Through her long fingers fall clumps of rich loam and tiny, glistening seeds. |
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No matter how I shuffle the songs, I keep coming across these Britney clumps. |
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Most widespread around the sandhills is scrub, which is a desertlike habitat of sandy mounds with scattered clumps of vegetation. |
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Her hair hung in clumps down her back, tangled together and being blown in the wind. |
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The bride and groom sat on a bench in the shade while the best man and maid of honor fed them clumps of orange and white rice by hand. |
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The bouquet consisted of luxuriously scented white roses, clumps of swaying baby's breath, and elegant chrysanthemums. |
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Beat on it lightly with the back end of the brush to remove any clumps that remain. |
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We have also noted clumps of small marcasite crystals as a late-stage association with galena and drusy quartz from the Eagle mine. |
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Then it was into the tub room for some balneotherapy action to remove the mineral clumps and oil and to detox in some hot seaweed water. |
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A scribbly pencil line cut through the clumps of paint or twisted around the perimeter. |
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The card is a froth of glitter and highly scrumpled clumps of tissue paper. |
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Your parrot could catch its feet into the clumps and could get hurt while struggling to escape. |
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The birds love the dense thickets and scrub and clumps of bushes like blackthorn that grow in the older sites of the park. |
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In addition, this obliging plant seeds itself freely, so the number of clumps will gradually increase over the years. |
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Cereals, beans, and vines thrive in between clumps of eucalyptus on the heavy but fertile clay soils. |
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Making two or more passes with the tiller helps blend the compost with the topsoil and break up any clumps of material. |
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Splashes of yellow and pink are supplied by clumps of daffodils and bergenia. |
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He also has to deal with the possibility that he might go bald, as clumps of his hair have started falling out. |
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My hair keeps falling out in clumps again, coming out even as I run fingers through it. |
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Under the trees are beloved clumps of hellebores, erythroniums, and trilliums. |
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We passed the grove of young trees and clumps of shrubs, and came to the place where the ground began to fall away. |
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It is situated on the ground, on grass clumps or hummocks in the open tundra. |
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All over the island there are great clumps of the brilliant orange montbretia. |
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There it attaches to particles of minerals and organic matter, forming clumps. |
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A third assumed a spherical shell containing dense blobs or clumps of matter. |
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I always prefer to grow natives with natives, which is why I would choose to underplant gum trees with just a few clumps of lomandra or dianella. |
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Look out for the nationally scarce Stinking Hellebore, an impressive perennial forming stout clumps of dark green leaves. |
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My eyes are very deep-set, and become more so the older I get, so anything that smudges, flakes or clumps drives me mad. |
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As their common name implies, box jellies have a square shaped bell, to which four clumps of tentacles are attached. |
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Use a spading fork or shovel to lift clumps, then cut the clumps into sections with a spade, shovel, sharp knife, or pruning shears. |
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He drove the party through the grounds, sometimes over clumps of bush and through shrubbery as he lost the way in his excitement. |
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They are more than just dense clumps of various kinds of trees, creepers, grasses, bushes, shrubs and twining creepers. |
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I stare down into valley, whose steep contours are covered with bushy, broccoli-like clumps of kiewe. |
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Researchers suspect that Sagittarius will one day resemble the star streams and clumps being reported Thursday. |
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I'd seen a few stilts upstream, but now clumps of them were swooping and diving over the water. |
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It was an area of open heathland broken up by small clumps of trees, many misshapen and stunted by the constant attentions of wandering ponies. |
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Single-sex groups of males, but not hermaphrodites, were observed to congregate into clumps of animals attempting to mate with one another. |
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We hover close enough that I can see the matted clumps in the bear's shaggy, pale brown coat. |
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True there were some daffodils in early spring, and I have transplanted a few clumps of snowdrops that will give colour early next year. |
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They look great when planted in clumps and can be grown between shrubs and herbaceous perennials. |
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Wild flowers lined the sides of the road, the stock tanks were full of water, and fat bulls dozed in clumps of live oaks. |
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There were clumps of people standing around here and there, watching through the gaps between the houses. |
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Despite the enormity of Site B and the thronging clumps of people they passed, she seemed to know her way very well. |
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Accordingly, we dissolved in clumps of threes and fours, and drifted across the level excavated plain towards the pools of shade. |
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It still left giant clumps of grass clippings directly underneath the mower. |
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One Western cameraman saw scraps of flesh, pools of blood and clumps of human hair. |
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To fatten the birds before sale, some women were holding them by the neck and forcing clumps of gruel down their throats. |
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When I went higher still, I was able to look down on a great expanse of white cloud, looking like giant clumps of spotlessly clean cotton wool. |
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My skin is so soggy from perspiration that when I scratch it the skin detaches and I end up with clumps of skin under my fingernails. |
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He opened the door and walked up the stairs up toward the music wing, the snow falling off of his cloths and shoes in huge clumps. |
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They don't look like ants and they can be pretty scary when there are big clumps of them. |
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When small clumps of snow began to fall on him, he knew what was coming and began digging a hole, where he hunkered as the slide hit. |
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The form became clearer, it was a woman, whose blond hair was matted with clumps of blood. |
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Lumps in a starch paste are caused by clumps of granules gelatinizing on their outsides and becoming impervious. |
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Basically, they are clumps of deep fried dough covered with powdered sugar. |
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This is where the red blood cells sort of form into clumps and these are the start of the Deep Vein Thromboses. |
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A hallmark of Alzheimer's is the buildup of clumps of proteins in the brain. |
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She clumps around and nestles into a corner, and then humphs because I don't give up my bed for her. |
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To avoid clumps, you may grind oatmeal into a powder before mixing it with other ingredients. |
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The mud gets so thick and sticky that the clumps in my V-brakes stop my wheels cold. |
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No two ways about it, the place was thick with dirt and clumps of dust that had collected over the years it'd been neglected. |
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Ring-necked pheasants, descendants from flocks released for a hunting estate in the nineteenth century, dart between clumps of phragmites. |
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And so it was that I spent most of the day pulling up small clumps of grass from the gravel drive. Best described as very Zen indeed. |
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Finally, the eggs congealed into shiny yellow clumps, and we sat down at the table to eat. |
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Here and there, clumps of fir and birch trees rise out of the muddy wastes. |
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There were scattered houses and tree-lined roadways, then open plough, then clumps of trees. |
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On the corners, they stood in clumps, girls with big hair and tight jeans and fringed leather pocketbooks. |
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Long locks of once-blonde hair now frizzed in greasy clumps filled with dirt and thorns. |
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On our way from school in spring, a favourite pastime was to set fire to clumps of furze that grew in fields along the road. |
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Cattle stare at flat-bed haulers gunning clumps of black smoke and lugging damaged drill pipe up the gullied, mud-hollowed road. |
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These clumps of rock are known as meteors and asteroids, and the name given to icy loose formations of debris is a comet. |
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Lift the clumps carefully and prise the bulbs apart causing as little damage to the roots as possible. |
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When ordinary matter gravitates together, it clumps forming familiar objects like stars and planets. |
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I noticed it was also consistent in ejection, piling spent brass in neat little clumps within a couple of feet of one another. |
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The star Epsilon Eridani, 10 light years from Earth, was then found to have exactly the disc clumps predicted by the computer models. |
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They smiled exuberantly while mud clung to their hair in clumps, lined the crevices of their ears, nostrils, the rims of their helmets. |
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Looking around I could see clumps of snowdrops which brightened the drab countryside. |
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You then dribble ice-cold gin down the side of the glass and watch as spindly white clumps form in the mixture. |
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I followed, with my eye, the winding of the road and saw that it curved close to one of the densest of these clumps and was lost behind it. |
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They are caused by clumps of material suspended in the vitreous jelly that fills the back of the eye. |
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Carefully rake leaves away from clumps of snowdrops and aconites, replanting any that have been lifted by frost. |
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Stir in the rice and break up any clumps so that all the grains get coated individually and everything mixes up well. |
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From strong clumps you will get a great display of flowers that last for a long time. |
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Snow blew madly in a near-blinding wave, big wet clumps collecting on the windshield only to be swept away by the wipers. |
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Upon staining, these round bacteria are visualized in clumps that resemble bunches of grapes. |
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The tribesmen were all bunched together in clumps, and they too seemed frenzied with excitement. |
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They clustered here and there in little clumps, whispering, while Reynard's crew scurried around reefing the sails. |
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Implanted epithelium regenerates unevenly postoperatively, creating clumps of epithelial tissue under the flap. |
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We spotted two clumps of yellow flag or yellow iris growing along the edge of Sleepy Hollow Lake with other wild flowers. |
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Vehicles churned up billowing clouds of dust as they drove through a barren landscape of cracked land dotted with green clumps of grass. |
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His golden hair wasn't lathered with gel, but rather stuck out in messy clumps, urging girls to run their fingers through the shiny tresses. |
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It bears the images of a bishop's crook, a few trees and some clumps of grass inside a shield. |
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I find that it clumps well enough that cleaning the litter box is actually less of a hassle now than it used to be. |
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They should easily survive transplanting as long as the soil around the root ball is not unduly disturbed as you lift the clumps from the garden. |
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It built its nests in cavities among tree roots or in fallen logs or clumps of ferns. |
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For heating, I thought I'd get some rubber tubing and lay it in loops round the clumps of herbs. |
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Most conspicuous were the dark clumps consisting of several individuals with their loricas cemented together. |
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Now the engineers have proudly announced the discovery of no fewer than five clumps of louseworts safely beyond the proposed dam site. |
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There are also clumps of lymphoid tissue throughout the body, primarily in the form of lymph nodes, that house the leukocytes. |
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The unreflecting person clumps about on the earth's surface, but if she needs to know more about who she is and where she came from, she must dig down. |
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The powder areas are like wide open fields, not too steep, enabling you to make turns at your leisure, spraying clumps of fluffy snow in both directions. |
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Nebular theory incorrectly proposes that a gravitational collapse pulled the cloud close together to form our solar system, forming collection areas into clumps which circled the center of the cloud. |
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Lavender, rosemary and thyme gathered in thick clumps under the windows, with poinsettias, passionflower, marigolds, marguerites and hollyhocks growing wild in the borders. |
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They had clambered over a large tract of huge sand dunes littered with tufts of hardy grass, and scattered clumps of cacti, but the sand soon gave way to mountain slopes. |
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And every single time, as I've attempted to leave the car park, I've come across confused looking clumps of young people wandering in the road like bovines with backpacks. |
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Milled rice contains agglomerates, or clumps, of starch and protein. |
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That's why you most often see clumps of anemones of the same colour. |
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Under the trees are clumps of hellebores, erythroniums, and trilliums. |
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The stainable DNA may appear in clumps or may be in a reticulated pattern. |
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Other problems include irregularities of the heart beat, heart muscle destruction and blood clots and clumps of bacteria that go from the heart to the brain and other organs. |
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Daylilies are very easily propagated by the division of old clumps. |
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It is worth ending this small number of unethical killings in order to secure the right of women to rid their bodies of unnecessary and insentient clumps of flesh. |
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Along the tops of the walls and gullies are many small hydroid clumps which, in turn, attract a range of delicately coloured nudibranchs that feed on them. |
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Created when Mexican land grants were divided by San Francisco lawyer-leaseholders in 1857, the old ranches huddle behind clumps of wind-deformed Monterey cypresses. |
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Her hair was snowy white, tipped in black, twisted together in clumps to resemble feathers and pulled up out of her face with a black strip of leather. |
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Hoopoes breed across most of Europe, except Scandinavia, favouring open country and clumps of old trees including pollard willows, meadows orchards and olive plantations. |
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Santolina is clipped into clouds and punctuation is provided by six foot tall teasels, milk thistles, huge artichokes and great clumps of bear's breeches. |
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This was an impressive scenic dive, with huge yellow clumps of sponge, masses of cup corals with their almost fluorescent colours and featherstars everywhere. |
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Instead of harvesting a few big trees to maximize sawlogs, each tree is carefully chosen to create openings, leaving trees of various sizes in clumps. |
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The humidity had him feeling like a damp washrag by the time Sam wriggled his way through the vines and over clumps of rocks, fallen coconuts, and other debris. |
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If you have bulbs in your garden, you can dig them up and break apart the clumps of bulbs, planting the bulblets and cormels independently as you would a bulb. |
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Adjacent clumps of mussels coalesced to form extensive beds, which then served as a secondary substrate for other algal species and associated fauna. |
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It is a fable recalled by a lonely man who lies between the clumps of grass on the sands by a river, like a survivor washed ashore after a shipwreck. |
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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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Delicate lily-pads had been carefully placed on the glassy mirror of a thousand reflections, and clumps of reeds, bullrushes and gorse made forty-one shades of green. |
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The Backbone was a half-mile of barren limestone only fifty feet in width with nearly vertical sides and a few boulders and a few clumps of pines dotting its top. |
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They have chemical and toxicological properties quite different from either single beta amyloid molecules or clumps of the molecules called fibrils. |
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It was pocked with wartlike clumps of sap, and he walked over and began pulling them off, balling them up, and nestling the natural fire starter in the kindling. |
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In the Japanese damselfly, Mnais costalis, there is a high degree of female monopolization and females often oviposit on territories in tight aggregated clumps. |
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It's a very easy bulb to grow and is best planted in clumps or groups. |
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In general, two to six blood platelets or thrombocytes are seen in an oil immersion field, but their distribution is variable and they may appear in large clumps. |
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They noticed that rodent hair was easily transplantable as their dermal papillae aggregate or form clumps in the tissue culture. |
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Many researchers explained this difficulty by hypothesizing that the minuscule clumps are self-purifying. |
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Honey fungus is most obvious when, in autumn, clumps of honey-coloured, pale-stemmed toadstools appear at the base of a tree. |
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The plow would dig up the earth and the harrow would smooth the soil and break up any clumps. |
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This will tend to break up the clumps without drawing attention to yourself with the mana weave. |
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When the rains arrive, the Guban's low bushes and grass clumps transform into lush vegetation. |
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Plants may spread clonally through the production of daughter bulbs and division producing clumps. |
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Other sites are sometimes chosen, and these include low trees and bushes, bramble patches, reed beds, heather clumps and cliff ledges. |
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It is a compact perennial which grows in low clumps and sends up long stems that support globes of bright pink flowers. |
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It breaks up locks and unorganised clumps of fibre and then aligns the individual fibers to be parallel with each other. |
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The cylinder cleaner uses six or seven rotating, spiked cylinders to break up large clumps of cotton. |
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Mosses are small flowerless plants that typically grow in dense green clumps or mats, often in damp or shady locations. |
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The spawn of the two species also differs in that frogspawn is laid in clumps and toadspawn is laid in long strings. |
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Cut it to the ground with a string trimmer or hedge shears, dig up clumps of it and plant one gallon or five gallon lady ferns. |
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At Mass, Benedictions, novenas, we huddled in great damp clumps, dozing through priest drone, while steam rose again from our clothes. |
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Or maybe the Japanese, where Izanagi thrust his staff into the sea and pulled up some clumps of mud, which became the Japanese islands. |
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Growing on one of the large horn beam trees in the garden are several large clumps of mistletoe. |
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On average, about a third of cells that left the tumor migrated as bicolored clumps of cells. |
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At 24 hr, the C particulates were often in small clumps and without evidence of surrounding lysosomal membrane. |
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Makassar language is one of the clumps of Indonesian languages and classified as Oceania language which is under the Austronesian family. |
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Seen here is a collection of Mammillaria which left to their own devices will grow into clumps. |
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Traditional gallium trichloride is solid at room temperature and often forms clumps or sticks together during storage and use. |
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Smaller clumps of sedums, Mentha requienii, and alpine bulbs border rocky areas. |
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Women who have DCIS have no way of knowing whether these tiny clumps of suspicious cells are the seedlings of a tumor. |
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Native plants including the California poppy also have their counterparts in intricately detailed clumps of weeds and grasses. |
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During Alzheimer s, the tau protein forms sticky clumps called tangles which are thought to be toxic to brain cells. |
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Not only does glomalin contain 30 to 40 percent carbon, but it also forms clumps of soil granules called aggregates. |
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Edema, telangiectases, a moderate polymorphic inflammatory infiltrate, and melanin clumps are noted in the dermis. |
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Ear tufts are clumps of feathers growing from small tabs of skin usually found at or near the region of the ear openings. |
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They should be divided in summer every two or three years, when the clumps become congested. |
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Scattered among them are clumps of Dutchman's breeches, which resemble tiny pantaloons hung out to dry, and twinleaf, rare in upland sites but common in the floodplain. |
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Witch-hazels do well in shade and if there are clumps of woodlanders such as Solomon's seal and lily-of-thevalley nearby, they really add to the show. |
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Witch hazels do well in shade and if there are clumps of woodlanders such as Solomon's seal and lily-of-the-valley nearby, they really add to the show. |
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In this humped meadow the individual graves are clothed in dogrose and montbretia, clumps of soiled-white lilies and the tut-tut-tutting wheatears. |
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Place clumps of spiky flowers such as red hot pokers and verbascums between clumps of rounded flat flowers, like daisies and achillea to create maximum interest. |
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Through a process that included gravitational attraction, collision, and accretion, the disk formed clumps of matter that, with time, became protoplanets. |
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Pull out the dead outer leaves of phormium and divide congested clumps. |
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Brown simplified the long narrow stretch by sweeping it into a lawn that dropped right to the riverbank, stopped at each end by bold clumps of native trees. |
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The dim, narrow lobby was crowded with bodies, mostly men in dashikis and pillbox hats, kofias, talking in clumps or navigating their way through the crowd. |
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There you looked and there you led me off into the game of clumps. |
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By observing butterflies on the clumps of color-changing lantanas, Weiss found that buckeyes and gulf fritillaries learn to avoid frumpy old blooms. |
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A gate opens into the Forewalk overhung by the arching branches of more fine beeches, among the roots of which spring numerous clumps of glistening holly. |
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Clumps of native bush have given way to uniform rows of trees and contrived water features. |
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Clumps of itchy or prickly tiny red bumps on the skin that appear with hot humid weather in tropical countries is called miliaria or prickly heat in layman's terms. |
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As many as 1,500 people gathered at nearby Wittenham Clumps to watch the action unfold, the Oxford Mail reported in a liveblog on its website. |
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