Smaller defects may be mistaken for cutaneous lesions such as hemangiomas or dermoid cysts. |
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Silicon for chip manufacture must be highly pure and free of defects in the crystalline packing of atoms. |
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Encouraging women to lose weight before becoming pregnant could independently prevent neural tube defects. |
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Today, kinked tails are thought to be undesirable genetic defects in show cats. |
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Farmers living in fumigated areas complain of myriad sicknesses, including skin problems and birth defects. |
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These animals typically had extreme morphological defects including split and malformed nota and greatly reduced eyes. |
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Thirteen of the vehicles were served with defect notes and only 11 of all the coaches were free from any defects. |
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The transfer does the glossy animation justice by being clear and free of defects. |
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These mutant pupae have defects including shortened or bent legs, bristle defects, a split notum, and wing abnormalities. |
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Like the recessive alleles, frayed spindles and monopolar spindles characterized the spindle defects. |
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The voetstoots clause provides that you take the property as is, with all defects as they exist. |
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These toxins can damage immune systems, trigger cancers and cause genetic defects. |
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These defects include holes and blebs on the central tendinous portion of the diaphragm. |
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Chips are now so small that atomic-level defects on a silicon chip can cause power leakage up to 100 times the normal level, he said. |
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Your contract will contain a voetstoots clause absolving your seller from all liability for latent and patent defects. |
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Where a thing is sold voetstoots, the buyer must take it as he finds it with all its defects and vices. |
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Pregnant women who catch rubella can cause death and birth defects to their unborn babies. |
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Folic acid is a B-complex vitamin that is important in preventing neural tube defects in the developing human fetus. |
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At the same time, our mind has the potential to become completely free of defects and limitations. |
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Debating the defects of the Australian Broadcasting Corporation is, in many respects, a mug's game. |
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While vitamin A is crucial for normal fetal growth and development, too much of it may cause birth defects. |
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Some nutrients, like vitamin A, can build up to toxic levels in your body and can cause birth defects. |
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To excuse all production defects on the ground that they were undiscoverable would be to emaciate the potential of the Directive. |
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We should value our capitalist system without romanticizing it, and understand and try to mitigate its defects without vilifying it. |
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This space is reserved as a spare area for products with all primary defects and some secondary defects. |
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They hypothesized that the vasoactive properties of these medications had a role in the pathogenesis of abdominal wall defects. |
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Alterations in the p53 gene are the most common genetic defects known to occur in human tumours. |
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Women in the region live in constant fear of bearing children with genetic defects. |
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Print wear and defects from the source materials are the biggest culprits here, with a fair amount of nicks and blemishes still remaining. |
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The picture suffers from numerous source defects, including many nicks and scratches, a generally dirty appearance, and discolored film elements. |
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Such guarantees are given free of charge and promise that a product is free from defects in workmanship and materials. |
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He said the operation, known as gastric transposition, is more commonly used on newborn babies born with defects. |
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If all women of childbearing age consumed folic acid daily, the number of pregnancies affected by neural tube defects would decrease by one half. |
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Would-be doctors had personality defects ranging from extreme over-confidence, narcissism and aloofness to being overly empathetic. |
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The reason for symptoms in M.S. is a series of defects, called plaques, in the covering of nerve fibers in the brain, spinal cord and eye. |
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This medication can be used as daily eyewash to strengthen vision, counteract many eye defects and eliminate redness and soreness. |
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The court heard that work carried out by the defendants was of poor quality and defects were left unrectified. |
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Two of the bikes were so unroadworthy because of brake and tyre defects that their owners were issued with immediate prohibition notices. |
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The cells showed defects in chromosome segregation leading to the cutting of unsegregated chromosomes by the division septum. |
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If their system is free of these defects, then it clearly is a superior system. |
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She said the causes of the problem could be numerous, ranging from foot deformity to tissue defects. |
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It cannot take advantage of defects in internal procedures in order to defeat the making of a contract. |
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Differences in the gettering of Cu and Fe impurities at various types of structural defects are demonstrated on the basis of such a discussion. |
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Brightfield inspection is used by chipmakers to find the most critical defects during wafer manufacturing. |
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In particular, folic acid is essential for hematopoiesis and has been shown to reduce the incidence of neural tube defects during gestation. |
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These abnormalities are caused by defects in the genes that tell the cells how to make collagen. |
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When a roof needs a tune up, it means there are defects needing attention but that conditions are not serious enough to warrant roof replacement. |
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Even Alexander Hamilton, a prominent fellow Federalist, ripped into Adams, saying his defects of character made him unfit to hold office. |
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From a screen of 24,000 mutagenized flies, 17 mutants with presynaptic defects in synaptic transmission were recovered. |
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It's used to avoid defects in nuclear reactor pressure vessels or it may be on an aircraft to avoid catastrophic failure of an air structure. |
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Currently, physicians are able to diagnose many more birth defects than they are able to treat prenatally. |
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Five players were permanently blinded and a dozen more had permanent eye defects leading to reduced vision. |
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The Inspectorate's report required rusty radiators, flaking paint, brittle water pipes, damp and floor defects to be fixed within three months. |
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The bill contains a number of common-sense amendments to remedy several defects in transport legislation. |
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Radiographic features include radiolucent defects in the femoral head and fragmentation of the femoral head. |
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These species may be metal ions, surface defects, or adsorbed molecules or ions with one or more unpaired electrons. |
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New orthopedic options using autogenous tissue to repair articular cartilage defects of the knee are emerging. |
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It is not just for a relatively short period while physical defects to the property are made good. |
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Such defects could include trees and hedges that require attention either by the Highway Authority or frontager. |
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Typically, altered gene dosage caused by karyotypic abnormalities results in embryonic lethality or birth defects. |
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The eyes of newborn babies are examined for any obvious physical defects, including cross eyes, cloudiness, and redness. |
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Pore formation is promoted by an increased likelihood of transmembrane water defects in the presence of an external electric field. |
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Time-lapse microscopy in multiple focal planes was performed for analysis of embryogenesis and cytokinesis defects. |
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Polyploids show chromosome instability during exponential growth but do not manifest any other obvious growth defects. |
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Gun dealers aren't required by law to address these defects or to recall their products. |
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But perhaps the dreadful birth defects and mutated plants are not evidence at all, but signs and wonders portending some great event. |
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Stem cells from amniotic fluid have been used to repair windpipe defects in unborn lambs while still in the womb. |
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Software defects can be exploited on scale far larger than defects in physical products. |
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Exposure to large radiation dosages can be lethal, or can lead to cancer and birth defects. |
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Reconstructive surgery corrects defects or restores function, while cosmetic surgery enhances or improves a person's normal appearance. |
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Thrush and erythematous candidiasis are common in patients with immune defects and are often an early manifestation of the immunodeficiency. |
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All the corners and edges of the Gamma Pad are smoothed and the mousing surface is flat and free of defects. |
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Skin defects in the palm are often left to heal by secondary intention after surgery for Dupuytren's disease, with excellent results. |
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Many mutants died or showed pleiotropic defects casting doubt on the specificity of their retinal phenotype and were not included in this report. |
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The researchers believe the technique helps women conceive who had been unable to do so because of defects in their eggs. |
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Such installations are giving rise to some concern, especially having regard to the sums needed to rectify the defects. |
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This puts your baby at risk of a serious condition called fetal alcohol syndrome, which is a group of birth defects. |
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Also avoid alcohol during pregnancy because babies with fetal alcohol syndrome often have congenital heart defects. |
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Alcohol abuse by the mother causes fetal alcohol syndrome, and certain medications taken by the mother can cause birth defects. |
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In the most severe cases, children exposed to alcohol prenatally have a pattern of birth defects identified as fetal alcohol syndrome. |
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We checked all of the mutants for phenotypes that might indicate defects in endocytosis by other cell types. |
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The owners also refused to allow the plaintiffs to remedy the defects or complete the contract. |
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We got a 99 percent all-clear for any neural tube defects and were told that the doctor saw no need for an amnio. |
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And, in fine, the defects are almost always more tolerable than the change necessary for their removal. |
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As a replicase, Pol is highly sensitive to template defects and misinserts nucleotides only extremely rarely. |
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No defects in the source material or the digital reproduction appear anywhere. |
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We describe two children with recurrent bacterial meningitis due to cranial anatomical defects in whom diagnosis was delayed. |
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From 1989 to 1991, the rate of such defects for Brownsville was 10 times the U.S. average, or about 30 anencephalic births per 10,000 births. |
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People with some types of heart defects are at greater risk of developing bacterial endocarditis. |
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The neighborhood suffers high rates of infant mortality, asthma, birth defects and cancer. |
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The Advocate General is there concentrating on foreseeability of risks rather than the discoverability of particular defects. |
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The crystal structure of antigorite could not be solved, because of very fine crystal size and many defects. |
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First or second degree block, however, can occur with rheumatic carditis, diphtheria, digoxin overdose, and congenital heart defects. |
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Children born prematurely are likely to have enamel defects in both primary and permanent teeth. |
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Osmotic stress and potential defects in small ion or metabolite transport were examined on 1.2 M NaCl plates. |
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The picture is free of film defects and artifacts, making for a very smooth look. |
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The plant hormone auxin plays a role in specifying the pattern of root cells, and mutations affecting its localization lead to root defects. |
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An examination of the line revealed defects in a commissural pathway of neurons. |
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Canon dioptric lenses only handle simple eyesight defects of long and short sight, they may not help other eyesight problems. |
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Folic acid helps prevent birth defects and may reduce the risk of heart disease. |
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You have not chosen to particularise what defects and dilapidations you refer to. |
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Penile deformity or incurvation was not seen, and no continuity defects were palpated. |
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This can help spot design defects and prevent faulty products from reaching the market. |
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Most other respiratory viruses don't seem to increase the normal risk for birth defects. |
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When a mother has certain infections, such as rubella, during pregnancy, it can cause birth defects. |
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Other defects included faulty steering mechanisms and suspensions, rusty chassis and doors and seatbelts which did not work. |
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Several forms of familial hypercholesterolemia are the result of genetic defects in the gene encoding the receptor for low-density lipoprotein. |
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The two alleles that cause the most severe axon guidance defects have strikingly different mutations. |
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We need to recognize the defects of the old system and throw it out, before the entire edifice of any justice in Indian society collapses. |
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The cups must be free of any defects that would detract from their appearance or affect their performance. |
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The agency workers will look for defects such as sub-standard tyres, faulty lights and exhausts. |
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Of the 12 vehicles with serious defects two of the faulty school buses were repaired and re-tested on site before being cleared. |
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He suspects that Parkinson patients have defects in liver enzymes that usually serve to detoxify noxious chemicals. |
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The most common defects were bare tyres, faulty brakes, steering and suspension, plus broken headlights and brake lights. |
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These are fundamental defects, and are usually associated with a relatively feeble digestion, weak heart and incapacious lungs. |
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They may also be more susceptible to inbreeding and to genetic defects, say biologists. |
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Babies with brain malformations, numerous genetic diseases and other physical birth defects are at increased risk of cerebral palsy. |
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Ven mutants exhibit gross anatomical defects in the nerve cords, including their complete detachment from the body wall. |
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Birth defects and complications are also being missed because ultrasound waves are unable to penetrate large fat deposits. |
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It was a drastic form of eugenics, a desire to improve the race by eliminating genetic defects. |
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As you would expect from a new film, there are no nicks, scars, or other defects that migrated from the source print to the digital realm. |
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Enamel and dentine defects of genetic origin are rare but are occasionally severe and may take a variety of forms and vary in their inheritance. |
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There is a high frequency of inborn defects of respiratory organs and bronchiectasis. |
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These cells were seeded onto demineralized bone grafts to form cell-scaffold constructs and were implanted to repair various bone defects. |
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It is important to note that the aberrant projections do not seem to result from fasciculation defects or growth impairments. |
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Ever mindful of his training in pharmacy he did not fail to criticise what he saw as defects in The London Pharmacopoeia. |
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For later reference, the dentists were provided with a set of 6 color pictures of different types of demarcated enamel defects. |
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Usually, test patterns are displayed on the screens and carefully scrutinized to check for image defects. |
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The finding of one or more segmental or larger perfusion defects is a sensitive marker of embolic obstruction. |
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Fallot's tetralogy is a set of 4 congenital heart defects occurring together. |
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Taking even a single dose of thalidomide during early pregnancy may cause major birth defects. |
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Medications like thalidomide or isotretinon can cause tragic birth defects. |
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They also increase the number of defects or imperfections in the lattice as an artefact of the deformation. |
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Just like the glossies in which his celebrities appeared, his self-portraits are camouflaged, all blemishes and defects removed. |
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The poet stitches his epic out of speech's defects, not its seemlinesses or even its seaminess. |
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Whatever defects of character the new women may eventually acquire, lack of maternal affection will not be one of them. |
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The coherer, however, had several defects in that it was not very sensitive and was difficult to adjust. |
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Since barium sulfate is opaque to x rays, a clear image of the details of the GI system can be obtained, and most defects can be detected. |
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Fundoscopy showed severe disc swelling, and perimetry showed visual field defects, which were most extensive in both lower quadrants. |
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It can be caused by congenital defects or problems with the blood clotting. |
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Oral-facial clefts are birth defects in which the tissues of the mouth or lip don't form properly during fetal development. |
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The new line of three systems sets the industry benchmark with 30 nm sensitivity and throughputs of up to 1,800 defects per hour. |
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Most languages have some self-critical locution, usually a wordplay or neologism, to indicate typical national defects. |
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Hepatic hydrothorax originates secondary to ascitic fluid movement from the abdominal cavity to the pleural space via defects in the diaphragm. |
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Congenital heart defects appear to run in families and are associated with many genetic syndromes. |
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The risk of bearing a child with certain chromosomal birth defects increases as a woman ages. |
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Flies homozygous for such hypomorphic mutations reach adulthood, but often exhibit defects during the proliferative stages of gametogenesis. |
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Common associated findings in this syndrome include rib defects, hypoplasia of the upper extremities, and syndactyly. |
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Another prenatal test, called chorionic villus sampling, can diagnose most, but not all, of the same birth defects as amniocentesis. |
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Mutations that disrupt the signaling interactions between epithelium and the underlying mesenchyme can cause eyelid closure defects. |
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Rohcon surveyed the building a fortnight ago and rejected all claims of leaks and structural defects. |
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Known as septal defects, the holes can typically be patched up with surgery. |
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The stable immobilization appears to be an indirect proof that the tethered lipid bilayer lack defects on the mesoscale. |
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A cholangiogram can be performed intraoperatively to evaluate the hepatic and common bile ducts for filling defects and retained stones. |
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Edges are natural, colors solid, the picture free of defects or degradations. |
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The physician should palpate bony prominences and tendinous insertions near the heel and midfoot, noting any tenderness or palpable defects. |
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The paper shows that positrons can see defects better than either optical or electron beam microscopes. |
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Examples of multifactorial disorders include cleft lip and palate, neural tube defects and pyloric stenosis. |
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By law in most states, you have to disclose major structural defects in early stages of home buying. |
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Asian Americans have fewer birth defects than Native Americans, Caucasians, or African Americans, but more than Hispanic Americans. |
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The vast majority die in the womb and many that survive have defects and deformities. |
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Thus, defects in either cell type have the potential to affect both cellular and humoral immunity to varying degrees. |
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I can see now that the deficits in my cash flow had a lot to do with defects in my understanding of money. |
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While it is not riddled with defects or scratches, it still looks like lost stock footage from a rotting box of ancient newsreels. |
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Without carotenoids in the diet, animals, including ourselves, would suffer serious vision defects and potentially blindness. |
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Abdominal wall defects, including gastroschisis and omphalocele, are usually diagnosed prenatally. |
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Most of these lesions arise as a consequence of migrational defects during thymic embryogenesis. |
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Pregnancy is considered risky for women with diabetes because of the increased risk of miscarriage, stillbirth and birth defects in their babies. |
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Teeth are damaged by caries, wear, failed restorations, trauma, and congenital and developmental defects. |
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When a patient has beta cell defects, first-phase insulin secretion is impaired and eventually lost, which results in fasting hyperglycemia. |
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Could the defects in the structural organization also affect the olfactive bulb? |
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Even if we were not plagued by these curious and unusual defects of English, Paul would still be hard to understand. |
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A form that has a soothing, healing effect is the result of a mind that is free from harmfulness and defects. |
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Other transmutationists included French anatomist Isidore Geoffroy Sainte Hilaire, who studied birth defects. |
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Nine coaches and minibuses have been taken off the road after roadside checks uncovered a worrying catalogue of defects, including faulty brakes. |
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Most of such defects are hereditary and due to marriages between close relations. |
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Folic acid is especially important for women of childbearing age, as deficiencies of this nutrient have been linked with birth defects. |
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Because of these trap-like defects, the interface 119-107 essentially behaves like an n-type material. |
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Ultrasound can be used to diagnose certain congenital defects such as spina bifida. |
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The sterile females also had rough eyes and clipped wings, two phenotypes associated with cell division defects. |
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Parents of children with congenital heart defects have already told her that her account mirrored exactly what they went through. |
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The baby's mother had caught rubella and when pregnant mums get rubella the results are abortions, miscarriages, stillbirths, and birth defects. |
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Data from more than 300 deliveries indicate no birth defects compatible with congenital varicella syndrome. |
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Many suffer needlessly from eye defects due top lack of knowledge and basic equipment. |
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On the other hand, it is free from serious defects and is a good choice in its price category. |
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In terms of congenital defects, the first trimester of pregnancy is the exposure period of interest. |
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The researchers said it was not certain carbon monoxide and ozone were directly causing the defects. |
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Both monosomy and trisomy of specific chromosomes are associated with developmental defects and cancer risk. |
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Besides missing some birth defects, a routine ultrasound exam occasionally can suggest that a birth defect is present when none exists. |
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Some of the children have birthmarks or birth defects that correspond to wounds or other marks on the deceased person. |
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Caffeine consumed during pregnancy is associated with fetal mortality, birth defects and decreased birth weights. |
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Significant defects in graphesthesia and stereognosis occur with contralateral hemispheric disease, particularly in the parietal lobe. |
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In July the company mailed recall letters offering to fix any defects for free. |
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Sellers are obligated to disclose significant property defects of which they are aware. |
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These physical deviations were connected to the spiritual defects of blind literalism and obdurateness. |
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The potatoes will also have to meet minimum quality standards such as appearance and freedom from defects and plant diseases. |
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We have used a video of women describing their experiences when undergoing screening for Down's syndrome and open neural tube defects in pregnancy. |
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Advanced maternal age dramatically increases the risk of maternal mortality as well as birth defects like Down Syndrome. |
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By first isolating individual strands and then reassembling them back into fibres, chemists make fibres with as few defects as possible, making them much stronger. |
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The genetic material can grow quickly, but are typically riddled with errors or defects. |
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For all his defects, he had the qualities that are most needed to overcome the defects in our current political system. |
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Izetbegovic did not acknowledge the importance of the offer, but focused solely on its defects. |
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It is rather the worse for wear, very grainy with pronounced film defects. |
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This hazardous waste will remain toxic for centuries when landfilled, a deadly legacy that could cause cancer and birth defects for generations to come. |
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The water in the mantle may be contained either in high pressure hydrous phases, or alternatively as small hydrous defects in nominally anhydrous minerals. |
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There were no obvious tool marks, chips or defects, and the finish was perfectly consistent down to the sudden transition at the base of every fold. |
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Renal tubular defects result in a loss of calcium and phosphate in the urine leading to children with deficient mineralization of growing bone and rickets. |
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The Monza layout has changed over the years, and at one time featured bankings, but these have been discontinued following major concrete defects appearing. |
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He doubts 2012 data will show a significant increase in birth defects in Fukushima or Japan. |
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Officers would also be checking the vehicle for defects, inspecting the tachograph and checking for any alcohol content in the bodies of the drivers. |
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Genetic defects are known for both the synthase and the lyase. |
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The former pediatrician was also instrumental in protecting the rights of children born with birth defects and the handicapped. |
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Recent experiments support the idea that crystal defects may be responsible for the quantum tunnelling of magnetic moments in molecular magnets at low temperatures. |
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Others had malformed internal organs or eye and ear defects. |
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The relevant birth defects include missing limbs and malformed hearts. |
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Some mutations involving the hair are accompanied by defects of the skin and its appendages, such as nails, teeth, sebaceous glands, and mammary glands. |
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She says the traditional approach for evaluating a fluid milk's sensory characteristics scores the product against a list of commonly found defects. |
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In adults, lead overload can lead to miscarriages and birth defects, as well as sterility. |
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A mild form of this deficiency, associated with a thermolabile enzyme, has been proposed as a genetic risk factor for cardiovascular disease and for neural tube defects. |
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Simply put, to compensate for whey's natural defects and still permit speedy protein-synthesizing delivery, whey must be harnessed with a controlled, time-release mechanism. |
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Underground drains and sewers can suffer from structural defects caused by ground movement, leakage, subsidence, tree-root infiltration or corrosion. |
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The surface of the nails were smooth and without any defects. |
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Genetic defects of the red cell membrane may cause the red cells to assume a spherical rather than a biconcave shape, or alter their configuration to an elliptical form. |
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Lastly, they are valuable for use in medical research on multiple births, organ transplants, birth defects and diseases such as leprosy, typhus and trichinosis. |
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However, these trihedra were much larger and were growth defects which arose from a mechanism other than the condensation of vacancies or the release of misfit strain. |
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Both strains exhibited macrochaete duplications, eye defects, and loss of wing material consistent with dominant-negative effects of the Mam truncations described previously. |
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Defect reduction could be an essential part of moletronic chipmaking as well, said Brown, noting that controlling defects in self-assembled monolayers, or SAMs, is critical. |
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The depth and dynamism of the mono audio track make it almost as robust as stereo, and the soundtrack is clean and free of hiss or other defects as well. |
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Its monochrome is magnificent, with minimal defects or mastering mistakes. |
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Pipe and lamination defects are a by-product of ingot steel production. |
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There are no obvious image defects, but often the image is muddy and dull. |
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For instance, many transgenic experiments with members of the myogenic pathway have defects that differentially impact epaxial and hypaxial muscles. |
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Hereditary defects in the channels are known to cause many diseases, including dominant and recessive myotonia, Bartter's syndrome, and Dent's disease. |
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Two in a hundred children in Basra are now being born with birth defects. |
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Your bold brand of charisma not withstanding, staid types might see outsized expressions of your personality as character defects. |
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Plaintiffs enumerated a number of problems, defects and unworkmanlike conditions existing in the modular home constructed by the Defendant under its contract with plaintiffs. |
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There are few film defects such as nicks or blemishes to be seen. |
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Many of the grain defects in a leather do not penetrate into the leather nearly to the depth of the grain layer, and can be entirely removed by buffing. |
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Sperm banks do a lot more than just freeze and dispense the sperm, you know, they also test for HIV and other diseases, as well as hereditary defects. |
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These defects, which include conditions such as hemophilia and color-blindness, are called X-linked because the genes are carried on the X chromosome. |
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Membership in NATO has helped correct these defects of statecraft and government, although much work remains once a nation is included in the alliance. |
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To assess whether such an increase might be explained by a diagnostic shift of the abdominal wall defects, we analysed the time trends of omphalocele in these registries. |
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Conversely, supersaturation of bile with insoluble cholesterol, as a result of metabolic defects, promotes the formation of cholesterol gallstones. |
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Some birth defects can be diagnosed before birth, using one or more prenatal tests including ultrasound, amniocentesis and chorionic villus sampling. |
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Major malformations were neural tube defects and monogenic traits, syndromes, and sequences, and minor defects were anomalies such as syndactyly of the second and third toes. |
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Along a central European front, the two species hybridize, but the hybrids suffer from a whole range of defects, many of which are lethal at the embryonic stage. |
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No re-test fee will apply for minor defects such as faulty light bulbs. |
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He argues that defects of memory or faulty perception may apply. |
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If the claim is in respect of defects in the common parts or communal areas of a block of flats, the claim must be made by the Management Company or in Scotland, the Factor. |
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This system can repair extremely small and complicatedly shaped defects on photomasks, such as phase shift masks and binary masks, with high accuracy. |
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Miyao et a 116 studied 14 patients with lymph node metastases from bladder cancer and found complete concordance between genetic defects in the primary and metastatic sites. |
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These strains provided essential controls demonstrating the reproducibility of the quantitative assay and its insensitivity to general growth defects. |
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Read about birth defects and congenital heart disease to learn more. |
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It can crash through the armour of a modern tank and it poisons land and contaminates water supplies for years causing cancers and genetic defects. |
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Accident investigators found no contributory defects in either car. |
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Radioactive elements in the sample or in the surrounding environment ionize the atoms in crystalline quartz, and the electrons become trapped by crystal defects. |
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The defects produce a potential well which holds the electrons in them. |
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If you're shopping at a garden center, shop early in the season and choose only bulbs that are firm and free of defects such as cuts, bruises, or mold. |
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No skid marks were found, he said, and both cars were free from defects. |
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It was not a duty not to sell such a house nor was it a duty to warrant that all houses being sold by the local authority under the right to buy scheme were free of defects. |
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Summonses totalling R416000 have been served on drivers whose vehicles were found to have defects which included smooth tyres, defective brakes and faulty lights. |
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Empire expected that the defects and deficiencies would be rectified. |
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This approach can identify activities and outcomes that add value and those that do not, but instead arise out of defects in the service delivery process. |
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Some psychopaths are aggressive and commit violent crimes, other psychopaths are non-aggressive. Many other persistent criminals are said to have personality defects. |
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Commonly associated defects include a ventricular septal defect, a ventricular septal defect with pulmonic stenosis, in addition to those with an intact ventricular septum. |
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The former includes meditations on the precious human existence, impermanence, the defects of sasra, the workings of karma and the need for a spiritual guide or guru. |
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The third major category of error consists of specimen defects. |
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Other possible causes are trauma or injury to the breast, compression from mammography, accidents during implantation or explantation, manufacturing defects, and normal wear. |
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Critics recognised the mastery of the piece despite the defects in performance. |
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Central scotomas were noted on confrontation, but HVF showed bilateral, inferior altitudinal field defects. |
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T he r e we r e nume rous defects, including the complete failure of the trailer's air brakes. |
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In the June Nature Materials, the Yale team explains how it exploited gallium arsenide defects known as arsenic anti-sites. |
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Folic acid is a B vitamin that lowers the risk of spina bifida and other neural tube birth defects. |
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In most jurisdictions, the job of handling title defects rests primarily with the title company. |
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Freedom from all defects and imperfections, diseases, and distempers, infirmities and deformities, maimedness and monstrous shapes. |
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These defects may be more pronounced in the superior visual field, perhaps corresponding to the inferior predilection for the snowflake lesions. |
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Neural Tube Defects are one of a few largely preventable congenital defects, achieved through adequate folic acid intake. |
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Words related to social defects like divorced woman euphemized by which has less negative load in Persian culture. |
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Removing those defects by polishing makes the axe much stronger, and able to withstand impact and shock loads from use. |
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After each operation, the surgeons rated the degree of difficulty in suturing the uterine wall defects using a 1-10 visual analog scale. |
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The problem with sulfur is that it makes molten cast iron viscous, which causes defects. |
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Stiffness and elastic strength are more dependent upon the sound wood than upon localized defects. |
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They are defects which weaken timber and lower its value for structural purposes where strength is an important consideration. |
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Bladder defects may be seen cystoscopically and the proximal part of a persistent urachus can be explored endoscopically. |
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Symptomatic paradoxical air embolism may be more likely in patients with septal heart defects. |
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Myeloperoxidase deficiency is one of the most common inherited phagocyte defects, but it is rarely associated with clinical symptoms. |
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Although such defects were clear as early as 1849, nothing was done for the remainder of the 19th century even after much studying. |
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The Model DE00001 dog ear detection processor is designed to detect quality defects after splicing operations. |
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Green sand metalcasters have come to realize the majority of casting defects are mold related. |
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Microstructure is composed of fine ferritic and perlitic constituents without defects like non-metallic inclusions, gas and shrinkage porosity. |
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New posterior auricular perichondrial cutaneous graft for stable reconstruction of nasal defects. |
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If either is taken during pregnancy, they do not increase the risk of miscarriage nor cause birth defects. |
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In partial defects if herniation is probable pericardiectomy or pericardioplasty must be considered. |
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Repair of defects in spondylolysis by segmental pedicular screw hook fixation. |
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Diagrammatical description of the defect and the required prevention and remedy is available for the individual defects. |
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Thus, there is a need for effective methods to identify biological pathways that are pathophysiologically related to birth defects. |
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Worldwide, about one in 150 babies are born with cardiac defects, which can be identified through echocardiograms. |
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They were pro-life except in cases of rape, incest, maternal life risk, mental health risk, socioeconomic factors, or fetal defects. |
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Corneal exposure from eyelid defects, ectropion or lagophthalmos may result in exposure keratitis. |
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Undesirable traits such as health defects, aggressiveness or lack of docility are selected against. |
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