One of the many good touches in this book is its linguistic bent, as in the explanation of tilth and bourn, farming terms carried as baggage to the American Utopia. |
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It is important for this to be bourn in mind before studying and comparing the winter maintenance practices around the participating countries. |
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In popular mythology, moors are a bogland, a badland, an undiscovered bourn from which travellers risk failing to return. |
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You can trawl through cinema and find few more beautiful, more unforced, or more fleeting representations of the bourn between the living and the dead. |
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A strong currency can not only drive exporters bankrupt a bourn from which the subsequent lowering of rates can offer no return it can also, by forcing down import prices, create deflation at home. |
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Practicing our basic water bourn activities actually creates little pollution, although we are regularly questioned about our motors and motorboats. |
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Bourn, after a single, had stolen second base on the next pitch, an indication that Gonzalez would take risks to resuscitate the Braves' offense. |
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The mill was financed by Lancashire native Daniel Bourn, and was partly owned by other men from Lancashire. |
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A similar mill was built by Daniel Bourn in Leominster, but this burnt down. |
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So, we sideslipped in and still landed way up the runway, but fine.' Fifty-five minutes after V-Victor touched down, Ted Thackway, the pilot of K-King, was still circling blind over Bourn. |
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This was built in 1744 by John Bourn in partnership with Henry Morris of Lancashire. |
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This carding technology of Lewis Paul and Daniel Bourn seems to be the basis of later carding machines. |
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He takes his chance in the valuable Bourn Vincent Memorial Handicap Chase and the seven-year-old will appreciate the likely good ground and is taken to account for Klepht. |
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In 1748, Daniel Bourn and Lewis Paul separately obtained patents for carding machines, which were presumably used in the Leominster and Northampton mills respectively. |
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