I woke up the next morning, still sitting on my couch, with a crick in my neck aside from the rest of my wounds. |
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Even the most macho of male drivers do not want to sweat it out driving or get a crick in the neck, manoeuvring hairpin curves on mountain roads. |
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An overly heavy weight can take you beyond a safe range of motion, and that can give you a crick in the neck or other form of injury. |
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The company found a clearing between three hills where the grass was low and a few trees stood sentinel over a tiny, trickling crick. |
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The next morning I woke up with a crick in my neck and an annoying pain in my side. |
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I was close enough that the oversized screen nearly filled my peripheral vision, but high up enough that there was no need to crick my neck. |
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I do have this funky little crick in my neck, though, but it's nothing a nice microbrew won't cure. |
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Brayden woke with a crick in his neck, his arm asleep and the blankets too warm about him. |
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So I breathed in deeply with my face still buried in the crick of her neck, and under the scent of alcohol was Theresa's flowery perfume smell. |
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Eavan woke the next morning with a crick in his neck from sleeping in the wrong position for too long and a stale taste of ale in his mouth. |
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It was almost as though the boom had a crick in its neck after being folded up for so long en-route to, and in orbit around, Mars. |
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Ethan's head shot up so fast, I was surprised he didn't crick his neck. |
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I looked up at him so fast, that I was afraid my neck would crick. |
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It is a product of an impatient society that prefers to crick its neck peering at an online news bulletin than wait until the morning for a paper. |
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Just by the self-pleased way he worked out a crick in his neck, you could tell Mr. Gomes was used to stealing the show. |
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You crick open an eye and shiver, shaking off the sleepiness. |
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Adam woke up quite early thanks to a painful crick in his neck. |
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I rolled over to face him, I was getting a crick in my neck. |
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Adam woke late the next morning with a bad crick in his neck. |
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He told Lin Hong that he had a constant ache in every joint, an agonizing crick in his neck, and a chronic stomachache as well. |
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At the point of shaking her head, Irdle had gotten a crick in the neck when the door to the inn burst open, bearing two of the last people she would have expected to see. |
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On through Crick tunnel and then mile after mile of seemingly uninhabited country as we boxed the compass on the summit section towards Welford. |
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Crick was working on magnetic mines for the Admiralty while Jim was a very young student at the University of Chicago. |
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The discoverers of the DNA structure, James Watson, at left, and Francis Crick, look at their model of a DNA molecule. |
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Even the codiscoverer of the DNA double helix, Sir Francis Crick, displayed humility that is totally lacking in the present day know-alls. |
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The Watson and Crick article contains no padding, and every word carries its weight. |
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It's not an easy thing to grasp because at the centre lies, as Crick points out, a series of abstract legal and political concepts. |
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When the Second World War broke out, Crick was put to work for the British Navy developing magnetic and acoustic mines for use against German submarines and ships. |
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Francis Crick was one of the early proponents for the panspermia hypothesis, that is, that life actually originated somewhere else and came to earth. |
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Crick suggested that it might be possible to find chemical changes in the brain that were molecular correlates of the act of prayer. |
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During the 1960s, Crick became concerned with the origins of the genetic code. |
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In 1966, Crick took the place of Leslie Orgel at a meeting where Orgel was to talk about the origin of life. |
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In 1976 Crick addressed the origin of protein synthesis in a paper with Sydney Brenner, Aaron Klug, and George Pieczenik. |
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In 1976, Crick took a sabbatical year at the Salk Institute for Biological Studies in La Jolla, California. |
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Eventually, in the 1980s, Crick was able to devote his full attention to his other interest, consciousness. |
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Crick was skeptical about the value of computational models of mental function that are not based on details about brain structure and function. |
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The lecture is delivered annually in any field of biological sciences, with preference given to the areas in which Francis Crick himself worked. |
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The University of Cambridge Graduate School of Biological, Medical and Veterinary Sciences hosts The Francis Crick Graduate Lectures. |
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The publication of the structure of DNA by James Watson and Francis Crick in 1953 demonstrated a physical mechanism for inheritance. |
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Wilkins went on to help verify the proposed structure and win the Nobel Prize with Watson and Crick. |
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King's is a participant and one of the founding members of the Francis Crick Institute. |
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Watson, Francis Crick, and others hypothesized that DNA had a helical structure. |
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These included collections of reminiscences by Coppard and Crick and Stephen Wadhams. |
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Experimental evidence supporting the Watson and Crick model was published in a series of five articles in the same issue of Nature. |
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Sam cow binna browse down deh Sam's cow was browsing down there tuh Bull Head Crick. |
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The police have refused to lay charges in the case, even though assisted suicide is illegal in the state of Queensland where Crick died. |
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Crick is an excellent and provocative political journalist, but he was miscast here. |
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Enraged Crick marched over to Molly's owner Freya Booth, 16, and demanded she clear it up. |
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In 1962, after Franklin's death, Watson, Crick, and Wilkins jointly received the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine. |
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Hardy, Oliver Heaviside, Andrew Wiles, Francis Crick, Joseph Lister, Christopher Wren and Richard Dawkins. |
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At the age of 21, Crick earned a Bachelor of Science degree in physics from University College London. |
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Crick had failed to gain a place at a Cambridge college, probably through failing their requirement for Latin. |
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In 1947, aged 31, Crick began studying biology and became part of an important migration of physical scientists into biology research. |
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Crick had the very optimistic view that life would very soon be created in a test tube. |
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Late in 1951, Crick started working with James Watson at Cavendish Laboratory at the University of Cambridge, England. |
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Watson and Crick talked endlessly about DNA and the idea that it might be possible to guess a good molecular model of its structure. |
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In November 1951, Wilkins came to Cambridge and shared his data with Watson and Crick. |
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Wilkins shared this information about the B form of DNA with Crick and Watson. |
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A visit by Erwin Chargaff to England in 1952 reinforced the salience of this important fact for Watson and Crick. |
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Orgel also later worked with Crick at the Salk Institute for Biological Studies. |
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After his short time in New York, Crick returned to Cambridge where he worked until 1976, at which time he moved to California. |
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In 1956, Crick wrote an informal paper about the genetic coding problem for the small group of scientists in Gamow's RNA group. |
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In this article, Crick reviewed the evidence supporting the idea that there was a common set of about 20 amino acids used to synthesize proteins. |
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In his 1958 article, Crick speculated, as had others, that a triplet of nucleotides could code for an amino acid. |
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Crick had by this time become a highly influential theoretical molecular biologist. |
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Proof that the genetic code is a degenerate triplet code finally came from genetics experiments, some of which were performed by Crick. |
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Prior to publication of the double helix structure, Watson and Crick had little direct interaction with Franklin herself. |
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Before this both Linus Pauling and Watson and Crick had generated erroneous models with the chains inside and the bases pointing outwards. |
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Her identification of the space group for DNA crystals revealed to Crick that the two DNA strands were antiparallel. |
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Franklin was unaware that photograph 51 and other information had been shared with Crick and Watson. |
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Crick and Watson felt that they had benefited from collaborating with Wilkins. |
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Crick spoke rapidly, and rather loudly, and had an infectious and reverberating laugh, and a lively sense of humour. |
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Crick occasionally expressed his views on eugenics, usually in private letters. |
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For example, Crick advocated a form of positive eugenics in which wealthy parents would be encouraged to have more children. |
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In his book Of Molecules and Men, Crick expressed his views on the relationship between science and religion. |
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For Crick, the mind is a product of physical brain activity and the brain had evolved by natural means over millions of years. |
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In 1960, Crick accepted an honorary fellowship at Churchill College, Cambridge, one factor being that the new college did not have a chapel. |
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Severn Trent Property sold the site following the completion of a new rising main between Crick and Rugby which has taken all flows down to the much larger plant in Rugby. |
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Crick concentrated on the facts of Orwell's life rather than his character, and presented primarily a political perspective on Orwell's life and work. |
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Lord Adrian first offered the professorship to a compromise candidate, Guido Pontecorvo, who refused, and is said to have offered it then to Crick, who also refused. |
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Crick speculated about possible stages by which an initially simple code with a few amino acid types might have evolved into the more complex code used by existing organisms. |
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While Franklin's experimental work proved important to Crick and Watson's development of a correct model, she herself could not realize it at the time. |
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Watson, Crick, Wilkins and Franklin all worked in MRC laboratories. |
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Her two A form manuscripts reached Acta Crystallographica in Copenhagen on 6 March 1953, one day before Crick and Watson had completed their model. |
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It was clear to Crick that there had to be a code by which a short sequence of nucleotides would specify a particular amino acid in a newly synthesized protein. |
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In 1956, Crick and Watson speculated on the structure of small viruses. |
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At that time, Crick was not aware of Chargaff's rules and he made little of Griffith's calculations, although it did start him thinking about complementary replication. |
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Crick had started to think about interactions between the bases. |
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Crick did tentatively attempt to perform some experiments on nucleotide base pairing, but he was more of a theoretical biologist than an experimental biologist. |
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