Eastern growers must also contend with humidity-loving black rot, botrytis, downy mildew, and phomopsis. |
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For those who believe in omens, York also had to contend with a hoodoo which hadn't allowed them to win there for years. |
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On their arrival to the host country, they must contend with the spatial-temporal constraints of daily life. |
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Thus in spite of any improvements in the early years, there was always public hostility to contend with. |
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They don't manage to fully convey the horrors of the patricide and tyranny that they have to contend with. |
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First, the British idler has a more formidable work culture to contend with. |
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She said truckers must also contend with improvised explosive devices on the road. |
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That can't be good news for the rest of the field, which not only has to contend with a tough course, but a tough player. |
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It looked like a bomber group had gone off course, because there looked to be no fighters to contend with. |
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As if the people of Darfur, in western Sudan, didn't have enough to contend with, now there's the prospect of a plague of locusts. |
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If ever a man had difficulties of character and temperament to contend with, it was Gilbert. |
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None of these could really be compared to the kind of conventional client that other designers had to contend with. |
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In rural areas, women must contend with cultural and legal restrictions on health care. |
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Brought up at the beginning of the century Mary had some very difficult times to contend with, living through two world wars and a civil war. |
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Well, I may have had a lot of Grinches to contend with this year, but that doesn't mean I've lost my belief in Santa Claus! |
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I would have pure madness to contend with and no guide-lines for appropriate behavior. |
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They have to contend with elephants, hippos, bushpigs, porcupines, vervet monkeys, baboons and birds which are after their crops. |
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One had to contend with the poor quality N5, N26 and N59 roads as well as the dangerous secondary routes through the barony of Erris itself. |
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She also had to contend with the many false dauphins who appeared across France, Europe and as far away as Canada. |
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In between, he had to contend with a Shavian academic who had come to regard the bearded, vegetarian dramatist as his personal property. |
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Aside from swings in the economy, the board has to contend with the shifting sands of global politics, a factor in re-shaping the company. |
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Yet we stepped forth trepidatiously because, after all, we recently had to contend with The Keyboard Disaster. |
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Part of helping the public health system contend with the threat of bioterrorism is having reliable research available. |
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But in her first race on the turf, she will have to contend with three top fillies running as an entry for trainer Bobby Frankel. |
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Italian poets, in any case, have different bogies to contend with than those of American poets. |
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The consequent loss of grip invariably causes understeer that the drivers must contend with. |
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Essex County Fire and Rescue Service and Essex Ambulance Service also have to contend with numerous prank calls. |
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These sleds reach a minimum speed of 80 mph and the driver has to contend with g-force in each of the turns. |
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I didn't want to have to contend with soccer and Pop Warner football games. |
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Still, much like her counterparts today, she must contend with a presumption of male privilege. |
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He cites the heat as a possible problem to contend with and the opposition may be no slouches either. |
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Other staff contend with phone lines that don't work, uncertain supply lines, and a power system that is unstable at the best of times. |
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Examination of forage craters indicated that caribou had to contend with only a few centimetres of soft powder snow with a loose granular base. |
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It will establish how the nation will contend with the vexed question of hired-in labour to replace the efforts of locals. |
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The experiences I have described are in no way comparable to what we have to contend with in London. |
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They never had to contend with the problems of clogged sewers, of water and electricity cut-offs, of telephones not working. |
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As they voyage through space, the crew have to contend with anti-gravity failures, annoying talking doors and wars with alien races. |
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He must also contend with a house phone on which the chef buzzes him with a Wagnerian ring, as insistent as the Doomsday trumps. |
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Visitors have to contend with toxic gases, noxious fumes, and showers of hot ash. |
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But firefighters also had to contend with a hail of stones and water bombs from the children who crowded around them as they fought the fire. |
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Those frustrations surely are enough to handle without also having to contend with the threat of violence. |
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Jude and Tess contend with the stifling conventions of their society and are dealt with cruelly by it. |
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They had at least as many noun cases to contend with as Latin speakers did, as well. |
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Otherwise, you'll contend with nasty headwinds and Lycra-soaking downpours. |
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The package has had to contend with sandstorms, muddy conditions and oppressive heat. |
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Buchanon's speed, instinct and confidence make him a dangerous player for opposing teams to contend with. |
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It's a factor that Martel will almost certainly have to contend with in the future, a struggle almost as difficult as that facing Alonso. |
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Since it became a region in its own right, Montilla has had to contend with a popular image as an inferior, cheap alternative to sherry. |
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The guineas have had to contend with a lot of copperheads and a few garter snakes, which average 8-to 10-inches long. |
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When zipping through the military themed course you have to contend with a trigger-happy foot soldier holding a machine gun. |
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It's not the distance we will walk that frightens us, but the variety of climates we will have to contend with. |
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There are warm-ups and warm-downs, pressure management talks, positive attitude sessions, gym regimes and massage routines to contend with. |
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In fairness to both sides they had to contend with atrocious conditions with the playing surface waterlogged in several places. |
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Frankly, I could quite happily live the rest of my life never having to contend with that experience again. |
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If the winners emerge with some dash in their style, they may also have to contend with being All-Ireland favourites. |
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Every living creature, including plants, must contend with the ravages of diseases and parasites. |
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They are learning what works, and what doesn't, when fliers must contend with unsteady airflows and with airfoils that continuously deform. |
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Election officials had to contend with redistricting at the same time that they were implementing new technology. |
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I do have a lens that big, but with airline baggage allowances to contend with, I had decided to leave it at home. |
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Bachelor life also presented various pitfalls such as having to contend with laundries that insisted on ironing his socks. |
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Looking to her rearview mirror, she sees one solitary car behind her and is thankful that she must only contend with one irascible driver and no more. |
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Only the main trunk roads had been gritted, meaning anyone using other routes had to contend with icy and slippy surfaces that offered little grip. |
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Unfortunately, at first Brutus refused to show his corpulent face, and Carter had to contend with a near mutiny from the rest of the frustrated family. |
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Her character has to contend with flowery, overwrought speeches full of melodrama that are meant to generate some degree of humor, but which tend to fall flat. |
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He has to contend with much more conservative bishops, archbishops, and cardinals appointed by his two immediate predecessors. |
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Exhausted and in constant pain, she had to contend with vast, unfathomable personality changes that made her capricious, indecisive, impatient and intolerant. |
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As well as the wind we now had driving rain to contend with. |
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The issue of storage, with respect to bilinguals who have two languages to cognitively contend with, has been a strongly debated topic among researchers. |
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Despite our lack of information about the superstructures of the nearby tombs, we know that Eurysaces' tomb had to contend with at least one of his neighbors. |
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There are hidden plots and power struggles to contend with, and he finds himself increasingly isolated from all but the most trusted people in his life. |
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But then again, they didn't really have AI, surrogacy and cloning to contend with back then, did they? |
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It is easy to go overboard in childproofing our culture, and it is easy to underestimate the ability of children to contend with and to process cultural influences. |
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The final two survivors are doctors, who have to contend with the human cost of the collapse of Hiroshima's infrastructure and who document the details of radiation sickness. |
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As a historian, I have often had to contend with the question of how far to take the Bloomsbury approach. |
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After 1845, the Pedi also had to contend with an influx of white Afrikaner settlers, some of whom seized Pedi children and forced them to work as slaves. |
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There are unions and crusty local politicians to contend with, and a lot of competition. |
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Unst is precisely the kind of place where locals would pay high electricity bills even if they did not have to contend with severe winter weather and dramatic wind chill. |
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Like Coke vendors, the MSD had to contend with difficult roads and unpredictable weather conditions. |
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The prime minister is now having to contend with threats and counter-threats from unions unwilling to sign over an effective blank cheque on public services reform. |
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My belief is, that in seeking the re-enactment of the existing law after its suspension, you would have had to contend with greater difficulties than you anticipate. |
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The water was running fast enough to keep any kind of moss from growing on the rocks, so they didn't have to contend with extra slippery rocks as well. |
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I have to contend with Thai-roasted pheasant with sweet yams and shitake mushrooms, balanced precariously on a writhing pepper and black bean sauce. |
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Dempsey must contend with charges that his scheme will drive up the price of houses, with all of the serious political repercussions that would result. |
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I was quite far behind the leaders at one stage and, as the front runners overtook me, I had a lot of blue flags to contend with and lost some time. |
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We had to contend with a very cold easterly wind blowing downstream. |
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As if it weren't hard enough to step into the shoes of parenting someone else's child, a step-parent has to contend with centuries of negative literary images. |
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After the one-sided conversation was concluded Winthrop had his personal shame and sorrow to contend with, and the unshaven grin of the grizzly wino who asked for money. |
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In addition to human foes, Australian flying foxes must contend with a number of natural predators, including pythons, wedge-tailed eagles and powerful owls. |
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The players had to contend with driving rain and gale force wind. |
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Washers worked with boiling water, while starchers had to contend with caustic starches and potentially dangerous detergents, and ironers handled hot, heavy irons. |
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There is already too much fighting in the world to contend with in the first place and in the second place, I am sure I have other things I can be doing. |
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They brand is working to reposition themselves to contend with lifestyle giants like Michael Kors and Tory Burch. |
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As expected the course proved to be in excellent condition but as luck would have it the competitors had to contend with heavy winds and threatening conditions. |
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But she also has to contend with photographers looking to exploit her as a one-trick pony to shock their audiences. |
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These children, raised in impoverished communities, must contend with gangs, violence, poverty, and many other impairing social factors that create negative self-concepts. |
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For example, rural areas are having to contend with the disappearance of industries such as assembly plants, textile mills, and food processing plants. |
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Cooper plays Jeff Dawson, a wildcatter hunting the black gold who must contend with bandits who threaten to blow up his wells. |
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In the early 12th century, people of Yorkshire had to contend with the Battle of the Standard at Northallerton with the Scots. |
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Of course, Arnold had the Anglican church to contend with and ironicise, as did his detractor TS Eliot after him. |
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Local Japanese interest in the filming was high, and the crew had to contend with large crowds throughout the process. |
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The British also had to contend with several psychological factors during the conflict. |
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As a result, King George III abandoned any hope of subduing America militarily while he had a European war to contend with. |
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Turner would also have to contend with Percy Montgomery returning to South Africa and Newport stalwart Rod Snow retiring. |
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People are still allowed to walk along the pier, but must contend with motor traffic driving along the same wooden walkway. |
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Marti must contend with a remote stepmother, podlike to begin with, and has to destroy the vegetative incarnations of her father and brother. |
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But today, my friends, you and I must contend with a stone-hearted man who will not even comfort the poor with a place to sit. |
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Clemens had to think on his feet, adjust on the run, make split-second decisions and, if he messed up, contend with the consequences. |
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The Lord said unto me, Distress not the Moabites, neither contend with them in battle. |
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This year he plays Simple Simon and has to contend with Chico as the eponymous hero. |
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In addition to Government monopolies, the country's economy has to contend with other oligopolistic companies. |
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But unlike Scientology, mormonism also has a hit musical to contend with. |
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But it is more notorious for being a nightmare to field on in the second innings of day-night games with a heavy dewfall to contend with. |
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You assume the role of a young boy who, by using his collection of toys, has to contend with an invasion of evil Gotcha Borgs. |
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Green notes that Boehner must also contend with the feistiest member of Congress, Sen. |
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But with faith healers, people meditating under pyramids and a statue with growing hair to contend with, it looks as if he might have his work cut out. |
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As he prepares the meal, he has to contend with various nightmares, while his troublesome children get covered in chocolate and his wife Elaine starts hitting the bottle. |
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In the 1990s we had Heroin Chic and the Waif look to contend with. |
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To compound matters, he has also had to contend with being characterised by some sectors of the British media as a dour, surly and dislikeable Scot. |
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The lifecycle theorists are quite aware of this and postulate different issues one must contend with and the resulting disablements if one does not. |
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Something should be done urgently to safeguard a language that already has enough to contend with in the form of estuary English, glottal stops and grunts. |
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There were rough seas to contend with approaching Seahouses, late on Friday night, and dangerous tidal currents and standing waves in among the Farne Islands. |
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Future Portuguese India Armadas have to contend with this conflict, it will dictate Portuguese strategy in the Indian Ocean and draw in other participants. |
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These structures may have varying degrees of political power, depending on the cultural, geographical, and historical environments that these societies must contend with. |
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Alfred was still forced to contend with a number of Danish threats. |
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