Bulgarians count as kin relatives by blood and marriage on both the male and female sides. |
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Well, if this is what it takes to get him to stop writing, count me in as one of his most febrile supporters. |
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Ellis showed tremendous heart once again he beat the count and stumbled to his corner. |
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While so many people have second-class votes that do not count towards any result, millions are deprived of the means to make their voice heard. |
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The 57-year-old is a former C4 director of programmes and has also worked in the US, which would count in his favour. |
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These and other factors not mentioned may count against him, rendering his financial support from Smith useless. |
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Robson, whose friendship with Roy Keane could count in his favour, has been out of management since leaving Middlesbrough last year. |
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The capacity to raise funds for developing the property will count in their favour. |
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In fact, their experience in New Zealand would count in their favour should they subsequently receive a job offer and apply for residency. |
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It was imposed in June last year for dangerous driving under the influence of drugs and could count against her in future sentencing. |
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The lesson of these polls is not that the morality and leadership factors don't count as much as people say they do. |
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I wondered if the fact that it was me that called them would count in my favour, they'd probably just assume it was a mistake on my part though. |
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Montgomery will have the support of two players who have played fullback before, and this could count in his favour. |
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That she is female and is a fluent Arabic speaker are likely to count in her favour, at least statistically. |
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You wonder if not being an international company will somehow count in our favour, or what. |
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No detail is spared and the squeamish can count on skipping huge wodges of forensic jargon, which is no bad thing. |
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Get the highest thread count percale that you can because that is smoother. |
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There will be no need for a recount or a hand count to verify the accuracy of these figures. |
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He lost his seat in Dublin South East after a marathon count and recount in the last election. |
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He then proceeded to count and recount the hundreds of dollars he had with him, on a nearby desk, in full view of everybody. |
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They must count on wits and be quick on their feet in a gamble with destiny. |
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At that time, he is expected to plead guilty to one felony count of conspiracy. |
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An apparent clash of heads in the tackle left the inspirational Kiwi out for the count and he was in no state to play any further part. |
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There are six counts on the indictment and each count represents a separate allegation against this Defendant. |
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Over the years, I have lost count of the schemes put out by the council to control the traffic on the A3 Robin Hood roundabout. |
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In the meantime, Araminte's family has proposed a marriage between her and a neighbouring count in order to settle a land dispute. |
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The count was giving orders to some servants and when he heard her he turned around. |
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In all he pleaded guilty to four counts of rape and a count of sexual activity with a child. |
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One student has filed charges against Houston, who faces one count of terrorizing and a count of battery. |
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She has lost count of the complaints she has sent, but has never received anything but a standard reply, without even a signature at the end. |
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As the night drew on the count ordered everyone to bed as he had done the previous night. |
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He is wrong on every count and his paper is among the worst examples of pseudo-science I have ever come across. |
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Their detective is an outsider on every count and the violence is meted out against a community which is marginalised and forgotten. |
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We only took back roads and my brother lost count of the numerous golf courses that dotted the landscape. |
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Referee Tony Perez reached five in the count and the bell couldn't save Ellis. |
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How many fighters could have gotten to their feet before the count of ten after catching Joe Frazier's full swing left hook flush on the jaw? |
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Rich people still get professional bankers, competent and dressed in wool, to count their money out to them. |
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Cashiers handing change to customers count the money out in English even to obviously monolingual older Navajos. |
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This has been a very difficult year for us, but we have learned to count our blessings. |
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Teachers have almost lost count of how many times the school has been targeted but say the latest raid is at least the ninth in just 18 months. |
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I raised my eyebrows at him as I began to take out the money and count it out. |
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Since then, he has made more than 30 new works, although he says he has lost count of exactly just how many he has created. |
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I've lost count of the restaurants he's opened, and I must say, most of them do him credit. |
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Today the artist has lost count of the number of exhibitions he has participated in since those difficult days. |
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I've lost count of the meetings I have chaired on this issue, and the number of people in the system I have met. |
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The count had only reached four before the referee decided he had seen enough and summoned immediate medical attention. |
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The chip will keep count of how many drinks they've had and how much of a bill they need to settle with us. |
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Up in the sun-dappled stands, they kept count of the goals and counted down the minutes until the official celebrations could begin. |
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It is host to so many different communities that it is not always easy to keep count of the number of languages spoken on its streets. |
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He opened them again just as his count reached twenty-seven and let himself out, letting himself fall on his face on the floor. |
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At the top of each move, pause and squeeze for a one-two count before lowering the weight. |
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If not, count me out for the second X-Files movie, if such a thing ever happens. |
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Don't know if anyone kept count but there must have been at least thirty people there, overcast weather notwithstanding. |
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He escapes, reinvents himself as a count and starts to exact cold, calculated revenge. |
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Gloucester, whose injury count has hit double figures, featured Forrester in the centres again and a patched-up back row. |
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They could literally count the fascist infiltrators on the fingers of one hand. |
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The leader in the general classification is based on a running count of each rider's cumulative time over the race's 21 individual legs. |
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Last November, the discrepancy between the presidential exit polls and the tallied count was far beyond the margin for error. |
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The film has a much higher body count than the first, but the deaths are a bit less chilling here. |
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Most of the patients had a parasite count of more than 10 percent, which is critical. |
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I've been trying to do a mental count and it seems like there are five pecan trees on the west side, three in the backyard, and two on the east. |
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Initial laboratory studies may include a complete blood cell count and urinalysis. |
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The Stars are losers so far this summer in the open market, but don't count them out when the season starts. |
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I got everyone into two rows and did a count to make sure everyone was all right. |
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Mat did a quick count and decided there were somewhere between thirty and forty people in this room. |
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And as a labelmate to Sufjan Stevens and Shapes and Sizes, you could count on the sound to be a bit quirky. |
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Soldiers and their families could count on returning to the regimental home base over a career. |
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Geoff Pullum complains about the use of the count noun troop for individual, rather than collective, referents. |
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We certainly never got any credit points for our subjects, nor did our results there count towards our final rankings at the Knights' Academy. |
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The reduced contributions paid by some married women do not count towards the basic pension. |
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Arthur looked as surprised as anyone when Kizza failed to beat the count of referee Howard Foster of Doncaster. |
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The event has the status of a Badge event, meaning that results from all age-groups, count towards a runner's national ranking. |
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Reforming the voting system to make each vote count towards the final result would make every individual's opinion important. |
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If Democratic politicians want to run on restoring moral values in government they can count me in. |
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He will have an added pressure during the run of the show because his contribution will count towards the final grade of his qualification. |
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Well, if it includes wearing a creepy mask and robbing a bank, count me in. |
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He had told him to be five minutes early and if Smolensk failed to show up, that would count as an abort. |
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I count out my drawer in record time and barely remember to clock out before I rush through the store and out the front doors. |
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In most cases, the physician asks the patient to count fingers in all four quadrants. |
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I lost count the number of times Sligo players lost possession of the ball in the tackle. |
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The count of that land, Theobald, hosted a grand event that was attended by knights from all over northern France. |
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If the page count of a book were a measure of its quality, or of how much I am likely to enjoy it, then it would make sense to play those odds. |
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Why would someone who is caught up in prestige want to work at a University where connections count for more than accomplishment or ability? |
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But while every other match was called off early in the day, or even on Friday, Peebles were left to count the cost of a wasted journey. |
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Our hearts ache, we count the days, we weep with her family, sharing their pain and sorrow. |
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Digging a hand into his jerkin, Grenton pulled out some coins, barely taking the time to count them as he threw them on the table. |
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Travelling at the same speed as lorries, we lost count of the number trying to bully us out of their way. |
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Over the course of the semester, students take 13 weekly quizzes and the highest 10 count in their course grade. |
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That final count saw Behan, Clear, Callaghan, Scully and Power elected without having reached the quota of 691 votes on Sunday evening. |
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The non-party councillor got 1790 votes and was elected on the first count having exceeded the quota by 690 votes. |
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With 363 voted, he was just thirteen short of the quota and was elected on the second count with votes to spare. |
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Last fall's dramatic-series surprise was Las Vegas, all jiggle and surveillance cameras, a rush we could count on. |
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The only count on which he was found not guilty was of stealing a mobile phone and car radio from Mr Ducey. |
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There are three lines joining points of the configuration that do not count among the four configuration lines. |
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Note that the jokers and the trump rank cards count as belonging to the trump suit. |
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At half-mile intervals, they stop and count the birds they see or hear within a radius of a quarter mile. |
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That's likely a trace to the way many of us learned to count and do basic addition. |
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She'd lost count of the number of times he had raged at her and in November 2002 she told him she was leaving the practice. |
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Even if we cannot yet fully count the value of the environment as such, we can put a figure on the cost of environmental destruction. |
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Hearns put many outstanding fighters to sleep for the count of 10 with one right hand from welterweight up to super middleweight. |
|
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Imagine trying to count the raindrops on your car's windshield after a light rain. |
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If you count a term of an administration as a single data point, we have only five data points. |
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If responder has a count of 12 points he can jump straight to three No-Trumps. |
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So count us in for next year's challenge and let's see if we can make our, slightly unofficial, record official. |
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Only Richard Hooker can count as a precursor, and then merely in one limited branch of philosophy, that of jurisprudence. |
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Whether a teacher has a master's or other advanced degree appears to count only in science and math. |
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The 2004 Ford RST Championship is also new this year and will consist of 6 rounds with 4 to count towards the final total. |
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And when did the views of the people count for much with a Guardian columnist anyway? |
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And depending on how you want to count them, this is either the third or fourth major redesign of the site. |
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Clues to the presence of HPS are thick concentrated blood, low blood platelets, and a high white cell count with many young white cells. |
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Substitute whole-wheat pastry flour for bleached white flour to decrease the carbohydrate count and add fiber. |
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Fifty some coppers met her questing fingers, seven more added once her count was complete. |
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He's still wolf-whistling after his wife and that must surely count for something. |
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Year after year, we count down the seconds until January 1 arrives, and we have such high hopes that the new year will be different. |
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They entered the avenue, and locking the door after them, sought the flight of steps down which the count had before passed. |
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Of course, we know the car count will be larger than it has been all year, with everyone bringing their A game to Indy. |
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What can we count for, if we frighten them with broken nails and agnail since first moments? |
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If anyone is taking up a collection to buy him some new records, count me in for a quid. |
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For example 8 count aida cloth has 8 cross stitches per inch while 16 count has 16 cross stitches per inch. |
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The pollen count in the Midlands has very little dependency on the direction the winds are coming from. |
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I can not count how many times I have seen guys miss rebounds because they had to bring their hands from their sides. |
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The announcement of the final count was held over from the early hours of Sunday morning to allow for the papers to be checked. |
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I have lost count of the number of smashed plate glass windows in the town centre, and not just isolated premises, often several at a time. |
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I had a chat to coach Darren Abram on the way home and on Wednesday told him to count me in. |
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Go to the bread aisle in your supermarket, and count just how many different products we have. |
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I lost count of the number of times this band was earnestly recommended to me, in reverential tones. |
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Mike Tyson was out for the count him in the fourth round at Freedom Hall in Louisville, Kentucky. |
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So, in February, I've decided to count the total number of search engine referrals to this webpage. |
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Meanwhile local governments began to count the total losses resulting from the flash flood. |
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Lin comprehended pairs, and could count to four, so eight was as high as his knowledge of cardinal numbering went. |
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My customary answer is to count to fifty and then, after confirming that nobody knows or cares that I'm still on the line, I hang up. |
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Her eyes were squeezed shut, gritting her teeth so hard her jaw ached, attempting to count to ten in order to help calm herself down. |
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Numbers were practically meaningless to her, as she only barely could count to 100, something Laurel constantly nagged her about. |
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They couldn't speak any English, and Matt knew only how to count to ten in Arabic. |
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The player gave her a thumb's up sign, and Mint turned her head to the front as the announcer began to count down to zero again. |
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As thousands of children across the borough count down the final days to Christmas, Santa will be preparing for his busiest day of the year. |
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To count down to 2001, organizers for the event say the main theme of the evening will be surprise. |
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As we count down to the biggest golf event ever to take place in this country, one of the big questions has just been answered. |
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I count Euripides among them, and would also include in this category Aristotle, Rousseau, Hume, and Adam Smith. |
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The university does not count a year that includes six months or more of medical or family leave as a year toward mandatory tenure review. |
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No extras are included, unless you count the advertisement for other Comedy Central shows. |
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However, these figures count all officers, including desk officers who are not able to answer calls from the public. |
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Four Summerhill students can count themselves among the brightest in the country after winning the All-Ireland Schools Table Quiz title. |
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They often question whether their opinions count or if the issue is of relevance to them. |
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We have a couple of games in hand and that could count in our favour, as we aren't that many points away from the play-offs. |
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Even if the product of your effort is of high quality, you still might not be deserving, since other factors could count against you. |
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In any case, neither Steele nor Blackwell can exactly count on a huge African-American turnout to win the chairmanship. |
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This means that any rise in pay would not count towards the pension. |
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The strange thing about this is that, with all the great promises of positive stories, we can count on one hand the very few that have kept their word. |
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But don't count redshirt freshmen Brodie Croyle, one of the program's biggest recruiting catches in recent years, and Spencer Pennington out of the battle. |
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In translating the odes, for example, I kept to their syllabic count and tried to engender rhythms akin to but not identical with those engendered by alcaics in German. |
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Still, it may be too early to count out Philadelphia and its legendary cheese steaks. |
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In 1988, the year before Spot News moved to Chicago, the city had what looks like a body count suited for war time. |
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The death toll of at least 53 people on February 20 doubled the body count of the previous two days. |
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It suggests that epidemics, like explosions and tsunamis, are of interest only if there is a body count to headline the story. |
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Sancho resigns himself and agrees to the task on the condition that he is not required to draw blood with these whippings and that gentle lashes count too. |
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Whose interpretations of the world will count at this critical moment? |
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Apparently, the thread count of one's bed sheets is of great importance. |
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Critics' views count only when they echo the public's, she says. |
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This latest regatta was especially important, because from now on, points count towards the final showdown when a winner is chosen to challenge Alinghi for the Cup. |
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I know I can sing, so you can definitely count me in for the next series. |
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Usually, a minor knight might hold a few acres from a baron, who in turn held the land from a count or earl, who in turn held large tracts of the king. |
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As these exams don't count towards my final degree and I need to have scarcely even browsed any Classical texts to pass them I feel an utter apathy and lack of motivation. |
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When the 12 anti-protest laws were voted on in Parliament, the Speaker even did not count the ayes. |
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Or even to be able to count on the support of elected legislators who could, if they wished, censure you. |
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Unless you count the certifiable outlier, Michele Bachmann, Sarah Palin is the only one they have left. |
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A clock chimed in the distance, its final count ending at eleven strokes. |
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But I understand that other people's opinions count just as much as mine. |
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Had a feeling we could count her in on this little celebration. |
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More than just reading skills are impaired, you can count on it. |
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Forest staff are proud of their reputation for providing exceptional grooming and you can usually count on lake effect snow to give them something to work with. |
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So, to everyone reading this, wherever you are, pause for a moment tomorrow, amidst the family fun and multiple helpings of food, and count your blessings. |
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Inzamam's experience and class came through as he defended watchfully, ran sparingly, and made the loose balls count with crunching drives off the back foot. |
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The one flavor you can always count on, however, is rich chocolate, the most chocolaty food imaginable. |
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After and only after both players have picked, they may take pairs of cards of the same rank from their hands and lay them aside to count toward their score. |
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A low count spelled serious trouble, whereas high and stable numbers were seen in those with a good response to antiviral drugs. |
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And the costs of litigation amount to chump change for guys who count their net worth in nine and 10 figures. |
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He won, too, and the WFP was able to count on allies in every citywide post but the top job. |
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Police officers eventually controlled the crowd, which jeered, chanted and booed after its attempts to force its way into the count centre had been blocked. |
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Anthony Kennedy, the one we usually count on for a little decency, voted to dismantle the ACA the last time. |
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The communication between the two means you can never count them out, even though they begin the second half of the Chase in ninth place, 124 points behind Stewart. |
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As she reached the count of ten, Elliot followed Carl into his dreams. |
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The ad would then count as a coordinated communication and would be subject to strict spending limits. |
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Pounding is charged with one count each of assault, adultery, and conduct unbecoming an officer. |
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Face cards count for ten except for the king, which counts for zero. |
|
Dip cookies in hot chocolate to a quick count of five and eat! |
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The motion for a directed verdict of acquittal on count two is dismissed. |
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So weasel words about tolerance and maturity count for nothing. |
|
In other words, to count as an instance of an allographic work, a performance has to take into account performance practice relevant to the period. |
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Many hundreds are flying, most powered with a 220-hp Continental radial, and you can count on them to leak oil, burn gas and give you more fun than is probably legal. |
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When Krohn raised concerns over this lack of accountability, he was told that it would take too long to count the collection and distribution of all the money. |
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To determine whether the child is receiving enough food, the doctor will do a calorie count after asking the parents what the child eats every day. |
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Among the things it keeps count of are mentions of Mrs Warwick. |
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You can count the pro-victim charities on the fingers of one hand. |
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If we can get them for that price or less, then count us in. |
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The weave or thread count of the towel has no significance in this case. |
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She seemed to count to 10, her smile fixed, then said she'd have to ask. |
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I have lost count of the times an agency has said that they are putting you forward for a position you are interested in and that's the last you hear from them. |
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Then there's the assertion that you should count stock and pension benefits. |
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He has pled not guilty to each and every count in the indictment. |
|
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The Walking Dead piled up an impressive body count in 2014, with Lizzie, Hershel, and Beth among its major casualties. |
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Bob still claims that Billy can't count and Billy says otherwise. |
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Well she said she still needed three more guys and I said to count me in and that I knew my friend Chris would love to participate, so she added him to her list. |
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As for other female stars, you can count them on the fingers of one hand. |
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I said count me in, not realising he would take me seriously, but he did. |
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Napapol got Arial Austria to take the count at 40 seconds of the 5th. |
|
If a citizen is wronged by any party, he or she can count on it that the Constitution and the Bill of Rights will protect him and justice will prevail. |
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This is not true, but in the case of cotton grown in Egypt, the higher thread count means the fabric will be incredibly strong and will last for years and years. |
|
Next is Wallace, who will face one count of assault and battery. |
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He said he could count such days on the fingers of one hand. |
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I do not believe we have a current count of fugitives for publication, but will inquire. |
|
The Cleveland Nine should count themselves lucky that they were returned to full duty after 16 months. |
|
In the last two years, I could count on both hands the stories I've read. |
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I couldn't count them all, but I think there must have been at least 500 people in attendance. |
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The system throttled itself to batches of 50 requests at a time to keep the thread count under control. |
|
Matthew is a cockbiting lunatic. post count seemed small. I thought maybe this would livin things up a bit. |
|
It adds to the trend that law schools and law journals are no longer content to count angels on pinheads. |
|
Or perhaps something unusual occurred in the current period that you can't count on to repeat itself. |
|
The first time you meet that someone special, you can count on them one day being dead and in the ground. |
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Of course if she begins to preach, and to tell me to count my blessings, I shall send her away. |
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I may not be as young as I used to be, but I can still handle this job. Don't count me out. |
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Bok believes that media violence undermines... psychological mechanisms that allow people to bounce back and to count to 10 before they lash out. |
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There is a temptation at this point to jump up and down, shouting about how often you have asked about that point. Instead, count to ten. |
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I think it a great error to count upon the genius of a nation as a standing argument in all ages. |
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Today, the vacant lands and the croplands are almost gone and the count results reflect the change. |
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We are working at cross-purposes here, if you're trying to reduce the count and I'm trying to increase it. |
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And in all of this medley of extemporania, Nixon could count on the faithful support of the minority leader of the House, Mr. Gerald Ford. |
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And oft upon yon craggy mount, Where threat'ning cliffs hang high, Have I observ'd him stop to count With fixless stare the sky. |
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It's been a fortnight of forevers since the Braves could count on a late-game comeback. |
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The Prime Minister could count on the support of a hawkish majority in Parliament to support the invasion. |
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Common nouns are in turn divided into concrete and abstract nouns, and grammatically into count nouns and mass nouns. |
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He promptly awarded their elected leader, William Iron Arm, with the title of count in his capital of Melfi. |
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Eight weeks later she married Henry, thus Henry became duke of Aquitaine and Gascony and count of Poitiers. |
|
The new king fought the Flemings on behalf of his vassal, the count of Flanders, and restored that count to power. |
|
Edward could not succeed in his plans for Scotland if the Scots could count on French support. |
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As seen from these two examples of relatively simple kanjis, the stroke order and stroke count are arbitrary. |
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Catatonia could always count on a place in the gossip columns, too, thanks to the lagered-up antics of their boisterous lead-singer-about-town. |
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Though workers count as part of a workforce regardless of nationality, only certain individuals may be appointed as voters. |
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The least count of a voltmeter is the minimum change that can be discerned. |
|
It did not count against the Rockies on their linescore, but it did on the scoreboard. |
|
|
Class 1A, 1B and 4 NIC do not count towards benefit entitlements but must still be paid if due. |
|
Class 3 contributions only count towards State Pension and Bereavement Benefit entitlement. |
|
Tancred, King of Sicily, the last Norman monarch, made Malta a fief of the kingdom and installed a count of Malta. |
|
Negotiations were handled by the recently restored Bishop William of Durham and Robert, count of Meulan. |
|
After dinner, what remains but to count the clock, and hope for that sleep which I can scarce expect. |
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A set consists of a sequence of games played with service alternating between games, ending when the count of games won meets certain criteria. |
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Under these rules, if a man went down and could not continue after a count of 30 seconds, the fight was over. |
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Any timed lap started before the end of that period may be completed, and will count toward that driver's placement. |
|
Lewis returned to his feet at the count of six, but stumbled forward into the referee in a daze. |
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Knocked to the floor in the fifth round, receiving a count of eight, Chisora recovered only to be floored again in the same round. |
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However, if there is no male to inherit the title and the count has a daughter, in some regions she could inherit the title. |
|
Gordon Brown pointed to the 2012 medal count for Great Britain, saying that it showed the success of a union that included the two nations. |
|
The figures from 1972 do not count towards the total as badminton was a demonstration sport. |
|
Passaro was found guilty of one count of felony assault with a dangerous weapon and three counts of misdemeanor assault. |
|
From 1911 onwards it became a count based on the number of insured persons registered as unemployed. |
|
This count is still published today alongside the headline unemployment figure which is based on the Labour Force Survey. |
|
The claimant count and the headline estimate of unemployment based on data collected in the Labour Force Survey. |
|
More information on the difference between the claimant count and the headline measure of unemployment is in this pdf. |
|
Dancy notes that this does not explain why intentions count but motives do not. |
|
In 1247, the city was ceded to the count of Guelders as collateral for a loan. |
|
|
In any case, it is usual to count only the monarchs or heads of the family, and to number them sequentially up to the end of the dynasty. |
|
In Mathematics, which comprises six 100 UMS modules, only the C3 and C4 modules count towards this requirement. |
|
The thread count not only describes the width of the stripes on a sett, but also the colours used. |
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The count is cyclic, electing or eliminating candidates and transferring votes until all seats are filled. |
|
Some methods may not produce exactly the same result when the count is repeated. |
|
Notice that in computing CPI or IPC, we do not count any nops executed as useful instructions. |
|
A count of 15,756 gray seals in southeastern Massachusetts coastal waters was made in 2011 by the National Marine Fisheries Service. |
|
Despite managing to rise by the count of nine he was extremely unsteady and appeared to be in no position to defend himself. |
|
The last official count of nesting leatherback females in Brazil yielded only seven females. |
|
Every count had the help of seven of these scabini, who were supposed to know every national law so that all men could be judged according to it. |
|
This population level significantly decreased from the 1992 kittiwake count of 34,870 breeding pairs of this seabird. |
|
These birdwatchers may also count all birds in a given area, as in the Christmas Bird Count or follow carefully designed study protocols. |
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Former were occupied by the count of Holland in 1289, the latter were governed by the Duke of Schleswig and the king of Denmark. |
|
Russia could no longer count on receiving help from either Germany or France without there being a danger of British involvement in the war. |
|
After the 860s, Lotharingian noble Robert the Strong became increasingly powerful as count of Anjou, Touraine and Maine. |
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Each one of his parkings of securities was a separate count on the indictment. |
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The later parts count settlers quarter by quarter beginning with west and ending with south. |
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However, in 1987 and 1992 the constituency did count during the night rather than the next day. |
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The word can thus be said to have a double meaning, which partly depends on whether it is used as a count noun or uncountable. |
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As of 788 Adalric was fighting and capturing Chorson, Carolingian count of Toulouse. |
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Then he'd go and do some piss-ass thing that didn't count for beans and blow his horn. |
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Those do not officially count as part of the Mongol ethnicity, but are recognized as ethnic groups of their own. |
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The data collection method is to count every person resident in Namibia on the census reference night, wherever they happen to be. |
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The Orsini remained very powerful, and Pope Alexander VI could count on none but his 3,000 Spanish troops. |
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But they did not count the last three to six months of work history because in a precomputer age, those records were often unavailable. |
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Its presence negatively impacts air quality by adding to the count of airborne particulates. |
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Some sources give a count of a thousand or more breeds, but these numbers cannot be verified, according to some sources. |
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The count distinctions typically, but not always, correspond to the actual count of the referents of the marked noun or pronoun. |
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Below are examples of all the properties of count nouns holding for the count noun chair, but not for the mass noun furniture. |
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Classifiers are sometimes used as count nouns preceding mass nouns, in order to redirect the speaker's focus away from the mass nature. |
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Recently, a new logical framework, called plural logic, has also been used for characterizing the semantics of count nouns and mass nouns. |
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The use of a classifier is similar to, but not identical with, the use of units of measurement to count groups of objects in English. |
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On the other hand, some languages like Turkish treats all the nouns, even the not so obviously countable entities as count nouns. |
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The Middle English mass noun pease has become the count noun pea by morphological reanalysis. |
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Many English nouns can be used in either mass or count syntax, and in these cases, they take on cumulative reference when used as mass nouns. |
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Generally, collective nouns are not mass nouns, but rather are a special subset of count nouns. |
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Thus, for example, if a pope's reign commenced on 1 August and he died on 2 August, this would count as having reigned for two calendar days. |
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A count of murder may be joined with a count charging another offence of murder, or a count charging a different offence. |
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A count of conspiracy to murder may be joined with a count of aiding and abetting murder. |
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The following specimen count was contained in paragraph 13 of the Second Schedule to the Indictments Act 1915 before it was repealed. |
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