And, to come back to my dalmatian analogy, it has left him with a spotty record, spots that can be found in this sponsorship document that I have here. |
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Can you talk me through the Kelly chicken breast with pigeon peas, cubeb berries and Dalmatian sage? |
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This inspired Jack and Harry Bagust, brothers from the Sydney area, to breed one of these hybrids to a Dalmatian imported from Great Britain. |
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One must remember that the Dalmatian was bred to run with horse and carriage. |
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And long romps with Pongo, the resident Dalmatian turn the haven into a dog lover's paradise. |
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Unlike the symmetrical spots of the Dalmatian, the patches are jagged and irregular. |
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He is a Dalmatian, a native of the island of Brac, and he did not enjoy what we might term a normal childhood. |
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Like many who fled Vukovar, both girls found themselves on the Dalmatian coast, once home to Croatia's famed resorts. |
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The marble the US built the White House with comes from the Dalmatian Coast of Croatia. |
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Recently, however, the King of Hungary had been inciting rebellion in the Dalmatian towns, offering them his protection. |
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He walks a Dalmatian down the street and carries a black-and-white spotted banner in a parody of identity and affiliation. |
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The award was a small wheel of Camembert on a ribbon the Dalmatian proudly wore around his neck the rest of the evening. |
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In Dalmatian folk belief, for example, a girl born in a red caul became a morica when she grew up, and when she married she became a witch. |
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Slavic peoples migrated into the Balkans and along the Dalmatian coast in the sixth century. |
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My own daily dose of exasperation and humiliation comes courtesy of Bandit, a three-year-old Dalmatian. |
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Vet of the Year award went to Paul Harris, of Thirsk, who was nominated by Dalmatian breeder Chris Pickup. |
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The family dog Jasper, a brown spotted Dalmatian, strained at his lead as master and family passed by. |
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Local Dalmatian sandy limestone clads the in-situ structure, the stone cut smooth in contrast to the rough city wall across the new alley. |
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From Dubrovnik you can catch a hydrofoil to the most delightful of all Dalmatian resorts, the medieval capital of the island of Hvar. |
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One guy decided that the world should know the number of spots his Dalmatian had so he gave his dog a web page and started the concept of personal home pages. |
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The 'Pearl of the Adriatic', situated on the Dalmatian coast, became an important Mediterranean sea power from the 13th century onwards. |
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Croatian cuisine includes dishes such as grilled meat, Dalmatian smoked ham, salted pilchards, sheep's cheese and paprika-flavoured salami. |
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A Dalmatian dominatrix. Famed for her cheekbones, dramatic entrances and trails of absinthe-coloured smoke. |
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But I remember it just as The Blue Cave Moment, one of a stack of epiphanic memories of the Dalmatian coast. |
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The neighbors claimed I was personally responsible for the spread of spurge, Dalmatian toadflflax, and knapweed. |
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A number of one-day trips connecting Brela with other Dalmatian destinations offer an opportunity to explore the broader area. |
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Three years earlier Béla had been forced to cede Zadar to Venice, but he retained Split and other Dalmatian provinces. |
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He maintained contacts with Slovakia largely by correspondence and publishing a series of texts on Dalmatian topics. |
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It is also worth mentioning the success of the LIFE project for the protection of the Dalmatian Pelican in the Danube Delta. |
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It likely accompanied the Illyrians on their migration through Istria and the Dalmatian islands to the Kras massive in present-day Slovenia. |
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One involves Dalmatian toadflax, which is a real problem in the southern interior of B. C., where it can totally cover hillsides. |
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Amongst the most interesting birds are the Dalmatian pelican, the lesser grey heron, the glossy ibis and the white spoon-bill. |
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But in the painting, because this is a Thomas Kinkade piece, spotty looks like a sweet little Dalmatian. |
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He always travelled with his dog, Jack, she said, a male Dalmatian who usually sat in the passenger seat of his four wheel drive Toyota land cruiser. |
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On this 13-day tour you'll see imperial eagles, Egyptian vultures and Dalmatian pelicans, plus frescoed monasteries, Roman ruins and the monuments of the Thracian horsemen. |
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Merlot has also been popular over Italy's north eastern border in Slovenia and all down the Dalmatian coast, where it can be attractively plummy when yields are restricted. |
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The best period to visit the Dalmatian coast is from April to October. |
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It's just the place to buy a helium-filled Dalmatian, while listening to old blokes with beards making a noise akin to a donkey being garrotted with cheese wire. |
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The Dalmatian has served as a sentinel, war dog, fire department mascot, hunter, shepherd, and performer. |
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Yes, the Dalmatian coast will take off as surely will the unspoilt Mediterranean portion of Turkey, but that may be more than a year or two away. |
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Others such as Dalmatian, Polabian and Slovincian have gone unuttered for decades. |
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The Dalmatian riviera in Croatia is fast becoming the place to be seen. |
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In 20 years, thanks to intensive fieldwork and monitoring of most breeding colonies, the Dalmatian Pelican population has increased at least five-fold in south-eastern Europe. |
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The Danube is one of the last refuges in Europe for the white-tailed eagle, and hosts 70 percent of the global population of Dalmatian Pelicans. |
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It is the furthest island from the group of Central Dalmatian islands. |
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A workshop to finalise, produce and translate an Action Plan on the Dalmatian Pelican, including by means of an expert meeting in one of the Range States. |
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A great choice of first class restaurants offering traditional dishes and meat and sea-food specialties. Dalmatian wines round up the medditerannean feel and atmosphere. |
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There is dispute as to whether the Polo family is of Venetian origin, as Venetian historical sources considered them to be of Dalmatian origin. |
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The languages spoken by the people were the Romance Dalmatian and common Croatian. |
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The latter started to replace Dalmatian little by little since the 11th century among the common people who inhabited the city. |
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One example of this process reaching its conclusion is that of the Dalmatian language. |
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The increase was most pronounced in the Dalmatian and Karlovac eparchies, where return of refugees had been the most intense. |
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Smaller ports, such as Ploce and Split on the Dalmatian coastline, are also entry points for narcotics. |
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Traditional buildings are characterized by masonry consisting of large or small ashlar limestone, either of local origin or imported from Dalmatian islands. |
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There was one potentially significant development in a long-running but lowlevel dispute with Croatia over that country's construction of a bridge from the Dalmatian mainland to the Peljesac peninsula. |
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Her financial reserves and territorial possessions were lost or threatened: Cyprus passed into the hands of the Turks in 1571 as did Crete in 1669, whilst the Dalmatian coast and Morea required constant defense. |
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Classic examples of solution lakes are abundant in the karst regions at the Dalmatian coast of Croatia and within large parts of Florida. |
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In 1298 the Genoese defeated the Venetian fleet at the Dalmatian island of Curzola. |
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But UCLA's run production has been spottier than a Dalmatian with freckles. |
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They exclusively use sea salt and bora which caries the Dalmatian plants aroma for the maturation of ham which is the crucial component for the quality and specific taste. |
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The most southeast Frankish neighbours were Croats, who settled in Pannonian Croatia and Dalmatian Croatia. |
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The third geographic region, the Croatian littoral, is composed of the Istrian Peninsula in the north and the Dalmatian coast extending south to the Gulf of Kotor. |
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In the ensuing war, the city of Vukovar in Slavonia was leveled by bombardment, Dubrovnik and other Dalmatian cities were shelled, and about one-third of Croatian territory was occupied by Yugoslav forces. |
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The 22nd Annual Conference will take place in November 2009 in Dubrovnik, a town located at the southern end of the Dalmatian coast, close to the border with Bosnia-Herzegovina and Montenegro. |
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The Dalmatian pelican is the rarest species with a population estimated at between 10,000 and 20,000 following massive declines in the 19th and 20th centuries. |
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The country had suffered high casualties, yet failed to achieve most of its major war goals, notably gaining control of the Dalmatian coast and Fiume. |
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Venice expanded as well along the Dalmatian coast from Istria to Albania, which was acquired from King Ladislaus of Naples during the civil war in Hungary. |
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