If they knew how long ago body lice diverged from head lice, they should know the likely date for the appearance of the first clothes, too. |
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Some of the most interesting speakers in the Commons debates were those who diverged slightly from party lines. |
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Assuming that turtles diverged from Eureptilia after synapsids, there remains the problem of whether turtles have turbinals. |
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If at one point the terms were synonymous their meanings have gradually diverged. |
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While their paths diverged after 1990, their fates are entwined again this season. |
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If the oil painting legend assumed a commanding place in the Romantic imagination, the accounts of writers and artists necessarily diverged. |
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Assume that chimpanzees and humans diverged from a common ancestor about five million years ago. |
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He gave an example of a trigonometric series which diverged at every point, yet its coefficients tended to zero. |
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Recently diverged species will not demonstrate reciprocal monophyly for some time after they have stopped exchanging genes. |
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On some issues, the views of faculty diverged significantly from public opinion. |
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Hence the authors concluded that gene expression had diverged most rapidly in the human brain. |
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After bony fishes and mammals diverged about 400 MYA, class II genes increased enormously in the mammalian lineage. |
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But the fact that she could not overlook was that their paths had diverged. |
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It is clear that they were living somewhere on the Eurasian continent and diverged from other Slavs. |
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In the six million years since the human and ape lines first diverged, the behaviour and lifestyles of apes have hardly changed. |
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However, they conclude that this is incorrect and that the prosauropods and sauropods diverged early from a common ancestor. |
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Thus, counter-intuitively, plants are likely to have diverged first, leaving fungi and animals as sister groups. |
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As in the case of Hsp 70 genes, these two groups of genes diverged long before the separation of animals and fungi. |
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Finally, psychiatrists in Britain and India diverged on the issue of restraining violent patients. |
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These models have examined the problems that might arise from the reunion of diverged parental genomes. |
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I addressed only the final point you made because it was there that our opinions diverged. |
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About halfway between the temple and the main road, a path diverged to the left. |
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Living chimps have diverged genetically from that common ancestor about as far as people have, the researchers add. |
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He also gave an example of a trigonometric series which converged in one interval but diverged in a second interval. |
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However, neontological evidence suggests that fissurelloids diverged from other vetigastropods relatively recently. |
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By contrast, North American black bears and grizzly bears diverged about five million years ago, he says. |
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Rapidly the distance between the two vehicles increased as their courses diverged. |
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Could two roads have diverged as far apart as these two and still be on their way to meeting? |
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Arrangements in the upper line represent periods in which duplicated genes diverged. |
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In the sixth form, the close group of school-friends began to fragment as their A Level subjects diverged. |
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Although the Alligator sequence was considerably diverged from the avian sequences, a reasonable alignment could be achieved. |
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Polar bears probably diverged from brown bear ancestors near the Arctic coast of Eurasia early in the Ice Age. |
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However, of late, some State forces have diverged from the national plan. |
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Hippidion was so distinctly different from other horses that it was considered to have diverged from the equid lineage about 10 million years ago. |
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They don't fight, but O'Neal and Bryant remain two roads diverged. |
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As Charles Murray noticed decades ago and demographers have known for some time, the structure of families has diverged drastically by social class. |
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At this point, temnospondyls, lepospondyls and reptilomorphs diverged. |
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Many of the taxa that apparently diverged in the Paleozoic now are limpets and retain little information about the morphologies of their coiled ancestors. |
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I diverged from the newspaper standard of never changing a quote. |
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They conclude that the gene began to deteriorate after the split between New and Old World primates but before the Old World monkeys and apes diverged. |
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But this common concept once shared by the East and West has diverged. |
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The Finnish and Ugric languages diverged thousands of years ago. |
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The solenodons diverged from all other mammal groups an incredible 76 million years ago and were, until recently, among the dominant predators of the West Indies. |
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Only the Picts, possibly, diverged from the European pattern of male descent with their apparently matrilinear succession to the kingship, though this is much debated. |
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Although the three standards remain close, they have diverged to some extent. |
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Marine organisms on both sides of the isthmus became isolated and either diverged or went extinct. |
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These are instances where both Oxford and Cambridge have now diverged from Blayney's 1769 Edition. |
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By the reign of Charlemagne, the language had so diverged from the classical that it was later called Medieval Latin. |
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The ancient parishes diverged into two distinct systems of parishes during the 19th century. |
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There is not a single African French, but multiple forms that diverged through contact with various indigenous African languages. |
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English Gothic was to develop along lines that sometimes paralleled and sometimes diverged from those of continental Europe. |
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The criteria for membership in these races diverged in the late 19th century. |
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Carson, a leading barrister, diverged from the normal practice of asking closed questions. |
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The many regions of the Nordic countries share certain traditions, many of which have diverged significantly. |
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Childe also diverged from orthodox Marxism by not employing dialectics in his methodology. |
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Although Swedish, Danish and the Norwegian languages have diverged the most, they still retain asymmetric mutual intelligibility. |
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They probably diverged in the North Pacific, spreading westwards into Eurasia and eastwards into North America. |
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Based on fossil calibration, the Hawaiian mtDNA lineage probably diverged around the Middle Pleistocene. |
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While they originally corresponded to the parishes of the Church of Scotland, the number and boundaries of parishes soon diverged. |
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Cetaceans' closest living relatives are the hippopotamuses, having diverged about 40 million years ago. |
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The cetaceans diversified, and fossil evidence suggests porpoises and dolphins diverged from their last common ancestor around 15 Mya. |
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In other cases, the Welsh and English names clearly share the same original form, but spellings and pronunciation have diverged over the years. |
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Around 453 MYA, animals began diversifying, and many of the important groups of invertebrates diverged from one another. |
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Little is known about when members of the various families in the Mysticeti, including the Balaenopteridae, diverged from each other. |
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The rorquals are believed to have diverged from the other families of the suborder Mysticeti as long ago as the middle Miocene. |
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However, it is not known when the members of these families diverged from each other. |
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Mitochondrial DNA sequences support the theory that these are recently diverged separate species. |
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Zalophus, Eumetopias and Otaria diverged next, with the latter colonizing the coast of South America. |
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The types of Low German spoken in these communities and in the Midwest region of the United States have diverged since emigration. |
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It was from this basal line that both the sea lions and the remaining fur seal genus, Callorhinus, are thought to have diverged. |
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Testudines were suggested to have diverged from other diapsids between 200 and 279 million years ago, though the debate is far from settled. |
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At the end of the Carboniferous period, this group diverged from the sauropsid line that led to today's reptiles and birds. |
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The two single lines of the old IoWR and the IoWCR, ran side by side to Smallbrook, where they diverged. |
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By Charlemagne's time the French vernacular had already diverged significantly from Latin. |
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Nordic countries share certain traditions in music, many of which have diverged significantly. |
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Until recently, the X and Y chromosomes were thought to have diverged around 300 million years ago. |
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According to molecular data, the New World and Old World camelids diverged 11 million years ago. |
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Since then, the standards used in the PRC and Taiwan have diverged somewhat, especially in newer vocabulary terms, and a little in pronunciation. |
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The ophiuroids diverged in the Early Ordovician, about 500 million years ago. |
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Cartilaginous fish, which today include sharks, rays, and ratfish, diverged from the bony fishes more than 420 million years ago. |
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In contrast, the Steller's jay and blue jay appear to have, diverged more than 5 million years ago. |
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Curbing the overprescription of pain medication and the use of medication to treat addiction was one area where opinions among speakers diverged. |
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Surprisingly, measurement trends for dosimeters from the unprotected group diverged from each other even within an isodose group. |
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On the third attempt of a nonstandard maneuver, the Seahawk rapidly diverged in yaw, driving the AFGS into an acceleration control mode vice the normal rate control mode. |
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Another reason that liverworts are now classified separately is that they appear to have diverged from all other embryophyte plants near the beginning of their evolution. |
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The proposition that James had ceased to be King had been the rallying point of the two parties which had made up the majority. But from that point their path diverged. |
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However, American law has diverged greatly from its English ancestor both in terms of substance and procedure, and has incorporated a number of civil law innovations. |
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A third view is that Zwingli was not a complete follower of Erasmus, but had diverged from him as early as 1516 and that he independently developed his theology. |
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By this time Scots had diverged significantly from its sister south of the border and had become the vehicle for an extensive and diverse national literature. |
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These varieties had diverged widely from the written form used by scholars, Literary Chinese, which was modelled on the language of the Chinese classics. |
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This clade further diverged into two subclades at least 800 years ago. |
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Others find that the okapi lineage diverged earlier, before Giraffokeryx. |
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Mitochondrial DNA haplotype comparisons suggest that it diverged from the other ostriches not quite 4 mya due to formation of the East African Rift. |
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For example, if a mutation is deemed to have occurred 30,000 years ago, then this mutation should be found amongst all populations that diverged after this date. |
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An article appearing in the journal Nature has calculated they diverged about 516,000 years ago, whereas fossil records show a time of about 400,000 years ago. |
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These stories, however, diverged greatly from their medieval precursors. |
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The fungi are now considered a separate kingdom, distinct from both plants and animals, from which they appear to have diverged around one billion years ago. |
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These two species are thought to have diverged 8000 years ago. |
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It had been thought on the basis of morphological data that iguanid lizards diverged from other squamates very early on, but molecular evidence contradicts this. |
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Faroese and Icelandic are hardly mutually intelligible with Norwegian in their spoken form because continental Scandinavian has diverged from them. |
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Balaenopterids diverged from the other families of suborder Mysticeti, also called the whalebone whales or great whales, as long ago as the middle Miocene. |
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They were long thought to have diverged from other animals early. |
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As contact between Manx speakers and Gaelic speakers from Scotland and Ireland declined, the language diverged further from its related neighbors. |
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Eosalmo driftwoodensis, the oldest known salmon in the fossil record, helps scientists figure how the different species of salmon diverged from a common ancestor. |
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By the end of the period when Middle Scots began to emerge, orthography and phonology had diverged significantly from that of Northern Middle English. |
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The 1930 ILP conference decided that where their policies diverged from the Labour Party their MPs should break the whip to support the ILP policy. |
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The phonology of some Canadian Gaelic dialects have diverged in several ways from the standard Gaelic spoken in Scotland, while others have remained the same. |
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As with many languages, over time the spoken vulgar language diverged from the written language with the written language remaining somewhat static. |
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Theorists have diverged over the desirability of increased absoluteness. |
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Scotch Corner, in North Yorkshire, marks the point where before the M6 was built the traffic for Glasgow and the west of Scotland diverged from that for Edinburgh. |
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