Air is introduced into the slurry through spargers creating a countercurrent flow of air bubbles. |
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Today Corey had a bright red bottle of soapy water, and was blowing bubbles whenever the teacher turned his back. |
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This well-priced and pristine champagne has elegant lemon, fine bubbles and a vigorous froth. |
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She had created this illusion with her faith, as one makes bubbles, blowing on soap water. |
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Blowing bubbles is a favourite pastime of many children, but not one normally associated with school. |
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And don't forget to show your toddlers how to float on their backs and blow bubbles. |
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The panels are made of varying sizes of glass frit that, when melted, trap varying sizes of air bubbles. |
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Sasha watched as Annie and Patrick blew bubbles by dipping a wand into soapy water. |
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The trick once down was to keep an eye on bubbles and fish behaviour for telltale signs of cross-currents and whirlpools. |
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All of a sudden bubbles were flying everywhere as James jumped out, grabbed a towel and wrapped it hastily around his waist. |
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Place splotches of color as desired onto page, then blow bubbles through a bubble wand onto the page. |
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The latter is definitely the kind of place you can imagine frazzled executives escaping to as they float on a spume of hot bubbles. |
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Looking to the past, housing bubbles often lead to crashes with price drops on homes that average from 25 to 30 percent. |
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Mix to combine and set aside for five minutes, or until small bubbles form on the surface. |
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I watched my daughter and her friend, captivated by a circle of people blowing bubbles. |
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My fish has blown some bubbles in his tank, so he must be happy lately for some reason. |
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The water swirled around the glass, catching little bubbles of air and refusing to allow them to escape. |
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A popular form in the 1760s was the result of twisting opaque white or coloured glass into the stem, instead of air bubbles. |
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Bits of it glowed with a strange, orange light, trapped within tall bubbles of glass. |
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Chemical analysis of the ice and the air bubbles in these cores provide a picture of climate and atmosphere during the past 110,000 years. |
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Spectra acquired from liquid samples that are inhomogeneous or that contain air bubbles can yield erroneous concentration values. |
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For instance, some of Le Bec-Fin's champagnes have to be in a curved glass in order to keep the bubbles inside the glass. |
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A proper, complete filling of the cell with liquid ensured the absence of the air bubbles while the cell was stirred. |
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Stirring the mortar sample for 30 seconds releases entrained air bubbles into a viscous liquid at the base of a column of water. |
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A post-mortem report records that she died from pulmonary barotrauma, which causes air bubbles to circulate in the arterial system. |
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The tub is slick, and with lots of slippery bubbles foaming up from the jets, you'd best watch your step. |
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As the couple left the church with huge smiles across their faces they were greeted with showers of confetti and children blew foam bubbles. |
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Speaking of which, please turn in all your unopened MRE's that have bubbles or are covered in foam. |
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Add four eggs and half a cup of water to the paste and beat well with an egg beater till very frothy and air bubbles appear. |
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Plasma is a lightweight surface carefully coated with millions of tiny glass bubbles. |
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To his intense distraction the delicate bubbles rise over the glass's rim and flow onto the table. |
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I just stared at an ornament on her desk, a glass paperweight riddled with air bubbles. |
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The root cause of this recession was the bursting of one of the biggest financial bubbles in history. |
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The family-owned auction firm has built its success on the excesses associated with economic fads and stock-market bubbles. |
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He argues that financial bubbles can lead to economic instability, with hard-to-control deflationary consequences. |
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Will we one day have to undergo scores of vaccinations in order to feel safe, or live in sterile bubbles? |
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To let in light, they punctured 23 holes in the roof, at least one for every room, and covered them with Plexiglas bubbles. |
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Bryce paused in his tooth brushing, bubbles of minty liquid foam dripping messily down his chin. |
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Other fungi provide numerous drugs, foods like mushrooms, truffles and morels, and the bubbles in bread, champagne, and beer. |
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When you suck through the tube, the water bubbles and filters the smoke to make it cool and smooth. |
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In the mountains of southern Arizona, a creek bubbles down a wooded canyon, heading to the desert a mile below. |
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Make sure your office staff bubbles with personality and that they always describe the studio in positive terms. |
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Still, it's the cheerful inner spirit that bubbles up from within, that characterises the successful model. |
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His strange sense of humour still bubbles up to the surface from time to time, although his action sequences truly distinguish his work. |
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In his sleep he was home under a coconut tree on the Savannah or at Maracas Beach feeling bubbles of foam curling up between his toes. |
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I learned how to hold my breath underwater, blow bubbles out my nose, and kick. |
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Why is it that no matter what color of bubble bath you use the bubbles are always white? |
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Behind him, Tekan was quietly watching the water hit the side of the ship, before breaking into a multitude of bubbles and foam. |
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She was spellbound by the bubbles that seemed to appear as the water cascaded in. |
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Expended gas is vented from the rear of your sub, making its way to the surface in a stream of bubbles. |
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In patients with decompression sickness, the vestibular system, spinal cord and brain are affected by the formation of nitrogen bubbles. |
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It sort of simmers and bubbles and from time to time erupts into a lava-like spasm of vexation, pique and peevishness. |
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Shirley should have seen bubbles burbling up as Shaw vented the expanding gases in his rebreather and drysuit. |
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But in the thought bubbles that float over their heads, most senior managers see customer service as a cost center. |
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A melody tumbles from Connors' hands with hints of processing and wah-wah to make a tone that bubbles up from some waterlogged dream. |
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During the low-pressure phase of each sound wave, bubbles expanded rapidly. |
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The thing is, I should be forced to live in a big giant ball of those plastic packing bubbles that are so fun to pop. |
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The artist had been set afloat at sea in a large clear bubble, naked, as several other empty bubbles bobbed on the waves around him. |
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Rolfe Kent's sunny up-tempo soundtrack bubbles ironically along, its sixties Italian jazz the quintessence of carefree. |
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In some lavas, rising gas bubbles may stretch out to form tubular vesicles. |
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I went back into the bathroom and found the tub filled with pink foam bubbles. |
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They're racists because they are driven by hate, and whatever they do, that viciousness just bubbles over. |
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The purpose of wedging the clay is to work all the air bubbles out and evenly distribute the moisture throughout the piece of clay. |
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This introduces a lot of fine air bubbles into the effluent, floating the algal matter to the surface to be skimmed off. |
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I drank the acidic, carbonated beverage, which compounded tiny gas bubbles in my throat that made me burp inside my mouth. |
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As you swim through, your image is reflected from the ceiling, where previous divers ' bubbles have collected. |
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Gas bubbles that were trapped in the lines dissipated somewhat, but never completely disappeared. |
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In a small saucepan, heat up the whipping cream until small bubbles start to form. |
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When there are bubbles, cut into the veneer with a sharp razor blade using a steel rule for guidance. |
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It seems that the bubbles in such drinks do not simply provide fizz, but change the flavor of the drink as well. |
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We are in a period of readjustment after the collapse of one of the biggest stockmarket bubbles in history. |
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When iceberg ice melts quickly, the bubbles released from it make a sound like soda water fizzing. |
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To prevent steam bubbles forming soft spots, a water quenching bath should be agitated. |
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Nathaniel handed Davis a small vile of clear liquid, bubbles fizzing and popping at the top. |
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These air bubbles can make their way to the brain, the heart, the kidneys and other vital organs. |
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We see the other astronauts, already out for the count, in their sealed sleep bubbles. |
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If the heat pierces those thought bubbles first, then the grunting conveyor belt dispels the last doubts about what soil you stand on. |
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I took a gulp of pop and rubbed my nose to get rid of the bubbles fizzing up there. |
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The dishpan filled with bubbles, and she watched them for several minutes in silence before she trusted her voice enough to speak. |
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The wet patches gradually shrink, the bubbles subside, the dryness steadily encroaches. |
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Chemically, aluminum will react with the alkalis in concrete and produce hydrogen bubbles. |
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Invert the syringe and slowly press the plunger to a level that pushed out any large air bubbles that may be present. |
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His threat to keep us all through lunch ended it, however, and Corey had to satisfy himself by blowing bubbles with his gum. |
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When she'd consumed the bitter liquid, she'd chew the gum, blowing great thick pink bubbles with casual aplomb. |
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Smoky nuts, ripe apples and yeasty notes wrap themselves around a core of bubbles and refreshing acidity. |
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Americans bounce back from failures, scandals, and bubbles with infinitely renewable confidence. |
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The one with the guy standing in the hot bath with bubbles and vapour rising up around him has given cause for much lavatorial humour. |
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Air bubbles seem to float just before your eyes, the planes of perspective are miraculously separated, and the layering is remarkably deceptive. |
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Soap bubbles come out of the tap in her apartment and drift lazily towards her. |
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This is why methane bubbles out of waterlogged bogs, seasonally flooded forests, reservoirs and lakes and landfills. |
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Another method of leavening is the use of whipped egg whites, which traps air in bubbles. |
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Air bubbles can also be trapped in beaten egg whites, a technique used to leaven angel food or sponge cakes. |
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When the bubbles start to look brown around the edges, squeeze in lemon juice from the cut lemons. |
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The only sound I could hear was the steady pace of my own breathing, which along with the rhythmic escape of air bubbles was quite hypnotic. |
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The image on the photograph bubbles and glows, then fades, until nothing is left but a dull, dirty white space. |
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If any plants are dry, plunge the whole pot in a bowl of water and wait until no more bubbles appear. |
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Brush the edges of the wrappers with water and fold over to seal, pleating the edges and releasing any air bubbles. |
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Text could be rewritten from the bubbles to practise the form of written direct speech. |
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A wonderful mousse of tiny bubbles and a delicious appley nose are complemented by a fine undertone of honey. |
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These dolphins and other cetaceans don't like divers' bubbles, which is why we had to leave our aqualungs on the boat and snorkel. |
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This method relies on the ability of gas bubbles, which are rising through an aqueous solution, to trap certain minerals. |
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The rhythmically spaced silver-brown slabs of gel evoke fish scales, while the surface bubbles reinforce the aqueous appearance. |
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On a computer screen it is much easier to draw curves and bubbles, to have planes interpenetrate at odd angles and slide around. |
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On the UK version they were just selling this plasticky bath mat thing that shoots bubbles at you. |
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Sometimes only bubbles can be seen on the surface as they grub around the bottom for food. |
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At times, sharp clicks and bubbles of noise will suddenly bulge to the top before disappearing back into the fray. |
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It bubbles up from a great depth and is naturally filtrated, then bottled and hermetically sealed in 19-litre containers. |
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It was built in 1929 and has seen many a party and famous face relaxing in front of the fire, pinkies out, sipping a glass of bubbles. |
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When they charge towards you and spin around barking bubbles, there is very little time to adjust and fiddle with a camera. |
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Her guitar work is raw and drips with attitude, while her singing bubbles with personality, passion and sensitivity. |
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She's a race-walking instructor who bubbles with enthusiasm, armed with clever similes and a rigid attitude about ingraining proper technique. |
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When paintings are finished, porcelain slip is poured onto bat and tapped gently to remove any air bubbles. |
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Fill pan with cheesecake mixture, tap on counter and let stand for 10 minutes to allow air bubbles to rise to surface. |
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To a grouch, changes in a business environment are nothing more than bubbles. |
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Those gas bubbles can then block blood flow and impede oxygen delivery throughout the body. |
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Not to be confused with tartrate, creatine titrate works along the same lines as effervescent creatine products, minus the bubbles. |
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The body starts to putrefy within a minute or two of death, and bubbles of gas come up through the mouth. |
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The amount of methane bubbles rising from the bottom of Lake Kinneret was quantified by using a dual-beam echo sounder. |
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He gets in touch with his Indian heritage and a wisdom drenched phrase bubbles through his drunken babble. |
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Trim as necessary and adhere to the top of the wood making sure to get out any pesky air bubbles. |
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And then everything dissolved into a series of technicolored bubbles, and she knew no more. |
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Control tests without protein in the cell contents ensured the absence of spontaneous scatterers that would be attributable to air bubbles. |
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The foam, filled with tiny oxygen bubbles, can be injected into veins to smooth bulges and stop blood-flow problems behind the condition. |
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These are technology-driven bubbles, not fad-fueled manias like tulips, or fraud like the South Sea scam. |
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What goes wrong here is that the bubbles magnify the peppery heat of the spices and your tastebuds may wilt under the attack. |
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Just as bubbles on the surface of a cup of coffee tend to clump together, so do the crystals in a rock. |
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Then Abi came over and played peek-a-boo with him behind the plexiglass bubbles. |
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Breeding fighting fish are territorial, defending an area around a nest of mucus-coated bubbles floating on the water surface. |
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The mean acoustic size of rising bubbles decreased in the hypolimnion but increased in the epilimnion. |
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To be sure, credit bubbles are all about the circumvention, obstruction, impairment, and eventual breakdown of the market pricing mechanism. |
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Normally the bubbles are coated to avoid clustering and to prevent surface tension from dissolving the bubbles by pushing the gas out of them. |
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She would scrunch up her shoulders and grin and almost convert entirely to bubbles at the very mention of the concept. |
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Others made bubbles with hole punches, and once this process began, the possibilities became endless for new ideas with a hole punch. |
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I'd just run a gorgeous bath with bubbles galore, hot water and a divine smell from the bath soak. |
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I did notice a few soapy bubbles in the bath but figured a quick rinse with the shower head would be sufficient. |
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Dermatologists discovered that a too-hot hair dryer can actually create tiny, gas-filled bubbles in the hair shaft. |
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A squirt of baby bath liquid for an older baby will give enough bubbles to liven up bath time. |
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Mercedes stepped into the giant marble bathtub, filled to the rim with bubbles and rose petals. |
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He's so cool, he's like a professional, blowing big bubbles then sucking them back into his mouth with a pop. |
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A big head that is comprised of large bubbles, coupled with beads of bubbles rising through the beer, is evidence of high levels of carbonation. |
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If this happens slowly, the gas bubbles will slowly migrate through the magma and degas. |
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Spontaneous carbonation or bubbles that sprung from natural mineral springs were believed to relieve common ailments with their tonic properties. |
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Microjets can be powered by compressed air, thermal bubbles, and even acoustic waves. |
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The team found large hot bubbles extending above and below a disk of gas along the equator of the galaxy. |
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Often called the bends, decompression sickness causes nitrogen bubbles in the tissues of a diver's body when he attempts to surface too rapidly. |
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A bookshelf displays an array of well-thumbed cookbooks, and the kettle bubbles on the hob. |
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Acoustic cavitation involves the creation and oscillation of gas bubbles in a liquid. |
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A shaky laugh bubbles past his lips, and dizzy words start tumbling out of him. |
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The short-lived microcavitation bubbles were visualized using time-resolved microscopy with stroboscopic illumination. |
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Only a thin trail of Ed's bubbles betrays the fact that he is now deep beneath the coral. |
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First, we assume that the magma degassing process is open, meaning that gas and bubbles are lost from the magma during degassing. |
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Soil that falls apart and gives off few air bubbles has poor aggregate stability. |
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In liquid, these high-frequency waves cause the formation of microscopic bubbles, or cavitation. |
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The cement becomes sticky, and troweling often causes damage by pulling the cement loose from the concrete, causing bubbles. |
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When they reached the decorated room, streamers and bubbles floated down onto the newly weds. |
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The turbulent water produces millions of air bubbles that circle about your mask and add to the thrill of the current. |
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Soap bubbles and cell membranes are often catenoids, and molecules may knit together to form helicoid surfaces, emblems of stable energy states. |
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The water began to simmer, several lines of bubbles winding their way to the top. |
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If not enough time is allowed, the wallpaper may continue to expand on the wall causing bubbles or blisters. |
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The first pour and sniff reveal a pale straw colour, a constant stream of bubbles and a whoosh of extraordinary freshness. |
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He then coats the eggs with mucus, swims up to his nest, and blows them into the mass of bubbles. |
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Unexpressed or unappreciated ideas manifest themselves in empty speech bubbles near the mouths of many characters. |
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When they dive, muscles close the blowhole and their ribcage collapses to keep air bubbles from forming in the bloodstream. |
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Karen Nelson was contentedly lying in her husband's arms amidst the bubbles of the hot bath he had drawn. |
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When no more bubbles showed themselves, he then was able to pry off the door. |
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Set the dish over low heat on the stovetop, and bring its liquid to a simmer, looking for bubbles around the edges. |
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If the butter sizzles loudly and melts and bubbles quickly, the pan is ready. |
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The bubbles in bubble tea are actually oversized tapioca pearls, made from cassava root starch and caramel. |
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From the aorta these bubbles would have gone straight up the carotids to her brain. |
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Visible bubbles in a supposedly still wine are frequently viewed as a fault. |
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He threw the book down, searched for the wineglass, then jumped out of the tub, a mass of bubbles and flesh, sleek flesh. |
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They argued that it could prove detrimental by pumping up incipient bubbles in bond, stock, and housing prices. |
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For a moment, every sound was muted by the pressure of the water, of bubbles kicked up by her uninvited presence. |
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I scooped a handful of bubbles and rubbed it into his perfectly gelled hair. |
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Very intense pulses can cause the bubbles to burst, boosting the signal still further. |
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Outside the dining-room window, a tiered fountain bubbles in a shady entry garden with nandina, butterfly iris, camellias, ferns and hostas. |
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Fill the carboy just to the neck, but not so full that bubbles from residual fizzing will reach the mouth. |
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Nitrogen is more soluble than helium and any preformed bubbles will quickly absorb nitrogen. |
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Like a bowl of rice bubbles that only needs milk, this article only needs a reader for it to go snap, crackle, pop! |
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Small quartz grains are unstrained, and notable for the abundance of tiny fluid inclusions, some with vapour bubbles. |
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Since gas bubbles increase sensitivity to sound, many ray-finned fish have modified gas bladders and swimbladders adjacent to the inner ear. |
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The honeycomb bar would be a bone showing early signs of osteoporosis and the one full of bubbles would be the full-blown disease. |
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Many pensioners could even use their pots to invest in buy-to-let properties which could stoke future house price bubbles. |
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I lit candles all around the bathroom, and had a nice soak in a bath full of lavender scented bubbles. |
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Now, I don't mean the actual delightfully frothy bubbles that dance around on the top of a glass of champagne. |
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He poured in the orange scented bubble bath soap, frothing the water to build up a big head of bubbles. |
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The Milky Way will spiral into the central black hole in much the same way as the soap bubbles disappear down the plug hole after my bath. |
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A new technique for manufacturing identical bubbles produces foams that look more like crystals than soapsuds. |
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She poured a little experimentally into the water, and smiled when it turned to bubbles, frothing in great white mounds. |
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Better to wait until bubbles burst and manage the consequences, softening the economic blow by loosening monetary policy very quickly. |
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The bubbles were still rising out of an upturned elkhorn which had rolled down the slope. |
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At times, catching bubbles with a butterfly net might seem to provide a more worthwhile preoccupation. |
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Not only were there bubbles, the bright red oxygenated blood actually frothed. |
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In freezing xylem, gas bubbles are formed because air is not soluble in ice. |
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For 70 years, physicists have puzzled over sonoluminescence, a process where sound waves create thousands of hot, luminous bubbles in water. |
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My fascination with sonoluminescent bubbles continues, in a way, in my high-speed photographic studies of drops and splashes. |
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But along the way, as this new commercial revolution develops, there will be plenty of froth and lots of bubbles. |
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It was transferred into a sealed flask and air was pulled out by a vacuum pump for a few minutes until bubbles stopped forming. |
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I wore it while bussing the outside tables, and graced everybody with bubbles. |
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I thought of the infinite possibilities as I scrubbed, focusing on the bubbles the bristles of the brush made. |
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It was shiny on the top, with some little bubbles in places, like a piece of dark green peanut brittle. |
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The bubbles grow in size until they are collapsed rapidly by the compression region of the sound wave. |
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Place the platter under the broiler and broil until the cheese bubbles and starts to scorch in places, about 2 minutes. |
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A paper-hanging brush is about 25 cm wide, and is for smoothing bubbles out of freshly hung paper. |
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This is where the body's tissues have been loaded by nitrogen and micro bubbles have been formed. |
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This is a product made in the image and method of the great champagnes, enhancing its vinosity with bubbles. |
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She gazed up at the ceiling above the bed she'd been sleeping on and stared at the numerous bumps, cracks and bubbles. |
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The rapid formation of bubbles is also why a carbonated beverage spews when opened after having been shaken. |
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Bubbles containing microcosms within the larger painting often complete the verses. |
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He was in a large tub full of warm water filled with suds and bubbles. |
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Cook until large bubbles appear but do not allow sugar to caramelize. |
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I describe the pink hued iridescent bubbles in the bathtub, and the way they glide away from my skin as if it's made of silk. |
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That means that Champagne is fermented a second time in the bottle when sealed closed, which naturally produces the bubbles. |
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But I also remember being amazed by the lush underwater scene and taking home happy memories of rabbitfish snacking on our bubbles as they escorted us around the house reef. |
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This combustible brew of race, class, and economic anxieties bubbles all too closely to the surface. |
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When a piece of illusory knowledge spreads to epidemic proportions and turns into common knowledge, bubbles and panics can result. |
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If raised indoors, aeration should be adjusted to produce large bubbles. |
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He photographed different bits of her body, and also made lubricious home movies in which she blew soapy bubbles through a phallic pipe or kinkily grappled with another woman. |
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The lump of clay is briefly kneaded to force out air bubbles. |
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Two bubbles less than a millimeter apart might have radically different temperature, density, and other important properties. |
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Wary of reinflating the stock market and property bubbles in Japan, the country's central bank held back for a time from aggressively pumping money into the economy. |
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It boils at 80 degrees C or even less if you're up in the alps, in which case, you'll need a pressure-boiler to get the water hot enough before it bubbles. |
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This study shows that in a competition between the two enzymes, DNA ligase trumps the flap endonuclease in capturing bubbles and creating expanded tracts. |
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She turned, and saw just a stream of bubbles rising where he had been. |
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Have a helper hold one end of the paper off the surface while you work from the opposite end to slowly rub the paper down so no air bubbles are trapped. |
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Once you've poured the mousse into the oiled moulds, give each one a sharp tap on the surface to knock out any overlarge air bubbles, cover and leave to set. |
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I pulled him out by a leg, and there was a trail of blood and bubbles where his mouth had slid along the ground. |
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The system is highly beneficial in the beer and soft drink industry where the taste of the product is highly influenced by the amount of bubbles within the container. |
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The town is really just three main streets, South Street and Market Street and North Street, and about them bubbles a decorous throb of industriousness. |
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From the side cabinet Grace poured in rose scented bath salts and bubbles. |
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Fat droplets, air bubbles and ice crystals are all dispersed in a thick sugar solution to form the semi-solid, frozen and aerated matrix that we know so well. |
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Finally, SEM allowed visualizing the microbiota trapped in the bubbles. |
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Underneath our feet tectonic plates shift, magma bubbles, water boils, and both regularly erupt. |
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Water striders are covered stem to stem and toe to toe with a layer of tiny, waxy, feathery hairs in which countless minuscule air bubbles are trapped. |
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Recent posts include a look at the oil, housing and technology bubbles and the convergence of the Nikkei and the Dow. |
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Her two very large, flesh-colored balloon sculptures initially resemble pinkish bubbles that have emerged from their blowpipe in contiguous clumps. |
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I hope they weren't spooked off from buying property a few years ago, what with all these doom and gloom losers pontificating about inflation, bubbles, and unicorns. |
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Ultimately, confining logical molecules in layers or three-dimensional lattices of nanoscopic bubbles might allow a true molecular computer to be built. |
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In the phase 2 study, children use a nebulizer to inhale cisplatin, a standard cancer drug that has been specially encapsulated in protective fatty protein bubbles. |
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I deemed it useless to restart the bath, and rinsed out the bottom, where the soap bubbles and lather collected, so that the servants wouldn't have to. |
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In one area, children created giant, iridescent soap bubbles, which jiggled and glittered brightly in the spotlights as they floated upward, before finally bursting. |
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Fizzy drinks, including soda pop and spritzers, increase bloating because the carbon dioxide trapped in the bubbles creates gas, which slows down stomach emptying. |
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The segregation vesicles are interpreted to represent solidified interstitial melts, which migrated into gas bubbles prior to lava solidification. |
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The final signature of bubble fusion is the coincidence between the sonoluminescent light flashes from collapsing bubbles and the neutron emission. |
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Blowing bubbles was always a favorite pastime during the summertime. |
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They left the church in a shower of bubbles, blown by all the guests. |
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Children can enjoy using twisted wire coat hangers to blow bubbles. |
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Her wet-sleeved urchin takes advantage of the soapy water to blow bubbles. |
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The crabs twitched and blew frothy bubbles, showing off their freshness with an occasional contraction of a pincer, as they lolled numbly in a shallow ice-filled tray. |
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It was made up of spheres, looking like bubbles on the ocean surface. |
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One that caught my eye seemed to be a mass of bubbles in blown glass. |
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The raising effect is caused by the heat reacting with other ingredients to form air bubbles of CO2, and these are trapped in the gluten forming pockets in the dough. |
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Drink from a tulip shaped glass to keep the bubbles in longer. |
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For example, true Pilsners should be served in tall glasses to allow the continuous stream of sparkling bubbles to create a dense head and carry the hop aroma upwards. |
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Isolationists live in bubbles and are not aware that they will burst. |
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While there are all sorts of useful databases and modeling packages being developed by biotech firms and labs, they all exist in isolated developmental bubbles. |
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But still that end-of-summer dread bubbles up within my body's cells. |
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Glass containers or other fragile items are not recommended for obvious reasons and liquids such as blow bubbles, shampoo, bubble bath or aerosols are not appreciated either. |
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It's possible, also, to skip bad loops in a bubble memory, but when you initialize the memory, you have bubbles associated with those loops, so it's hard to get around them. |
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The finely porous membranes are designed to allow the flow of water between adjacent vessels while preventing the passage of gas bubbles and pathogens. |
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An overlaid panel's smoothness, used with the proper release agent, vibrators, and vibrating techniques helps to move the air bubbles to the surface. |
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Toast the bread slices, one side only, pile the cheese on an untoasted side, sprinkle a few drops of milk on top of the cheese and grill until the cheese bubbles. |
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Here the second fermentation, the one that produces the bubbles, occurs inside a tank and the resulting carbonic gas is sealed in with the wine in the bottle. |
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Pour in the wine and stir the rice until the liquid bubbles away. |
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They will appear in a cartoon strip talking through speech bubbles. |
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It may sound like a dental malady, but cavitation is a powerful natural force, a bombardment of microscopic bubbles that breaks down some of the hardest materials on earth. |
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Out in the open I spied William, holding on to a rail, his regulator streaming air on the current, the bubbles stringing out horizontally behind him. |
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The text bubbles with bullet points, subheads and one paragraph sections. |
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Use a sweeping motion so no air bubbles are trapped beneath the laminate. |
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Each character bubbles with traits, ticks and idiosyncrasies. |
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As the bubbles pop, shock waves are created within the pump that not only make noise but also burst with enough force to damage the impeller and other pump parts. |
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Suslick counters that because chemical dissociations occur in mere femtoseconds, reactions would have been well underway even in the acetone bubbles. |
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Synonymous with tench feeding are bubbles, what has been referred to as needle bubbles, which describes the tiny streams of pinhead bubbles perfectly. |
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When such bubbles burst in the vicinity of a solid surface, the symmetry is broken because the surface interferes with the inrush of fluid to the collapsed bubble. |
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Columbus had no instrument to measure his speed, so he simply observed bubbles and debris floating past his ship and used those observations to make an estimate of the speed. |
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The bubbles from the carbonated soda fizzed unpleasantly in my insides. |
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His glass, in front of the candle, writhing flame visible through the clear liquid, illuminating the bubbles spinning and fizzing their way upward. |
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Unlike the bubbles in your fizzy drink, though, each of these bubbles would carry on expanding, until all the fluid had gone and only bubbles remained. |
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Also, looking back over a decade of stranding records from Britain, the researchers found seven dolphins and porpoises and one beaked whale with puzzling gas bubbles. |
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The short exhaust ports can allow bubbles to rise alongside your mask. |
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Stir and set aside for 5 or 6 minutes, until mixture bubbles and foams. |
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The goopy surface is pocked with craters where bubbles burst. |
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Tilt each glass and pour the remaining champagne in a dribble down the inside of the glasses, so that you minimise the froth and maximise the bubbles. |
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White bubbles of froth jostle on the head of my pint of beer. |
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Rose tilted her head back and let the blisteringly hot water soak her hair, rinsing away the mountains of frothy bubbles that coated her luxurious chocolate-coloured tresses. |
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Air bubbles will also make working on the potter's wheel more difficult. |
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She sat there counting ceiling tiles and blowing bubbles with her gum. |
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The drama of a simultaneous release was hindered by technical difficulties, so the balloons dribbled out and up like bubbles rising in viscous liquid. |
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Evan sat in a little corner bored, watching the two babies communicate in their funny language of popping bubbles of dribble, giggling and laughter. |
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Small shops such as Cuds and Cuddles, Pacific, and Bubbles buy most of their merchandise wholesale from Accra's bigger boutiques and stores. |
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Bubbles from an aquarium pump and absorbent paper to wick water up the sides served to increase the humidity. |
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Monkeys who want to rule the world will be slapped down by these troublesome toughies called Blossom, Bubbles and Buttercup. |
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Bubbles by the quayside grew as a pair of midweek divers surfaced and exited the water. |
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Holding her breath, she dove into the water and blew bubbles. |
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Damaged gun tips and nicks on bells can cause bubbles in the droplets that are then trapped in the film. |
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As the deep water rose, dissolved carbon dioxide came out of solution to form bubbles, just as soda fizzes when one uncaps a bottle. |
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Judy and Bubbles battle and evolve, through their rivalry, into a respectful and comradely self-awareness that bypasses and undercuts their earlier competition over men. |
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In addition, apocrine secretion of large cytoplasmic bubbles seems to occur in the apical portion. |
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Mochi has a heterogeneous structure of amylopectin gel, starch grains, and air bubbles. |
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Pulsed electrogeneration of bubbles for electroflotation yields optimum-sized bubbles that are independent of solution conditions. |
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