Instead of darts, gently ease the waistline to the waistband for the most flattering fit. |
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In the 1980s and 1990s we were ill at ease and unable to get a hold on things as we faced a big black hole and a slow drift to oblivion. |
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It contains not only caffeine but also theophylline, a compound that can ease the symptoms of a cold. |
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You could learn massage to ease pain, for example, and support your partner in the different positions she may want to use during labour. |
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She offers aromatherapy massages to ease tension and back pain, and manicures, pedicures, arm and foot massages to improve joint mobility. |
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Shoutmail is banking on convenience and ease of use to expand its user base and to attract advertisers in the process. |
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Britain's women's quadruple sculls hopefuls have a week to focus on gold after qualifying with ease for next Sunday's final. |
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More headway was made among the Slavs of central Europe, aided by the relative ease of access and the penumbra of Carolingian power. |
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Using minimal props and costumes they create trumpeters and fairies, castles and marketplaces, with ease and clarity. |
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Sanderson crossed from the left to Rae and the on-loan Berwick Rangers player rounded his marker with ease before slotting past the goalkeeper. |
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As if the sound were a signal, the stone lid began to ease back with the grinding scrape of stone on stone. |
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Software testability refers to the ease with which software can be made to demonstrate its faults through testing. |
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It's a move that could help ease the political crisis in Pakistan, a key ally in the war on terror. |
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This material is commonly known as terne and is used where ease of solderability and a degree of corrosion resistance are desirable. |
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It could ease tensions and improve ties between the bitter political rivals. |
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And what enhances the quality of the show is Jhansi's ease with dialects and mannerism. |
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On the other extreme, don't ease the traveler to leeward so much that the genoa backwinds the entire main. |
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You can ease the pain by rubbing the gums gently with your finger, letting your child chew on a teething ring or using a pacifier. |
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The hilt of the blade is designed to hug the wrist, made of a lightweight, thin malleable metal for ease of wear. |
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With grace and ease that he had entirely lacked, she executed a perfect backcast. |
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MacManaway diagnosed a trapped nerve in the middle of her back and manipulated her spine to ease the pain. |
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Never at ease when alone, bachelor males routinely seek the company of other species of monkey. |
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To ease my back and save time, I screwed a piece of plywood to the top of a sawhorse and made a crude table to catch the piece of split wood. |
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As I made my way to the taxi stand at JFK, I felt at ease for the first time in over a month. |
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They were designed to ease the transition to black majority rule, while avoiding the danger of social revolution. |
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As a married woman, Mrs. Darcy retained the brightness and the unshakable ability to be at ease in every situation of her maidenhood. |
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Asian markets were mixed after the Federal Reserve chief hinted the bank could ease up on its stimulus taper if the growth outlook weakens. |
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The micropipette was pulled manually to a gradual taper to ease insertion into the tissue. |
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Netting unless very well put on the trees prove no good as the clever jackdaw or cheeky magpie can get in with ease in the smallest opening. |
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Despite the size of the sharks, she felt at ease in the underwater environment and helped clean the tank and feed the aquariums other fish. |
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Perhaps it will ease Eleanor's leaving if I were to give this to you, madam. |
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We are now looking at schemes where ease of use and wide take-up can be offered and achieved. |
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For convenience and ease of use, most modern women opt for churidars and salwars, with matching dupattas to give them the stylish look. |
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Truthfully, the translation aspect is a McGuffin, a way for Kelman to ease the reader into his language lab without realising it. |
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Asylum seekers also face being electronically tagged to ease the pressure on detention centres. |
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The furniture is powder-coated sage green, so it will not compete with the garden around it, and the pieces are arranged with ease and grace. |
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You will usually be given pain relief such as paracetamol or codeine tablets to help ease your discomfort. |
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Older children can drink tea with honey or gargle warm salt water to ease throat pain. |
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Roller bearings were specified for the engine truck for reliability and ease of maintenance, and likewise a mechanical lubricator. |
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Knowing how and when to release these joints is critical to facility, ease of movement and speed. |
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And to cap it all, he evades his moral inquisitors with the ease of the true lounge lizard. |
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The heater coughed and spluttered loudly and we both laughed nervously, trying to ease the tension. |
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Kathy fidgeted beside him, studying her nails, ill at ease among these obvious geeks and losers. |
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Those that get straight As will be able to start AS levels to ease their way into the sixth form. |
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He had now experienced both the extremes of a life of ease and comfort and the life of extreme austerity and asceticism. |
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Instead, it's best to ease back into your dance routine, increasing physical demands by five percent per week. |
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A master at work, he commands the screen with an effortless ease and a complete lack of artifice or contrivance. |
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After the funeral, visits and invitations to those bereaved might help ease some of the loneliness and isolation. |
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Nicola Sturgeon, the SNP's health spokeswoman, challenged ministers to intervene to ease the logjam. |
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Then ease the rose from its container, taking great care to plant the entire root ball intact, cover with soil and firm in. |
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It claims the tent beats 2-man dome tents in roominess, stability in rain and wind, ventilation, and ease of setup. |
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It is surely part of their distinction, too, to have adapted to a live-in photographer with apparent ease and even grace. |
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The Romanian uranium was targeted because of the ease with which it could have been transported by terrorists. |
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Abraham chose a scissor stair not only for ease but also for architectonic reasons. |
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As he suggests, linking artistic motivation with money purely to increase the ease of studying copyright would be too simplistic. |
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Residents are set to fight plans for a proposed link road to ease traffic congestion between Wigan and Atherton. |
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After road-testing the backpack version I give this product a big thumbs up for ease of use, value for money, reliability and effective security. |
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In medical design, approachability, intuitiveness, ease of use, and strategic value are the most critical aspects, he explained. |
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Felicity of language is a strong point, and he switches with ease from English into the local lingo. |
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The devices are available in custom sizes and can be ordered with prescored liners that ease removal. |
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Why would the government ease restrictions on pollution that causes a serious health risk? |
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Nationally there is also growing concern at the apparent ease with which real guns can be bought. |
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You have to ease your way in, rather than be like a bull in a china shop, which isn't my style anyway. |
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Digital tablets combine the tactile sensation of light pens with the ease of use of a mouse. |
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These features contribute to the bag's lightness and ease of use, transport, and storage. |
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I particularly liked the ease with which the V6 petrol automatic light-footedly stepped its way through city traffic. |
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About 17 miles from Galway city, Athenry is fast becoming a satellite town because of its lower house prices and ease of commuting. |
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High doses of aspirin and other anti-inflammatory medications can sometimes ease mild symptoms. |
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While levodopa and other drugs can ease the symptoms of PD, none of the current treatments has been shown to slow the course of the disease. |
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The market discriminators today are direct operating cost, simplicity and ease of maintenance. |
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The lethality, hardiness, and ease of production of the anthrax bacteria have made it a mainstay of known BW programs. |
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As the afternoon shadows lengthen, the gradient starts to ease and our progress becomes more assured. |
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The ease with which information can be retrieved from a site ranks highly among criteria by which users rate a Web site. |
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Most Protestants, certainly Anglicans, would be quite at ease with these words, and so they should be since they mirror their theology. |
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I was also very impressed with the ease with which the split rear seats could be dropped using spring-loaded latches. |
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Their renewability and relative ease of processing reduce environmental impact. |
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He called for landlords, the drinks industry and hoteliers to work together to ease the passage of the Bill. |
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The ease with which aluminum may be fabricated into any form is one of its most important assets. |
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On the campaign bus, Simon spent hours in conversation with reporters, alternating with ease between the personal and the political. |
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Between 1957 and the early 1960s, thalidomide was used by several thousand pregnant women across the world to ease their morning sickness. |
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This may relate to ease of access to hospital rather than lack of concern about follow up. |
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Much like their forefathers, they yard the cattle with ease and grace, born to the country that surrounds them. |
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The technique greatly increases the thoroughness and ease of the Reichian techniques and adds other psychological improvements. |
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But planning ahead can help to ease labor pains while you look forward to holding your baby in your arms. |
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The addition of this fee is intended to ease the process of registration during orientation week. |
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The Kenny method involved wrapping the affected body part in hot wrappings to ease muscle pain. |
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She bore it stoically and quietly, cut expenses to ease his financial worries, and made sure no one outside the family found out. |
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Colonel Bradley said it takes constant fine-tuning of processes to ease workloads. |
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For instance, there's the double-claw hammer used by woodworkers and carpenters to pull up nails with more ease than a single claw hammer. |
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This is inevitable, and a reader may be ill at ease at the scarcity of evidence that underlies many of these reconstructions. |
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It was a beautiful day and it was great to watch Johan and Laurie ease the old girl through the South African airways. |
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And now, my hearties, be gay, and gaily read the rest, with ease of body and in the best of kidney! |
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Will the tax cuts for the highest income brackets ease the pain of the ailing poor? |
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It is said that Hippocrates brewed leaves from the willow tree to ease the pain of childbirth. |
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For ease and safety, the students first fitted the frame together on the ground, then took it apart and reassembled it in place. |
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Again, the car did its job with confident ease and didn't get keyed in the car park. |
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With 11 years of agritainment experience, you can feel comfortable in the ease of booking and setup of your event. |
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From elevators to automatic doors, these products help ease the lifestyle of aging families and persons with physical needs. |
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For half an hour he had showed himself, through the unhurried ease with which he stroked the ball around, to be a cut above. |
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Although there is no way to cure a poison ivy rash, you can ease the discomfort. |
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They were bright young men, at ease in Western society and with an interest in engineering and aeronautics. |
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She climbed in the window with ease and as she approached the stairs she caught a whiff of perfume not belonging to Mrs. Chavez. |
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Perhaps our concept of justification is not itself precise enough to require a precise degree of ease or rapidity of access. |
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It will also ease existing legal barriers to a newspaper apologising in advance of legal action. |
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An unlocked door will come open with unexpected ease and whap me on the nose. |
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The ease with which electronic content can be copied and reproduced raises a multitude of copyright, trademark, database and passing off issues. |
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She glued textured rubber onto the stairs to ease her pet's trip around the house. |
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All the containers filled at Oneida are gable-top paperboard cartons, many with screw caps for greater ease in pouring and recloseability. |
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Governments could have chosen to ease the pressure, but successive Labor and Liberal governments instead turned the screws. |
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We felt quite at ease as the naturist section was a good distance from the main 'textile' beach and as a result there were very few passers by. |
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It seems the itsy-bitsy import's company car was stolen while he was taking his ease in Bananaland. |
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Even then, Rovers did not ease back and Burns got the ball in the net again only to be adjudged offside. |
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In February, bundle up and ease into an Adirondack chair among daffodils in the redesigned garden. |
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By the 1920s a state-subsidized system of grain elevators, silos, and storage at railheads helped to ease the cycle of glut and scarcity. |
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We want the Minister to take a call to put our minds at ease that this amount has not been paid out. |
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When a pregnant woman does come down with chickenpox, she can be treated with the oral antiviral drug acyclovir to help ease symptoms. |
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Russians, for historical reasons, can be acutely ill at ease with the idea of expounding uncomfortable truths in a formal setting. |
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Her forceful personality and ease in the spotlight complemented the king's serious, thoughtful demeanour. |
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Tiernan performs with the casual ease of a natural raconteur, but the appearance belies an almost fretful perfectionism. |
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She knows she is going blind from a hereditary disease and yet won't tell anyone, or ease up. |
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They could then be more at ease with themselves afterwards and their information could form a vital piece to complete the jigsaw. |
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It's important to keep in mind that security needs to be balanced alongside other important considerations, such as speed and ease of use. |
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Marriage has also been weakened by the ease with which you can now obtain a divorce. |
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Other studies have confirmed that chewing sugarless gum for 30 minutes after a meal can help ease acid reflux. |
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Programmed and played beats merge with ease and an emergence of acid house squelches and bleeps add new dimension to the sound. |
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We were all taken back by the ease of it all, the fact that there was no question of not paying the tax. |
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Technologically, strong land fortifications ease the security dilemma, and highly accurate but vulnerable nuclear weapons exacerbate it. |
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I can still see his slight frame darting past defenders and rifling over points with unerring ease and accuracy. |
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He had no choice but to ease his foot on the accelerator and let his speed drift down to about 20 mph. |
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The walls, adjustable lighting and curtains are all in warm colour tones to ease anxiety. |
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Its wandering conversations ease eventually into evening, then night and dawn again, where the movie ends. |
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Meanwhile Glasgow City Council has pledged that staff will continue to work around the clock to ease road and footpath problems. |
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Ireland were not about to ease off, and emphasised the point with Henderson's dramatic arrival in midfield. |
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Since virtually all the wines are sold with ease on the undemanding local market, there has been little or no incentive to modernize or re-equip the wineries. |
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The ease with which violence is portrayed as entertainment is not unique to Abercrombie. |
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At the right time and in the right dose, it can ease and abridge economic maladies. |
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Amassing a collection of his own, moreover, might eventually ease his entrance into elitist scientific circles. |
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Bernanke suggested that Congress ease up on the whole budget-cutting thing. |
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But we can extrapolate from previous experience that decapitation does incentivize Hamas to ease up on its attacks. |
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He opened the back door of the Humvee, where Mace was trying ease himself out. |
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But it takes a special kind of ease and openness for all this begetting to take place. |
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There was a sense of ease in the loose white shirt-dresses, billowing skirts, and roomy pajama pants. |
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Thanks to breathable fabrics like linen and comfortable details like drawstring waistbands, this summer's trends are aimed at making you feel at ease in the summer heat. |
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The minor injuries unit pilot scheme was launched to help make the town feel safer and to ease the burden on hospital casualty units by dealing with the walking wounded. |
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It's hard to be judged on your grace and social ease when you've got clunky pleather monsters affixed to your feet. |
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The vibrant palette of beach paraphernalia, stripes on windbreaks and seaside rock translates with ease into kaleidoscopic designs in fused glass. |
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Jennifer Murray, 22, a first-year environmental management student flatting in Te Puna, said the new accommodation would help ease the demand on flats. |
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Because there are hundreds of nerve endings and close to 30 major pressure points in our feet, sometimes people need a little more than a bath to ease pain and relieve stress. |
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If you call them soon enough, surety firms might be able to kick in some money to ease cash shortages as well as to share good ideas and offer lots of expertise. |
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The ease of publishing on the Net is such that if someone posts something obviously erroneous, someone else can easily post a rebuttal, refutation, or correction. |
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Because of the ease of transportation of paragliding, far more paragliding pilots go abroad, they make those trips more often, and hence more airtime flown abroad. |
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Medical experts testified the average injection of Demerol to ease anxiety is no more than 50mg. |
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Here is the place to try a hot stone massage, where warm basalt stones from the desert's dry river beds are used in a deep massage to ease any knotted muscles. |
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According to D' Angelo, there is a trend in transport refrigeration toward the requirements of reefer reliability, ease of serviceability, ease of use and constant airflow. |
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You will also notice a refreshing difference in your work process, as you grab and paste images into your documents with the ease previously reserved for text. |
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The students' protest was refuted by IPB spokesman Agus Lelana, who said the institute would support the administration's effort to ease congestion in the area. |
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As for Simmons, he gets to ease his conscience while also burnishing his personal brand of savvy fandom. |
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Using water as a way to ease birth and labour pains is very popular. |
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Recently, xeriscaping has been spreading roots to other areas of the country where homeowners are finding the ease of a low maintenance garden appealing. |
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His inhuman biceps and sultry hip pumping will ease any pain felt after hearing about his exit from the figure skating scene. |
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The new product incorporates an array of high-tech materials and engineering innovations aimed to increase precision, reliability and ease of use. |
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Two goals in each half from the league leaders saw Newry brushed aside with consummate ease and keeps the City languishing near the bottom of the table. |
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The twin advantage of this is that it would not only ease the competition substantially, it could also help to avoid any hint that the company might need to be renationalised. |
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Can images arising from a self apparently at ease internally and at peace with its environs ever produce images that surpass mere visual reportage? |
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As it stands, the deal will ease the travel ban and trade embargo, and make it easier for Americans to do business in Cuba. |
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If there is no obstacle, they would enjoy the ease that is shown to everyone else. |
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This deal will greatly ease a travel ban and the trade embargo, and make it easier for Americans to do business in Cuba. |
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This would allow the ecb to increase the money supply and ease the strain on struggling economies such as Greece and Portugal. |
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The authors concluded that topical anesthetics in spray formulations are preferred for endoscopy due to safety, ease of application, and similarity of products. |
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A few drops of peppermint or lavender oil added to a handkerchief or tissue and inhaled will also ease the nausea associated with travel sickness. |
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It is a good middle-of-the-road steel and is perfect for hunting knives like this due to its ability to hold an edge and its ease of resharpening. |
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The leg of the garment should sit on, above, or below your hip bone and not dig into the front of your thigh at a fleshy part for ease of movement. |
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If that doesn't ease your pain, try a fitted cushioned seat cover. |
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Biological weapons combine maximum lethality with ease of availability. |
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The ease with which she climbed suggested a much younger woman, as did her eyes, which were clear and alert, free of the rheum typical of the aged. |
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Here's someone who's lived his whole life in a little town in Wales, and he's more liberated, inquisitive and at ease with the world than most people I know half his age. |
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On record, he is a master of filling spaces with innovative licks, whilst still leaving enough room for the music's swing and rhythm to ease the tunes along. |
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It might look like a long-lost exhibit from a medieval torture chamber, but this chair is designed to ease away the stresses and strains of the working day. |
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Content, my mother was at ease that her first-born would not fall into the ranks of picky eaters. |
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We've got to work on reliability, robustness, ease of use, and range. |
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These include the ability of mother plants to produce plenty of wood, the ease with which cuttings root, and also the ease with which they can be grafted. |
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Put the bandages and gauze away, and get ready to enjoy oysters for their ease rather than their challenge. |
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Helping to ease the sense of isolation or loneliness, talk therapy focuses on revising the negative thoughts and feelings associated with depression. |
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To ease the aches and pains of the office, ask your partner to gently rub your shoulders, or try one of the exercises below to get your blood flowing and loosen your muscles. |
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If you ease off the power, the plane loses height quite quickly. |
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Post-water break, Rubio managed to get into a groove and ease on in for a smooth-jazz finish. |
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Socks are another area where negative ease can be a good thing. |
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Neither of the fundraisers have even put on a pair of skis or salopettes, but they intend to glide down the slopes with ease in the 26 mile event. |
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Conservatives oppose public spending to ease the hardship of poor women, cutting funds for food stamps and housing assistance. |
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I could only surmise that these Makonde had taken Swahili names to ease their assimilation into coastal society, creating confusion among non-resident park officials. |
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Try squashing the barbs on two of the three points to ease removal. |
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Use a teaspoon for ease in filling the manicotti with the chicken mixture. |
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To ease the procedure you can use some automatic backup software. |
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Johnson plays the innate clumsiness and discomfort that we'd expect to accompany a recent bodily acquisition like this with apparent ease and deft comedic mannerism. |
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A name like that might ease some of the pressure of living under such a stifling state. |
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A plate of bread with balsamic vinegar and olive oil helped ease the pain of a 40-minute wait for the first course, as did our bottle of decent Argentinian Malbec. |
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I was nervous about my first massage, but my masseur, Tony, managed to ease away the aches and pains of a working life spent hunched over a keyboard. |
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Luckily, there is a diverse array of relocation specialists in Japan that aim to ease the transition. |
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Doing bold scenes in The Guru helped me feel at ease with the raunchier Strictly. |
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Earlier work under Frederick the Great surrounded efforts to ease shipping and construct dams to serve coal transportation. |
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In the Mediterranean, small cetaceans are targeted to ease pressure on edible fish. |
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Pompeo Batoni made a career of painting the English milord posed with graceful ease among Roman antiquities. |
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The course helps to ease or eliminate sufferers' arachnophobia and is run by experts at London's Zoological Society. |
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The kayak, as it glides with ease over the wiry kelp, is effective at getting anglers into position for a catch without getting caught up. |
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In addition, to ease reinforcement, an attempt was made to consolidate as many battalions from the same regiment within the same brigade. |
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Livingston was built as part of the New Towns Act of 1946, in part to ease overcrowding in Glasgow. |
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The Highland Potato Famine started to ease in the first half of the 1850s, but the years of famine had taken their toll. |
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Recreational battle reenactment tends to focus on pitched battles partially for sake of ease of demonstration. |
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A more flexible and portable model would ease exit from and reentrance into the profession and enable it to more effectively compete for talent. |
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The two generals were also reported to have found solace with the wives of subordinate officers to ease the stressful burdens of command. |
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Most liberals, however, support government programs that seek to provide economic security, ease human suffering, and reduce inequality. |
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The famine led the Russian Empire to ease financial regulations, and investment rose in following decades. |
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Later, in 1997, the Group A cars evolved into the WRC car spec, to ease the development of new cars and bring new makes to the competition. |
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The Dutch West India Company would eventually attempt to ease tensions between Stuyvesant and residents of New Amsterdam. |
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An increase in off-site patient treatments also compels some OEMs to simplity product design and packaging to increase ease of use. |
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The British captured Senegal with ease in May 1758 and brought home large amounts of captured goods. |
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North Korea has offered high-level talks with the US in a bid to ease tensions in the Korean Peninsula, but Washington has reacted cautiously. |
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These products vary in complexity and the ease with which they can be valued on the books of financial institutions. |
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Instead of using the opportunity to ease the tensions between Bonn and Washington, Acheson chose to pour gasoline on the fire. |
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Kathy Engstrom, first vice-president, chose to wear a kurta for ease of movement. |
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The World Bank ranks the United States first in the ease of hiring and firing workers. |
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These amenities have helped ease the sometimes difficult circumstances of long periods away from home. |
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Myer ordered Lasix to reduce the fluid in the lungs and thereby ease breathing. |
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At this point, Roosevelt worked to ease immigration restrictions in the midst of an America turned restrictionist in its immigration policies. |
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After the match, Taylor vowed to ease up on his schedule but increase his practice in order to play his best at the major events. |
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Red Bull Racing used Cosworth engines in its maiden year due to the ease of continuing with the engine Jaguar Racing used. |
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Early clinical trials have confirmed the value of the ease of accurate placement, repositionability, and retrievability of the valve. |
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He had many computers in his house, with a bank of six monitors rigged up to ease writing. |
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As a result Keats went through dreadful agonies with nothing to ease the pain at all. |
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However, its ease of use and portability quickly made it a must-have device for technophiles, and it soon spawned imitators from other companies. |
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This is due in part to the ease of handling, as they can be served hot or cold, directly from the can, making them handy for outdoor eating. |
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However, around Halloween a large amount of fireworks are set off, due to the ease of being able to purchase from Northern Ireland. |
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One post was typically filled by four men, one sentinel and the others at ease until a situation arose or it was their turn to be sentinel. |
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He had the uncanny ability to demolish his opponents with ease and make mincemeat out of them. |
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The coconut extract caprylic acid will help kill Candida and psyllium husk will ease constipation. |
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It scored points in the area of roadability, power and ease of use, Strategic Vision said. |
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The letter i was incorporated to ease pronunciation and form the linguistically correct and meaningful name. |
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He first suspected it would prove an adequate disinfectant because it was used to ease the stench from fields irrigated with sewage waste. |
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The waitress demonstrated with practised ease the technique of folding the betel leaf into a cone. |
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It has many attractive characteristics, such as ease to use, simple structure, speediness and robustness. |
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With these capabilities, SAIC can form teams rapidly and collaborate with ease across organizational and enterprise boundaries. |
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If light-handed, or the wind fresh, let go the bowline and ease off the tack, and haul up the weather clew. |
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To ease his mother's burdens, Priestley was sent to live with his grandfather around the age of one. |
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It was built to ease traffic congestion in Preston caused by tourists travelling to the popular destinations of Blackpool and The Lake District. |
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New industries arrived in Preston during the interwar years which helped ease the pain felt through the sharp decline of the cotton industry. |
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Originally built as a chapel of ease to Kirkham, it eventually became a parish church with its own vicar. |
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In order to ease the large budget deficit which had accumulated due to the recession, the coalition made deep spending cuts. |
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For ease of discussion, I'll use Bitcoin to include all similar cryptocurrenices. |
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The new Tinytag Ultra 2 Thermocouple data logger offers fast response, versatility, cost-effectiveness and ease of use. |
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Herbs such as red clover, sage and black cohosh have phyto oestrogen-like actions, and will help to ease symptoms. |
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It can also mean strong private property rights, contract enforcement, and overall ease of doing business as well as low barriers to free trade. |
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The chalk marl was conducive to tunnelling, with impermeability, ease of excavation and strength. |
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Customers continue to benefit from our technology with improved gate quality, balance, ease of use and maintainability. |
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If I digg'd up thy forefathers graves, And hung their rotten coffins up in chains, It could not slake mine ire, nor ease my heart. |
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The key aims of the plan are to ease congestion and improve accessibility, air quality and safety. |
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Further, hypertext systems, because of their ease of construction, are very rich in text, graphics and visual illustrations. |
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For ease of reading, the passage has been divided into sentences while the pilcrows represent the original division. |
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My personal ease and independence were less infringed than that of those who are accounted the freeest members of society. |
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While flowcharters have their own problems, they do accurately represent the program and ease the maintenance programmer's task. |
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Ninus being esteemed no man of war at all, but altogether feminine, and subject to ease and delicacy. |
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She enjoyed the ease of living in a house where the servants did all the work. |
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Fixed array technology enables a new threshold for the total cost of print, total thruput, and ease of operation. |
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He was his first filthy self of the meeting at Dover that time and seemed much at his ease with whip-jacks, adam-tilers and clapperdogeons. |
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But most are less mediagenic advances that contribute to sustainability, product safety, ease of use and other benefits. |
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If he cannot digest a strong and abstersive drug, for to remove his evill, let him at least take a lenitive pill to ease the same. |
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In the meantime, try a daily joint supplement like glucose amine or bromelin to ease those aches and pains. |
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In the same group, Al Merengues kick-started their campaign on a high note, defeating Rosaro 6-1 with ease to win three valuable points. |
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During this time, the Habsburg Empire sometimes covertly hired Cossack raiders to go against the Ottomans to ease pressure on their own borders. |
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Ear tags with numbers are attached, or ear marks are applied, for ease of later identification of sheep. |
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A fixed or prototypical word order is one out of many ways to ease the processing of sentence semantics and reducing ambiguity. |
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However, this design criterion was in conflict with the ease of coining new compound or derived words on the fly while speaking. |
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For ease of presentation, just dependency trees are now employed to illustrate these points. |
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For much of the Northwest Territories' early history it was divided into several districts for ease of administration. |
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Bush carefully chose the new ambassador for El Salvador to ease tensions following the Central American Crisis. |
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Unlike Wilson, he was not at ease on television, and came across as less spontaneous than his opponent. |
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However, iron objects of great age are much rarer than objects made of gold or silver due to the ease with which iron corrodes. |
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During the course of his illness, he invented and constructed several devices to mechanically ease his pain. |
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Knots materially affect cracking and warping, ease in working, and cleavability of timber. |
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In general, however, it may be said that where strength or ease of working is essential, woods of moderate to slow growth should be chosen. |
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Rice is currently the most sought after size due to the ease of use and popularity of that type of furnace. |
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To ease up the organization of the tooling in CNC production many companies use a tool management solution. |
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The work in coal mines was hard and dangerous, and so there was a great need for tools to ease this work. |
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This was largely due to the ease of use of Portland cement, its quick setting, and high compressive strength. |
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Liquidity refers to the ease with which a security can be sold without a loss of value. |
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To ease this problem, posts are sometimes erected to provide more sites suitable for nest building. |
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Tiles are often sold gauged, meaning that the back surface is ground for ease of installation. |
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There is little mention of the town until the 15th century when the population had risen enough for a chapel of ease to be built. |
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The current building was rebuilt in 1850 on the site of the former chapel of ease and is a Grade II listed building. |
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Relatives of the dead were expected to make offerings of food and drink to the dead to ease their conditions. |
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Nervous and shaky but feigning confidence, I completed the interview with ease and even managed to vibe with the country cutie. |
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PolyOne also offers antistat concentrates to ease product handling and add shelf appeal. |
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I tried to ease my grip, but my hands were sweating so profusely that the lizards began to wriggle out of them. |
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Perfectly charming and at ease on stage, he's equally rambling and yakky in an interview. |
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The ease of the Internet can reduce busywork and free up time, but even Google autocomplete won't tell us how to fill the time we've saved. |
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We were sponsored by Typhoo so we'd got boxes and boxes of teabags which we used as baksheesh to ease our way through borders and customs. |
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She opened a bank account in London to ease the transactions and provide a little walking-around money when she visited town. |
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Tokyo, has patented a water-in-oil emulsified sunscreen cosmetic that exhibits excellent long lasting coverage and ease of washability. |
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A ease of Histoplasma capsulatum causing granulomatous liver disease and Addisonian crisis. |
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This helps to further ease the burden of the prosecution, as well as FWS officials, in gathering admittable evidence. |
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I wish the writers would ease off the comedy pedal, which forces non-stop wisecracks out of Tessa's mouth. |
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