From the distant night streaks of fire appeared, arrowing down onto the palace rooftop. |
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Without heat or gas on a bitter winter night, the residents nonetheless resist distant relocation. |
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We kept on coming back on safaris, but although we longed to move here we knew it was just a distant dream. |
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Surveyors use a tachymeter to make quick calculations of the distances, bearings or elevations of distant objects. |
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Lewis, charming and avuncular, is far easier to relate to than the aloof and distant Freud. |
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And outside the window are the distant cries of coyotes, yelping and yapping out on the shadows of the countryside. |
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They didn't even look like distant relations of each other, much less the same person. |
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Michael did not suffer fools gladly and could seem aloof and distant at times, but this was his rather old-world formality. |
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Staying out of the media spotlight can lead to accusations of being aloof or distant or smug. |
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Napoleon appears most distant and aloof in his demeanour when considered from his right side, from which point the eyes are least visible. |
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The tools are also helping astronomers measure the rate of birth of stars in extremely red and distant galaxies. |
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First class casters could reach way out to shy fish, and distant mangroves. |
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Still others reformed entire countries, making way for U.S. products on distant shores. |
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They are postcards from a very distant past, putting faces on people who lived centuries ago. |
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Simon opened his mouth to say something but was interrupted by the distant rumbling of thunder. |
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There was no answer, only the silence of the dust clearing and the distant rumble of motorway traffic. |
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The government is grappling with the arduous task of providing relief to distant islands. |
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Plant hunters were bringing exotic new species from distant shores and their finds prompted extreme security measures such as man-traps. |
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I could hear the distant rumble of thunder in the background but all sound was lost to my ears as Darius walked in. |
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Late in the evening, freight cars rumble past, lumbering along in the wake of the engine's distant whistle. |
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At the same time, we are experiencing vulnerability on our own shores and grief for the innocent lives that will be lost on distant shores. |
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With some historical detective work, they manage to reconstruct a genealogy, tracing their line back to early colonists or distant shores. |
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Thunder continued to rumble ominously overhead, like some great sky god beating out a war march on giant, distant drums. |
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Immigrants from more distant shores than those of Ireland, Scotland, and Wales have made them their own. |
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Try roller-coasting over Turnhouse Hill, Carnethy Hill and Scald Law, and let the wide open skies and the distant horizons exhilarate you. |
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We have always been concerned with the welfare of those Indian workers who travel to distant shores in search of higher remuneration. |
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Somewhere an electrical source was arcing out, throwing a harsh glare against cold metal like distant lightning reflecting from storm clouds. |
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Who knows what intelligences, human or artificial, will in some distant future study these scraps? |
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There is a distant bridge, a small harbor, and a lonely road that leads to another beach town. |
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Without heat or gas on a bitter winter night, the rogue residents nonetheless resist distant relocation. |
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Beyond Corryhabbie Hill on the opposite side of Glen Rinnes, Lochnager and the arc of the Cairngorms form the distant horizon. |
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Standing there, hearing a distant roar of London traffic, the woman next to me looks disgruntled, something to do with the poems not rhyming. |
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And so, while scientists toiled in their labs, the market for dictation tools faded like a distant radio signal. |
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As we made our way along the pretty woodland walk, we gradually became aware of a distant and muffled rumble. |
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But it seemed so distant from where he sat now, with mosquitoes biting at his wrists and a wilted arbutus on the sill. |
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Out past a cruising leopard seal, the distant Marr Glacier calves another berg, the boom echoing across the water. |
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Many still think it is an African disease that is too distant from their shores. |
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It could be that they were bound to the distant shores of Africa or Brazil. |
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The springtime calling of frogs had given way to the chirping of crickets and the distant barks of rutting roe deer. |
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Ultimately, for travel to distant star systems, the tremendous energy available in particle annihilation will be applied in propulsion. |
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Evening sun is glowing across the aircraft on the apron as incredibly dark clouds loom over distant Amsterdam city centre. |
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We eased our way through the crowd and into the park which after only a few paces seemed many leagues distant from the City surrounding it. |
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Eve quickened her pace as she heard the distant roar of an engine pulling up into the driveway. |
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The seemingly harmonious life of the family is shattered and the two women decide to go away to a distant place and begin life anew on their own. |
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Nursing literature is full of anecdotal accounts of the distant approach that doctors have towards patients and their carers. |
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The distant sound of automatic cannon fire could be heard, and then there was a tremendous explosion above them. |
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However, considerable friction arose from the beginning between lofty republican ideals and the lure of distant lands. |
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In addition, alleles from geographically distant localities often cluster together. |
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An Orkney woman has been made an honorary Cree Indian, after visiting distant relatives on a reserve in Canada recently. |
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In those gold borders I lived apart from the happy, academic families, with their distant stasis of ancient language. |
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In late evening, as the sun sets, the hills on the distant horizon tint to pink and deep rose. |
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His status as the son of a U.S. Senator landed him a cushy desk job in cozy surroundings far distant from the battle lines. |
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Birds with permanent roosts became the couple's rather more distant but equally delightful acquaintances. |
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Even his apparently limitless supply of inner motivation must hit a boredom threshold at some point in the distant future. |
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As D-Day approached I became a zombie, all distant stares and unresponsive grunts. |
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But now, she grew reproachful and distant with Rhiannon, and Rhiannon knew quite well why. |
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The walls are throbbing gently to the beat of music coming from one near and several more distant amplifiers. |
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North is the farthest remove from home, a place where Frankenstein's monster wanders mournfully, distant from all the known safe world. |
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Each idyll is a society in the distant future or the remote past that can be held up as a noble alternative to American society. |
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Is it possible to stay mad at a distant dad when he's also a sheepish, attractively rumpled amnesiac? |
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Less commonly, bowel cancer can spread to other, more distant organs such as the lung or brain. |
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But the attempt to define and punish a category of speech as obscene is an atavistic vestige from a distant era. |
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Second, it predicted that light from a distant star passing near to the limb of sun would be bent by a small but measurable angle. |
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The ronin's distant past explores the conflict between an honorable samurai heritage and the financial worries of masterless ronin. |
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Her days as a single mother living on income support must now seem like a distant memory. |
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Judging from the past, we may safely infer that not one living species will transmit its unaltered likeness to a distant futurity. |
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And there it would be, the horizon ablaze with light where the gleaming flames of candles met the distant flicker of stars. |
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The walls are walkable, a good place to peer down at the city streets or over at the distant Welsh mountains. |
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As long as the military remains an all-volunteer force, they say, war and death could remain distant abstractions for most Americans. |
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The ruined city of Vakith stood deserted, but the distant memory of children playing or merchants peddling their wares echoed in Drakas' ears. |
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Lime was quarried in Rockland and shipped by rail to distant points, but this was an industry in decline. |
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The acceleration of the Universe can be seen in the redshifts of distant supernovae. |
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A cool day and the distant ridge of the Ngong hills is pale against the washed-out sky, with a thin layer of cloud flat and hard over the city. |
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The wanderer is like a dehydrated traveller in a waterless desert, or a lover longing to see the distant beloved. |
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The name is misleading, since this is not a member of the rush family, but a distant relative of water plantains and water soldier. |
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Buy them now and some time in the distant future, a Ronald Reagan jelly bean jar may yet be within your grasp. |
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We've grown used to Japanese car makers showing way-out pollutionless cars of the distant future. |
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One summer morning a rack of antlers was visible in the distant meadow where the night before a pack of 14 wolves had taken down a bull elk. |
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This makes it the most distant extrasolar planet detected by astronomers to date. |
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He stood there with a distant look in his eyes holding a radio in his hand that was spattering incomprehensible messages from his superiors. |
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He was able to detect the Sun and about five radio galaxies, some of the most distant objects then known in the universe. |
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The water system has meant improved health among residents, who now need to spend less time carrying water from wells distant from their homes. |
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At the end of the morning, we stood on a bank at the nature sanctuary overlooking a glassy cove with a distant raft of big black ducks. |
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As I approach 26, my young person's railcard will soon be but a distant memory. |
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The value of such distant rainfalls is that they do contribute to the flow of the Kunene and the inflow through Ruacana. |
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His distant kinsman, Mr Enfield, tells him a story of a mysterious Mr Hyde. |
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To conduct a maritime war in distant seas the Admiralty had to be able to transport naval stores to squadrons operating from remote stations. |
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As a result the common law courts still remain more distant from the merits than the administrative law courts of continental jurisdictions. |
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I heard the distant chime of the bell up at the ranch house, and we both knew it was time to head in. |
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The constellations are wheeling above him as he heads for the promise of the low, distant lights. |
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If you go to Adobe Walls today equipped with a rangefinder you will quickly see that none of the distant buttes are 1,538 yards away. |
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Women are rarely filmed at such occasions, and they appear only in distant glimpses. |
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A distant relative of the whippoorwill, the potoo feeds mainly at night, opening its short, curved bill very wide to sweep up flying insects. |
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I noticed, across a distant paddock, a white-haired figure striding through the grass. |
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Strangely enough, I had to leave my close comrades-in-arms behind or send them, against their wishes, to distant places. |
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Out at the distant horizon ascended a monstrous tidal swell amassing into an alp. |
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This allows read-only access for customers or other constituents in distant locations. |
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And likewise, I try to remain a little distant and aloof, and not reveal too much of myself and my ditziness. |
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All that was palpable, tactile, realizable, was a distant mirage of dead spirit. |
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Yet with heavy weapons whining and thumping in the hills around us, nothing seems more distant than the prospect of a hearty meal. |
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Some wild tribes of the distant past no doubt did follow the practice of killing innocent people in revenge for the death of one of their men. |
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Will the human lineage survive, reasonably happily, into the far distant future? |
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The editor then changed Webb's status from investigative reporter and reassigned him to a distant bureau, miles away from his family. |
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Cirrus clouds indicated the distant approach of a trough, both in the surface and upper air. |
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On their arrival in distant countries, they were either placed in temporary reception centres or were collected by prearranged guardians. |
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The entire composition is unified by an extensive, wintry landscape containing distant narrative details. |
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On Sundays, Mr Utterson takes walks through the streets of London with Mr. Richard Enfield, a young businessman and distant kinsman. |
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These waves are recorded by instruments all over the world, allowing scientists to accurately measure distant quakes. |
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Astronomers have long observed that light from distant galaxies is usually redshifted. |
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As his voice resonated, mingling with the call of a distant koel, the mystery of the majestic edifice stood out. |
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At the time I reached the camp, it was almost deserted, as workers had been trucked to a distant worksite, returning only late in the evening. |
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There has been an explosion in the number of astronomers scanning the skies for the telltale wobble of distant worlds. |
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Rama has no option but to crawl, wounding her hands and tearing her clothes as she inches towards her distant school. |
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Every 15 minutes, spend about 20 seconds looking around the room and refocusing your eyes on a distant point. |
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Scientists speculate that it could be a body from the distant Kuiper belt, way out in the outer solar system. |
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Never forget that you a great debt to anyone whose ancestors may have been wronged by some distant relative of your ancestors. |
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She showed how to be regal without being remote, dignified without being distant and she had the loveliest smile in the world. |
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It is reasonable to expect that contiguous homilies would be more alike than distant ones. |
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When the Queen first began her reign, monarchs were expected to be somewhat detached, grand and distant figures, especially the British monarch. |
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Here and there a few islands of allodial tenure, free of all burdens, survived from distant times. |
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Beyond the river, caramel plains rolled away to the distant horizon, spotted with acacia trees and slow-moving giraffe. |
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It was said that French soldiers at Verdun were given much heart when they heard the distant rumble of the first British artillery salvos at the Somme. |
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The rapport between Majority Leader Harry Reid and Minority Leader Mitch McConnell is as distant as it is adversarial, Snowe says. |
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In the post-Kefauver era of the early 1950s, it had many advantages over its distant desert sister. |
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That distant whirring sound you hear is a long-dead Greek physician spinning in his grave. |
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This can be seen not just in distant exurbs or suburbs, but in prime inner-city neighborhoods. |
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Palin went to Georgia to stump for Karen Handel, but Handel finished a distant third in the Senate primary. |
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Both are scheduled for the same time and the venues are too distant to make a hop from one to the next without missing out on the key presentations. |
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This allows the bats to spread the viruses to other bat populations in distant areas. |
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Guarantee each mother continuing personal care by a midwife she knows, whether she chooses to have her baby at home, in a low-tech hospital or at a distant unit. |
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He left his home in distant Bihar when he was harassed and beaten by thugs. |
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It's the idea of things rushing up on you suddenly, landing on you like an avalanche, hearing a distant rumble and then suddenly finding yourself surrounded by emotion. |
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And others will say that it is a distant echo thrown off the bombed-out rubblelands. |
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There were stories of distant strife, in Bosnia, Rwanda, and Northern Ireland, and those stories had the whiff of a different era. |
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It's a pleasant amble, wide and straight, passing beneath bridges, through cuttings and woodland, with glimpses across open countryside to distant fells. |
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This unit is subject to attack and has a certain round trip time, so rearming units in the middle of combat at a distant front line can be a dicey proposition. |
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Pilgrimage to such a distant site was inevitably expensive, and often laymen are found mortgaging their estates to religious houses in order to raise the necessary finance. |
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Later, I fell asleep to the sound of Lhoucine gently coaxing his camel and faint ululating from a distant stone cottage. |
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Those in distant suburbs undoubtedly heard her yells of pain and misery. |
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And I think that this case ought to be considered in the same manner as if the archdeaconry and the parsonage had been a hundred miles distant from each other. |
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A rhino-sized, wolf-like carnivore, Andrewsarchus is actually a relative of our familiar hoofed animals and a distant relative of the early whale, Basilosaurus. |
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His precise features were hidden beneath the caliginous atmosphere of the night, but I could see by the distant lights that he was a tall, willowy figure with light muscles. |
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He's so aloof and distant that it somehow draws people to him. |
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There is no soundtrack, no kick-ass guitar music to suck us into the lifestyle, just a blue sky, some distant shouting and the occasional applause. |
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There was no far-off hum of constant traffic, no train whistles or car horns, and certainly no distant streams of moving lights from the nearest highway. |
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Each of the huge rafters had been carved from a single tree, and old tombstones told tales of deaths on distant shores as, indeed, they did in Kochi's St. Francis Church. |
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Cancer cells will eventually invade deeper tissues and may spread into blood vessels and the lymphatic system, where they can be carried to distant sites. |
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The room is gradually invaded by well-wishers, liggers and distant relatives, the support bands and their friends, until there is barely room to breathe. |
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The days of having to carry bulk film around or switch between different film types and speeds is now a distant memory for those who have made the technology leap. |
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Last week, the distant rumblings became a downpour after the dismissal of an early favorite, Pia Toscano. |
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Blue mesas poke above the distant horizon line, and a domed courthouse grows larger as you near Marfa. |
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He's become so withdrawn and distant that he feels like a stranger. |
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There was a distant rumbling above him that gradually got louder. |
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The war seemed distant at that moment, as the sun sank before me, casting a rich amber light on the rooftops of a small cluster of buildings half a klick ahead. |
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Every day my cousins and I would make several trips to distant Virar, then located outside Mumbai, where we would buy rice for 1 rupee and 14 annas per pound. |
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At its widest point, the form is abruptly sliced and then twisted further still, at an acute angle, to face and frame a distant mountain on the horizon. |
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Possibly a distant ancestor of the modern bassoon, the instrument had a space at one end which almost certainly held a reed which generated the sound. |
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He was an engineer by profession, and used to look after the engines and trucks which ran on the light railways out to the more distant parts of the opencast mine workings. |
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Now we left Mankind behind and raced back to a time when the earth cracked open and molten lava welled out, at the end of the distant Mesozoic Age. |
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I just found out that my best friend and I are related through distant cousins. |
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Everything seemed to go quiet, save for the distant rumbling of thunder. |
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Forget the farm-to-table trend, which, more often than not, utilizes produce from distant states. |
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At first it was a distant rumble, then it was louder and louder. |
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What strange powers animate the ancient songs brought by the settlers of Founderston from their distant island home along with the bones of Lazarus? |
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He gave a halfhearted, widely panned speech on the night he finished a distant third in New Hampshire. |
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Everyone came to the wedding, including a distant cousin no one had heard from in years. |
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Other than some aliasing on the car models and in the distant backgrounds, Rallisport features amazing graphics that certainly add to the game's play experience. |
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Some say my epiphanic places are places I've known in past lives, and that what I'm feeling is the distant echo of ancient memories, sweetened with the savor of immortality. |
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In the not too distant future, these young people will control billions of dollars. |
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Following a well-established formula for regal portraits, Winterhalter created distant yet elegant formal likenesses of the rulers in full regalia. |
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Strange noises had echoed about ahead of him, sounds clearly defined, yet dim and distant as those he heard while approaching a bustling town from a distance. |
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In the distant night, a whisper of sound caught Yuen's attention. |
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The intellectuals, students, et cetera, will turn on this government as repressive and undemocratic in the not too distant future. |
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The manager gave the impression that the whole idea was a distant fantasy unworthy of immediate attention on Friday, but there was an element of enthusiasm too. |
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As a result, you're always hearing tales about the perfect slice of pizza in distant Flatbush, say, or the incomparable samosa in far-off Jackson Heights. |
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The climate of Florida is tempered somewhat by the fact that no part of the state is distant from the ocean. |
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To distant observers the light appears, due to gravitational time dilation, to slow down as it approaches the antihorizon. |
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In the not too distant past Salzburg had been an Archbishopdom ruled by her archbishops. |
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I was somewhat distant lately, and my lady promised me head every Tuesday of the week when I'm nice to her, so I better be on my best. |
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A distant gleam shone through the weight of his troubles, seeming to promise the dawn of a new day. |
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The diascope passes light through the two-dimensional object and uses a converging projection lens to form an enlarged image on a distant screen. |
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There is the distant cry of an embergoose, and then the moon slips up out of the grasp of the trees. |
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A soft, distant foom. The lights blinked, then faded. Foom-foom-foom! Explosions, one after another, rocked the tunnel. |
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Cyan full-burned the thrusters to gain speed, turning the shuttle away from the planet toward the distant moons. |
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This consisted in wheeling gob back to the most distant part of the stope and filling up the sets right up to the roof. |
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Too close a spacing caused the fibres to break while too distant a spacing caused uneven thread. |
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The first betrothal was to his distant cousin Aemilia Lepida, but was broken for political reasons. |
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At night there is no light in this building, but searchlights from distant points illume the splendid dome and the colonnades. |
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Centwine was succeeded by another supposed distant relative, Caedwalla, who claimed descent from Ceawlin. |
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To the South Saxons, the more distant influence and control of a king from Mercia is likely to have been preferable to that of the West Saxons. |
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Norwegians are accustomed to variation, and may perceive Danish and Swedish only as slightly more distant dialects. |
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Simultaneously Northumberland, whose northern territory was the most distant from the capital, had gathered his men and ridden to Leicester. |
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A hillman from some distant village in Kumaon comes into Almora to make his fortune as a jhampani or coolie. |
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During this period, Nelson was reported as being cold and distant to his wife and his attention to Emma became the subject of gossip. |
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Mountain lines and distant horizons lend space and largeness to his compositions. |
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Whether some distant cousin really belongs to the extended family of liberalisms is a matter of healthy dispute. |
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The restored memorial was ceremonially unveiled on 30 August 2014 by Alan Heather, a distant relative of Heaviside. |
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On 3 March 1749 Boulton married Mary Robinson, a distant cousin and the daughter of a successful mercer, and wealthy in her own right. |
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If these holds become full, aircraft are held at more distant points before being cleared onward to one of the four main holds. |
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The terrain for which it was best suited and for which it was probably designed in distant prehistoric times was the rolling plain. |
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There are three ancient standing stones in Boroughbridge known as the Devil's Arrows a mile distant from the site. |
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Deep into distant woodlands winds a mazy way, reaching to overlapping spurs of mountains bathed in their hill-side blue. |
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New media technology has led urban music styles to filter into distant rural areas across the globe. |
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His relationship with the players was distant and he was unable to impose discipline on the orchestra in rehearsals. |
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He was close to his sister, and on affectionate but more distant terms with his surviving brothers. |
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Frozen on the distant movie screen is an airplane that points, missilelike, toward the passing train. |
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Mistpouffers are dull, distant explosive sounds heard around the coast of Europe all the way to Iceland. |
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Far away on the moon-ward horizon a luminous silver mist veiled the distant view. |
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Cooperation among cartels expands their scope to distant markets and strengthens their abilities to evade detection by local law enforcement. |
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To a distant observer, clocks near a black hole appear to tick more slowly than those further away from the black hole. |
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These proteins appear to be distant relatives of the Tet1 oncogene that is involved in the pathogenesis of acute myeloid leukemia. |
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Gilbert's parents were distant and stern, and he did not have a particularly close relationship with either of them. |
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This helps dispersal of the seeds as any that the agouti fails to retrieve are distant from the parent tree when they germinate. |
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The beauty of the horizon's distant interstitial line in turn inaccurately replicates the beholding implied by Winnicottian nearliness. |
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Similarly, Sule Skerry and Sule Stack, although distant from the main group, are part of Orkney and technically amongst the Northern Isles. |
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Masonry channels carried water from distant springs and reservoirs along a precise gradient, using gravity alone. |
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David's victory allowed expansion of control over more distant regions theoretically part of his Kingdom. |
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Napoleon needed funds to wage another war with Great Britain, and he doubted that France could defend such a huge and distant territory. |
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In India a significant amount of cotton textiles were manufactured for distant markets, often produced by professional weavers. |
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The potential for inheritance by even distant kin meant that, in Early Irish law, those kin all had some sort of right in the land. |
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In such a case, even some more distant cousins could acquire the land, though they benefited less than closer kin. |
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There is the potential that the nonreproduced portion of the pain may be referred from a distant location. |
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It also argues that the growth in the number of democratic states will, in the not so distant future, end warfare. |
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Then, as the representative of her father's line she would assume a place ahead of any more distant relatives. |
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The cost of shipping ores from distant countries, and the growth of foreign competitors, ended Glamorgan's dominance of the industry. |
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The Chinese style generally showed only a distant view, or used dead ground or mist to avoid that difficulty. |
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The US Navy, French Navy, and the British Royal Navy operate only nuclear submarines, which is explained by the need for distant operations. |
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Military submarines use several systems to communicate with distant command centers or other ships. |
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Hyde was earlier a tenant of Lamb House in Rye, once home to his distant cousin, Henry James. |
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The townships are therefore often nearer to each other than they are to the distant farms in their own parishes. |
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The great majority of large breakers seen at a beach result from distant winds. |
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Bird species present are primarily auks and gulls, which feed in nearby offshore waters as well as more distant North Sea reaches. |
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For safety reasons the modules were organised so that the most dangerous operations were distant from the personnel areas. |
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Even in distant Byzantium Procopius heard tales of migrations to the Frankish mainland from the island, largely legendary for him, of Brittia. |
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In a distant blockade, the blockaders stay well away from the blockaded coast and try to intercept any ships going in or out. |
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Trucks are used in conjunction with the forklift tractor if the fruit is to be delivered to a more distant cooperatively owned packhouse. |
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They discovered a distant and abundant land in 1170 where about one hundred men, women and children disembarked to form a colony. |
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Thyle, which was distant from Orkney by a voyage of five days and nights, was fruitful and abundant in the lasting yield of its crops. |
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The squirrels have very accurate spatial memory for the locations of these caches, and use distant and nearby landmarks to retrieve them. |
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This is the maximum distance at which the Earth's gravitational influence is stronger than the more distant Sun and planets. |
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The Spanish crown found it difficult to enforce these laws in distant colonies. |
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Many were distant from larger centres of population and isolated for long periods by winter ice or bad weather. |
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The existence of this distant branch creates a much more complex picture of humankind during the Late Pleistocene than previously thought. |
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He observed that rocks from distant locations could be correlated based on the fossils they contained. |
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These transmitters are carefully synchronized to minimize interference from more distant transmitters on the same frequency. |
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Beginning in the 19th century, there was migration from Ukraine to distant areas of the Russian Empire. |
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This shift in thinking is boosted by a newer generation of Germans who see World War II as a distant memory. |
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The capitol, the metropole, was the source of ostensibly enlightened policies imposed throughout the distant colonies. |
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The Eradis of Nediyirippu in Eranad wanted an outlet to the sea, to initiate trade and commerce with the distant lands. |
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Parallax measurements of nearby stars provide an absolute baseline for the properties of more distant stars, as their properties can be compared. |
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The problem, ultimately, was how to determine the time at a distant reference point while on a ship. |
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The Maya city of Chichen Itza and the distant Toltec capital of Tula had an especially close relationship. |
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An Early Classic Maya merchant quarter has been identified at the distant metropolis of Teotihuacan, in central Mexico. |
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War brides brought from distant lands were also common in Cossack families. |
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There was extensive trade with distant foreign countries, and many foreign merchants settled in China, encouraging a cosmopolitan culture. |
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China and India continue to be the largest countries, followed by the US as a distant third. |
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Columbus reported seeing Tobago on the distant horizon in 1498, naming it Bellaforma, but did not land on the island. |
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Members had to travel to Westminster over a primitive road system, a real problem for those who represented more distant constituencies. |
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Central and western Europe, logistically more distant from the Central Asian heartland, proved less vulnerable to these threats. |
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Evans undertook travel to distant areas of the country in order to find offenders. |
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The Valleys and the western areas of Wales have less economic mass and are more distant from major economic centres. |
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This is based on the size of the primary tumor, lymph node involvement, and distant metastasis. |
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Convicts who represented a menace to the community were sent away to distant lands. |
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The region is distant from the geographic center of the country, and is a relatively small region, and relatively densely populated. |
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A wide swathe of the Southern Fells is in view, whilst even distant Skiddaw puts in an appearance. |
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To the west the skyline is formed by the distant Coniston, Bowfell and Scafell fells. |
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View from Peel Island facing north with Helvellyn in the distant background. |
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However, occasionally paths are distant from settlements, so that camping is necessary. |
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Yet for so public a figure, Jackson was socially awkward, inept at small talk and terrified when the distant audience became an adoring mob. |
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Syenite hears the distant sough of waves rolling against rocks, somewhere below the slope on which they lie. |
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Beach-tanned technocuties at distant tables who'd scanned them with interest when they came in now turned away scowling. |
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She gazed again down the web path to the slaughtered island, and to other islands beyond it, their distant lights unhazed by dust. |
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Powerful telescopes look far back into the distant reaches of the Universe. |
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When the wye switch is opened the home signal is automatically set at danger and the distant signal at caution. |
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Someday in the not too distant future, Romero will be beatified. |
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In the case of a distant electric network, a small wind generator supplying a small autonomous network is most suitable. |
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Some stars may contain wormholes, throatlike tunnels connecting distant points in spacetime, a team of physicists proposes. |
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That makes Helicoprion a distant relative of today's rabbitfish, ratfish and other chimaeras. |
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The most distant planet from the sun, covered in ice-Pluto is in a region called the Kuiper Belt, which is adjacent to the Jovian planets. |
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Komodos are distant relatives of the dinosaur and can grow up to 11ft long. |
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There are the doting mother, wild brother, and distant father. |
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Over into Nepal there are distant views of the Kangshung face of Everest, Makalu and Lhotse, as well as extensive views into Sikkim and Bhutan. |
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Here, we can see the run-down pier and the Grand Hotel on the left hand side and the distant view of Rhyl and Colwyn Bay on the other side. |
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They arise from distant donor sites and bring their own blood supply and lymphogenic potential, thus improving the drainage of traumatized areas. |
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We all tend to think of the volcanic Mascarene Islands of Mauritius, Reunion and Rodrigues as far away in the distant Indian Ocean. |
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All this occurred well before memories had become distant or gauzy. |
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Exoplanets are the distant offspring of a star beyond our sun, a brown dwarf, or a stellar corpse. |
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And yet, it also reminds us, by an act of allusive metalepsis, just how distant and untenable that kind of encomium has become. |
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I'd be prepared to bet that Shoguns will still be in British dealerships long after Porsche Cayennes and Range Rover Sports are distant memories. |
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The earliest microfossil record is an admixture of redeposited Paleozoic spores and pollen from distant deglaciated sites. |
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The public is often under the impression that all archaeology takes place in a distant and foreign land, only to collect monetarily or spiritually priceless artifacts. |
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In 1969 the United States was tied with the Commonwealth as the most important overseas connection for the British public, while Europe came in a distant third. |
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A very poor and distant relation, for when he was sent over to meet his Manchester mishpocheh it was in the capacity of driver for one of the junior directors. |
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Starting with the loss of Greece in 1821 and Algeria in 1830, Ottoman naval power and control over the Empire's distant overseas territories began to decline. |
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With marital problems of his own, he remained a distant figure. |
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Byron also became attached to Margaret Parker, another distant cousin. |
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Astronomers do experiments, searching for planets around distant stars. |
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Adrian's secular powers were too valuable to be surrendered and Manuel's subjects could never have accepted the authority of the distant Bishop of Rome. |
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Peter and Mania found a pensione whose view was of chestnut woods and a horizon looped by peaks lustred with last winter's snow, distant in time as well as space. |
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Providing dating for this distant period is difficult and contentious. |
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