. |
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Printers themselves were expected to monitor the boundaries between licit and illicit content in their works. |
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Subgeneric diversity was calculated by tallying taxa that cross boundaries. |
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There are also fears that the various newly created autonomies will fight over maritime boundaries and resources such as fish. |
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The indistinct boundaries between these dolomite rhombs and the calcite suggests that the latter has been partially dolomitized. |
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They are libertines, people who have gone with the contemporary cultural flow of destroying moral rules and boundaries. |
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Sectors are generally not separated by clear boundaries like those between levels of analysis. |
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A balanced women will give you space and respect your boundaries, because she will demand her own space and will have her own boundaries. |
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This permitted us to map the local jamming area and determine the boundaries of the jamming range. |
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This allowed for greater autonomy within the boundaries of the Federal Republic. |
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It is a unique record that pushes at the boundaries of autobiography and fiction. |
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They took it on themselves to define the distinction between high and popular culture and then police its boundaries. |
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The law of torts, or civil wrongs, is extensive and its boundaries are indistinct. |
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In a legal system that's built on analogy and precedent, principles often expand past the boundaries that even their authors originally urged. |
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Their formal innovations and aestheticism further pushed the Baudelairean boundaries of poetic language. |
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Instead, West Virginia argued that the boundaries of the projects should be extended to permit fishing in the tailwater below the powerhouse. |
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A second characteristic that distinguishes markets in which valuation is difficult is the heightened salience of product category boundaries. |
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The conference organizers set out to understand how the boundaries of activism are redrawn in the age of new media. |
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There needs to be regulation, and in some cases perhaps self-imposed boundaries are enough. |
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At Polesden in Surrey, a set of lynchets was found crossing parish boundaries, dissected by a late Anglo-Saxon hundredal boundary. |
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The picking apart of the fluid parish boundaries is methodologically innovative. |
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The society is now saying the show is pushing back the boundaries of animal safety for the sake of entertainment. |
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A fashion designer with attitude, Arora thinks fashion should be unchained and without boundaries. |
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In school, one of these many boundaries will be the legitimacy of academic knowledge. |
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It is a very unusual piece of theatre in the sense that it extends the boundaries and possibilities of theatre to the maximum. |
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Danny Hennesey and Bob Wrigglesworth hit a flurry of boundaries as Drax looked like running up a mammoth score against Heworth. |
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Bear signs are everywhere in Bradwell Bay, from fresh footprints to scat to mauled trees, marked by hears to show territorial boundaries. |
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The 33-year-old Kaluwitharana, playing his first Test in two years, justified his selection by tearing into the Kiwi attack with 13 boundaries. |
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By refusing to accept conventional boundaries, this film makes the ordinary into something wonderful. |
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In fact, it begs the question whether preserving today's national boundaries is a worthwhile goal. |
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There were 276 burgesses in 1086 under the direct lordship of the king, and about 450 households in all within the borough's boundaries. |
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The main campus is located within the boundaries of an urban area and is easily accessible by two major highways. |
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New Zealand broke away from the boundaries of rugby, racing and beer to embrace a range of new sports. |
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The officials are keenly aware they risk ruffling customers by straying outside the boundaries of its conservative styling. |
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Brackets denote operon boundaries and arrows indicate the direction of transcription of each gene. |
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Thinking beyond conventional boundaries and striving for differentiation and memorability is essential to the effectiveness of our design. |
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Do you claim responsibility for changing the boundaries of taste in film culture? |
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But, the thermals are for the most part within the acceptable boundaries of good taste. |
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Her images explore the illusory boundaries, shallow artificiality, and transitory nature of culture. |
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The boundaries were blurred to the extent that some kings themselves held episcopal or abbatial office. |
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They were not concerned with the boundaries of the French nation, but self-respect and honour. |
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The design community should push the boundaries and bring the standard of quality to a higher level. |
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Four towers, originally built to demarcate the boundaries of Bangalore, are now very much inside city limits. |
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It won't be the first time the keen sportsman has pushed the boundaries of human endurance to the limit in the name of charity. |
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He is not a moral majoritarian, but he isn't going to be extending the boundaries of personal morality either. |
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Each child was imagined as an active participant in establishing those boundaries, not as a passive acceptor of pre-established group decisions. |
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Simple quartiles cannot be defined in interval variables unless their boundaries chance to fall at interval boundaries. |
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In the United States, with its federalist system, marriage traditionally falls within the boundaries of state law. |
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Arico's Uccello series and the intriguingly elegant Perspectives made in 1970, explore the boundaries between geometric logic and visual space. |
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It's the defense's job to make sure that the prosecution watch their boundaries, watches their step. |
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Dublin's property boundaries were set from the earliest dense occupation, and wattle fences were replicated numerous times in the same positions. |
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With the electoral boundaries gerrymandered in parallel, many nationalist council majorities were wiped out. |
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He said the Government's electoral reforms would create a gerrymander, where electoral boundaries are created to give one party an advantage. |
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Could you help us here, because we are not quite clear as to where the boundaries should be drawn. |
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While the jet set rule the grounds, genuine golf lovers cut across class boundaries. |
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As it happens, these neurons are also very sensitive to the acoustic boundaries between speech sounds, as are monkeys and human infants. |
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Invasive species, indeed any weedy species, don't give a hoot about your property boundaries. |
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The age of the Ordovician boundaries were determined using potassium-argon and uranium radiometric dating. |
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At the same time teenagers do want boundaries of some sort and they do want us to love them. |
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The city was then divided administratively into four regions, without regard for the boundaries of the former six municipalities. |
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They say the new municipal boundaries will incorporate areas which are presently under their jurisdiction into urban areas. |
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Within its boundaries live over a hundred human residents, many of whom are farmers or cattle ranchers. |
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As well as residents of Dingle townland, people with rateable properties inside the townland boundaries can vote. |
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A lot of invaluable literature in the languages of the common folk has remained outside recognised literary boundaries. |
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At the same time, the centrifugal forces of interest and reaction caused local people to reconceive the boundaries of their nation. |
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He now hopes to plant another 450 metres of hedge at Hob Moor to replace deteriorating hedges and to screen other ugly boundaries. |
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As our graphic shows, Knight worked his runs all round the wicket, and in all he hit only seven boundaries. |
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The appeal of football spreads wider yet and wider beyond the nation's boundaries. |
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This conversion experience then rippled through science, changing the boundaries of disciplines, reallocating resources, and so on. |
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If the proposed boundary changes go through, Parteen and several other Clare suburbs of Limerick City will be drawn inside the city boundaries. |
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These set boundaries of a sort, but the blocks could, at least in this caricature, be assembled and reassembled in fluctuating patterns. |
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If the transportation crosses provincial boundaries, an additional allowance of 90 satang per kilometer will be provided. |
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The couple decide to try a live-in relationship, primarily platonic, though the boundaries soon dissipate. |
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It's a stereotypical behaviour in which ingrained cultural boundaries keep men and women from connecting romantically. |
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These dates are only applicable to stage boundaries and no dates are available for marine bands and coals used to correlate sections at sub-stage level. |
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I attended a parenting course to enable me to reestablish boundaries and to undergo counselling since I was almost sectionable myself by that time. |
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The seat of Oxley disappeared in a redistribution of electoral boundaries. |
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He reached a 102-ball ton at the declaration, hitting 14 boundaries. |
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He sees expansion beyond Singapore's boundaries as the only way to avoid the slow profit growth that comes to a company that has saturated its home market. |
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The film then blurs space-time boundaries as it sends the two filmmakers on assignment to interview the key characters surrounding the hero's life. |
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Sometimes if parents set too many boundaries and discipline too much, they will then also rebel and spiral out of control. |
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The lie detector tests are therefore intended to extend the boundaries a little by putting another psychological weapon in the hands of the probationary services. |
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Events of this kind are no respecters of scale or boundaries. |
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There are 300 hectares of parks, gardens and green areas within the city boundaries so you're never short of a place of respite from the sightseeing. |
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Women tittered nervously at the implications of age and sexual boundaries. |
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At the same time, they are the biological and cultural reproducers of the community and their bodies symbolize the body of the community and its boundaries. |
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One thing they all have in common is a blurring of the traditional boundaries between subjects and objects, which automatically reframes the issue of social agency. |
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Species defined in these anagenetic terms have neither discrete temporal boundaries nor a sufficient level of constancy during their evolutionary tenures. |
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Working across sectoral boundaries is difficult, owing to, among several reasons, powerful tobacco groups that oppose legislation on improving public health. |
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Polygon boundaries coincide with anticlinal ridges on the interface between the faulted sequence and an underlying 35 m thick low velocity, low density, overpressured layer. |
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An American first lady was embracing a brand known for its willingness to push boundaries, to agitate, and even to offend. |
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Mozart's operas to librettos by Da Ponte examine attempts to constrain the irrationality of desire within the artificial boundaries of class and society. |
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These were members of the royal family whose dynasties became hereditary while their traditional districts were clearly defined by boundaries and Bemba names. |
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You hope that the narrative will go off the rails, but Holt sticks to the boundaries of a ghost story. |
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Despite their different approaches in regional studies and regionalism, Morrissey and Hirt both agree that a region's boundaries change over time. |
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The many glories of Babylon, for example, lay unexplored not far from the boundaries of Baghdad. |
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This region, which incorporated the boundaries of the later independent republic, was a semi-autonomous constituent republic within the Yugoslav federation. |
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The bullies at Mariana push the boundaries of bad behaviour beyond the typical adolescent hijinks and hazing. |
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But the whole point of the biotech industry is to blur those boundaries, and Myriad did. |
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In this diagram, phase boundaries were assumed to be given by the onset and completion temperatures of the phase transitions revealed by the thermograms. |
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But it is a worrying claim nonetheless, one of many testing the boundaries of this new area of law. |
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Many former employees described Masters as a demanding, overbearing micromanager who had no boundaries. |
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For once, the boundless nature of comic story-telling is actually being used to cross boundaries. |
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The last six months have been a stark reminder of the brutality that lurks at the boundaries of civilized society. |
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Those who dream of a post-partisan future should note that paranoia has a habit of erasing traditional political boundaries. |
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World War I would reshape psychological boundaries as radically as it did geographical ones. |
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At one time the world was divided into entities that were separated by geographical boundaries, which have been significantly eroded and continue to dissolve. |
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It will be noted approvingly that the prose poem blurs boundaries. |
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Of course, in reality-that is, in the universe beyond the boundaries of our conceptual vocabularies-homosexuality is no more abominable than lobsters or flying squirrels. |
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However, after previously unbanded birds were banded during nesting, the understanding of territory boundaries and number of territories never changed. |
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The boundaries of acceptable comedy have once again asserted themselves, limning the limits of gallows humor. |
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States and boundaries disappear while new ones emerge, the world is being reapportioned and nobody, least of all the German government, is prepared to stay on the sidelines. |
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Each will create a blurring of the boundaries between clergy and laity. |
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Officials from the Fire Island National Seashore, whose boundaries encompass all Fire Island communities, have expressed wariness of such projects. |
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Therefore, the two growth constants, isochronous growth levels and simultaneous secretion across shared zooidal boundaries, apply to primary cystiphragm-cortex units. |
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The median lobate structure, formed by fusion of the two median muscle boundaries of the true lobes, may be extended away from the two lateral lobate structures. |
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The revival of St Emilion first occurred in the 1930s with the demolition of geographical boundaries and recognition of Pomerol as an independent appellation. |
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The phraseology suggests that Henley, although tenurially still linked with Benson, was increasingly seen as a distinct outlier with its own boundaries. |
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A second piece is a travel primer, Easily assembled at home, and for use by those who have never traveled to lands beyond, which beckons us to step beyond our safe boundaries. |
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By drawing boundaries against wrongful conduct, law provides a protective zone of freedom within those boundaries. |
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Convergence became the watchword as boundaries separating local and long-distance, voice and data, cable and telephone, and wireline and wireless services eroded. |
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Both cities have a shortage of better-off areas within their boundaries. |
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There has been a lot of gerrymandering of the constituency boundaries. |
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She'd never been outside the forest, and the river was well outside the boundaries of the tribal lands, she remembered once from her father's recounts of his travels. |
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He said the party had impoverished its supporters and predicted that they would turn against the ruling party, no matter how the constituency boundaries were gerrymandered. |
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If anything, it reinforced perceptions that the board and the ANC were simply gerrymandering provincial boundaries to suit short-term political ends. |
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These apophyses extend 50 pm into the adjacent quartz grains and, when viewed parallel to the grain boundaries, form irregular branching features. |
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If later drilling shows that the deposit extends over a larger area than had previously been thought, the area will be redetermined with more extensive boundaries. |
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Perhaps it is too easy to point out who else should have been included when the anthologist is limited by the boundaries her publishers set. |
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Segment boundaries often have a more complex structure and generally cross the rift axis at a high angle. |
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Vast forests, featuring almost exclusively the three species pine, spruce and birch, dominate the landscape, clearly demarcating its boundaries. |
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Blackheath FC, a club within the historic boundaries of the county, play in National League 1, the third tier of English rugby. |
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These expansions brought the boundaries of Normandy roughly in line with those of the ecclesiastical province of Rouen. |
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Alfred defeated Guthrum, establishing the boundaries of Danelaw in an 884 treaty. |
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Further, Coventry's prosperity and rapid growth was threatening that it as well as Birmingham would require to overspill its boundaries. |
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The divisions between all these groups are approximate and their boundaries are not always clear. |
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The initial objective of Ptolemy's reign was to establish firm and broad boundaries to his newly acquired kingdom. |
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Bristol's boundaries are defined in several ways, depending on whether they are those of the city, the developed area, or Greater Bristol. |
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Three types of plate boundaries exist, with a fourth, mixed type, characterized by the way the plates move relative to each other. |
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These are essentially continental fragments whose boundaries are generally defined by faults. |
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Shallow marine environments exist adjacent to coastlines and can extend to the boundaries of the continental shelf. |
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Its exact function is debated, though most researchers agree that its primary purpose is to establish boundaries. |
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As the tectonic plates migrate, oceanic crust is subducted under the leading edges of the plates at convergent boundaries. |
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Their boundaries as defined by Ptolemy and other geographers of antiquity were drawn along the Nile and Don rivers. |
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More immediate to the time, the partitioning of the Ottoman Empire was a political event that redrew the political boundaries of West Asia. |
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Divergent boundaries within continents initially produce rifts which eventually become rift valleys. |
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Divergent boundaries also form volcanic islands which occur when the plates move apart to produce gaps which molten lava rises to fill. |
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The origin of new divergent boundaries at triple junctions is sometimes thought to be associated with the phenomenon known as hotspots. |
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Divergent boundaries can create massive fault zones in the oceanic ridge system. |
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Passive margins are only passive in that they are not active plate boundaries. |
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Sharply defined boundaries exist between water masses which form at the surface, and subsequently maintain their own identity within the ocean. |
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Fogg sank off the coast of Texas, nowhere near the commonly accepted boundaries of the Triangle. |
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Other northern states discouraged the settling of free blacks within their boundaries. |
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The government wanted to reverse declining fish stocks by removing foreign fishing within the new inshore fishery boundaries. |
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These boundaries can even be visible, but usually their presence is marked by rapid changes in salinity, temperature and turbidity. |
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Despite this, there are no genetic boundaries around local populations that biologically mark off any discrete groups of humans. |
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These names survive to the present day as regional units of modern Greece, though with somewhat different boundaries. |
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There are also plans to build on land in the Teignbridge and East Devon areas, which border Exeter's boundaries. |
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Because some overlap regional boundaries, they may be shown in more than one region. |
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The Dublin Quarter Sessions Court had cognizance of all crimes committed within the city's boundaries except treason. |
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Urban districts that lay across county boundaries were to be included in the county with the greater part of the population in the 1881 census. |
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Examples included the changing of boundaries, raising of loans or the taking on of additional powers. |
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A book, movie, television series, or other artistic creation is said to be sui generis when it does not fit into standard genre boundaries. |
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Although willing to compromise about exact boundaries, the government stood firm on the existence or abolition of county councils. |
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Names such as Herefordshire and the East Riding of Yorkshire reappeared as local government entities, although often with new boundaries. |
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The early divisions form most of the current counties, albeit with adapted boundaries. |
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There are three fire stations within the city boundaries at St Mary's, Hightown and Redbridge. |
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The boundaries of the administrative counties changed considerably over time. |
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In the late 7th century, the West Saxons occupied an area in the west of southern England, though the exact boundaries are difficult to define. |
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These counties, on their historical boundaries, cover a little more than half the area of England. |
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Not all of these attractions are within the formal boundaries of the village. |
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In June 2011, research company Democratic Audit published its findings about the review of constituency boundaries. |
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The organisation attempted to create a set of boundaries for the UK according to the new rules, and to examine their political consequences. |
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Provisional notional results published in January 2012 calculated that the Conservatives could have won 299 seats under the new boundaries. |
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However, the northern and eastern boundaries of the area are hard to define. |
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In free flowing speech, there are no clear boundaries between one segment and the next, nor usually are there any audible pauses between words. |
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The establishment of permanent boundaries between what later became Lower Saxony and Westphalia began in the 12th century. |
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He concluded that tribes in general are characterized by fluid boundaries and heterogeneity, are not parochial, and are dynamic. |
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In Malayalam, compounding is phonologically conditioned so gemination occurs at words' internal boundaries. |
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Bordering dialects very probably continued to be mutually intelligible even beyond the boundaries of the consonant shift. |
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In this way, cultural boundaries of communication could be explored, as opposed to using linguistic boundaries or notions about the residence. |
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An explanation is that kinship does not form clear boundaries and is centered differently for each individual. |
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In contrast, descent groups usually do form clear boundaries and provide an easy way to create cooperative groups of various sizes. |
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In some cases, the geographic boundaries of an ethnic population and a political state largely coincide. |
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Innumerable conflicts have arisen where political boundaries did not correspond with ethnic or cultural boundaries. |
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The first, original, and truly natural boundaries of states are beyond doubt their internal boundaries. |
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Keppel's support for the project of creating the report was motivated by his concern with the maintenance of existing racial boundaries. |
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The Internet has been instrumental in connecting people across geographical boundaries. |
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Its maritime boundaries include Vietnam in the Gulf of Thailand to the southeast, and Indonesia and India on the Andaman Sea to the southwest. |
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Outside the boundaries of the microcosm lie foreign realms that, because they are unfamiliar or not ordered, represent chaos, death or night. |
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The climate changed considerably and boundaries among different ecological zones changed as well, affecting migration and conquest. |
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These areas do not overlap with constituency boundaries to get reliable data for election purposes as well. |
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What happened to true love knows no boundaries and all that? |
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Post towns rarely correspond exactly to administrative boundaries and their associated physical features. |
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In turn, many of the intendancy boundaries became Mexican state boundaries after independence. |
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A pandemic is an epidemic occurring on a scale which crosses international boundaries, usually affecting a large number of people. |
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The influence of Puerto Rican literature has transcended the boundaries of the island to the United States and the rest of the world. |
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Puerto Rican cuisine has transcended the boundaries of the island, and can be found in several countries outside the archipelago. |
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Earthquakes are rare because Florida is not located near any tectonic plate boundaries. |
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Hernando Pizarro's men formed an uneasy truce with De Almagro's men, surveying to determine the boundaries of their leaders' royal grants. |
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Many of the ancient faults are within plates rather than along plate boundaries. |
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Guadalupe Island is located in the extreme west of the state's boundaries and is the site of large colonies of sea lions. |
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The Treaty defines sovereignty and maritime boundaries in the area between the two countries. |
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Still other definitions of the ocean boundaries would have Tasmania with the Great Australian Bight to the west, and the Tasman Sea to the east. |
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There are many other islands located within the boundaries of the Pacific Ocean that are not considered part of Oceania. |
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Now Tim began to be struck with these loitering progresses along the garden boundaries in the gloaming, and wondered what they boded. |
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It is the largest among the rivers whose catchment is entirely within the Russian territorial boundaries. |
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Here, no fewer than eight isoglosses run roughly West to East and partially merge into a simpler system of boundaries in East Central German. |
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Thus, pseudosecrets can also become a way of maintaining generational and sexual boundaries in the family. |
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The only exception to this is that a sound change may or may not recognise word boundaries, even when they are not indicated by prosodic clues. |
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Most African Americans are descendants of enslaved peoples within the boundaries of the present United States. |
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The countries of the basin regained their independence between 1956 and 1962, retaining the colonial administrative boundaries. |
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By the Virginia Company's Third Charter in 1612, the boundaries of the new colony were extended out to sea to include Bermuda. |
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The more northern areas were held by the British until the peace treaty restored the old boundaries. |
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The state is bounded on the south by the states of Ohio and Indiana, sharing land and water boundaries with both. |
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State courts have the power to determine legal ownership of any real or personal property within the state's boundaries. |
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Small portions of Delaware are also situated on the eastern side of the Delaware River sharing land boundaries with New Jersey. |
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The Marathas continued their military campaigns against Mughals, Nizam, Nawab of Bengal and Durrani Empire to further extend their boundaries. |
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All election procedures are overseen by the elections and boundaries commission. |
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Gerrymandering is the manipulation of electoral district boundaries for political gain. |
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The Act was tidied up with many further Acts to alter electoral boundaries. |
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The natural language use of the terms varies, with subtle connotative boundaries. |
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However, the population growth slowed down as people moved beyond its boundaries. |
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They also have blunt boundaries, as opposed to flakes, which alleviates the stress concentration problems found in grey cast iron. |
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No large inclusions of cementite will form at the boundaries in hypoeuctoid steel. |
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The atoms in the materials diffuse across the boundaries of the particles, fusing the particles together and creating one solid piece. |
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Convex surfaces have a higher chemical potential than concave surfaces therefore grain boundaries will move toward their center of curvature. |
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This progress at domestic level transformed the townspeople's way of life and changed the boundaries of Mons and Spiennes. |
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West Exchange Street and Exchange Terrace serve as rough boundaries between the two. |
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The boundaries of what constitutes a market and what does not are relevant distinctions to make in economic analysis. |
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The borough boundaries were altered in 1935 by gaining a small part of South Westmorland Rural District under a County Review Order. |
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Until 1838 Keswick had no Anglican church within the town boundaries and was part of the widespread parish of Crosthwaite. |
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Historically it is part of the Hundred of Lonsdale 'north of the sands' in the historic county boundaries of Lancashire. |
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The boundaries are frequently described in terms of features such as large trees, streams or tracks, and even standing stones for example. |
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The boundaries of coppice coups were sometimes marked by cutting certain trees as pollards or stubs. |
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The boundaries of Red Screes are formed by the four streams in the adjacent valleys. |
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Coniston Water is situated within the boundaries of the historic county of Lancashire. |
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Subduction zones exist at convergent plate boundaries where one plate of oceanic lithosphere converges with another plate. |
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Before 2012 expansion of Moscow, MKAD was considered an approximate border for Moscow boundaries. |
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When used as field boundaries, dry stone structures often are known as dykes, particularly in Scotland. |
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Surrey's boundaries were altered again in 1974 when Gatwick Airport was transferred to West Sussex. |
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The historic county boundaries are with Cumberland to the north, County Durham and Yorkshire to the east, and Lancashire to the south and west. |
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Scottish writer Muriel Spark pushed the boundaries of realism in her novels. |
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Major mountains tend to occur in long linear arcs, indicating tectonic plate boundaries and activity. |
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The historic boundaries of Staffordshire cover much of what is now the metropolitan county of West Midlands. |
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The conurbation has a population of about 650,000, though less than half live within the city boundaries. |
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The traditional county town, and the largest settlement in the historic and ceremonial county boundaries, is Nottingham. |
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East Midlands Airport is just outside the county in Leicestershire, whilet lies within the historic boundaries of Nottinghamshire. |
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The major towns of Wakefield, Barnsley and Rotherham are within its boundaries. |
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This treaty established the boundaries between Norway, Denmark, and Sweden that still exist today. |
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From 1964, many fingerposts were replaced by ones in the modern style, but some of the old style still survive within the West Riding boundaries. |
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In 1912, the boundaries of Carlisle were extended to include Botcherby in the east and Stanwix in the north. |
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The whole of Longdendale forms the easternmost extension of the lands within the historic boundaries of Cheshire. |
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The exact northern extent varies and as with most geographical regions, people sometimes debate the boundaries. |
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In Mediaeval Britain, grazing rights within the boundaries of the Forest of Dartmoor were strictly limited. |
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To make matters worse, the parish boundaries often bore little or no relation to the natural geography. |
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