Early metazoan evolution, prior to the emergence of the clade that gave rise to crown taxa, involved a number of innovations. |
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He also said people need to study issues related to the disorientation of society stemming from the emergence of the information age. |
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Over the past few seasons, the seeds of the Big 12's emergence have been planted. |
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The 1960s also saw the emergence of liberation movements in the Portuguese African colonies of Angola, Mozambique and Guinea-Bissau. |
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However, it does mark the emergence of a new form which is in direct competition with mainstream media. |
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He clearly emphasized the emergence of socially organized labour and production as the key to distinguishing humans from animals. |
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The other burning issue of the week appears to be the emergence of second childhood in your middle age. |
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In the 1980s and 90s, the emergence of centers within the orbit of the seminary has accented new mission challenges. |
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There was first the bipolar world order, followed by its negation and the emergence of a unipolar world order. |
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Her political beliefs had been bolstered by her religious faith and she saw the emergence of a democratic society as a proper salvation. |
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If enthusiasm for monarchy waned, did the emergence of feasible alternatives explain subsequent political changes? |
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Our political parties are inert, and that's the reason behind the emergence of the radical groups which are filling in the political vacuum. |
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Slug injury to corn may occur before emergence due to feeding activity on the seeds in the furrow or to severe defoliation soon after emergence. |
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Maybe with the emergence of young, tough defenders such as Chris Gbandi that will change. |
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The very emergence of soca is a tribute to Indian percussion instruments, particularly tabla, dholak, dhantal and jhanj. |
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Let's hear it for the heretics and the emergence of a Nazarene in the midst of all this theocratic consensus. |
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Women played an important role in the emergence of Poland's modern political movements and the elaboration of their ideologies. |
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Even with the emergence of off-the-shelf hardware and software, the router market won't become as commoditized as the PC market. |
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I've also been cheered up by the unexpected emergence of some physalis plants I'd convinced myself had died when I transplanted them. |
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There appears to be a feedback loop linking the intensification of agriculture, the acquisition of wealth, and the emergence of hierarchy. |
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The emergence of such superbugs, which experts have long predicted, poses a grave threat. |
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Another unique characteristic is the emergence of shiny materials, such as satin, silk, shantung and duchesse. |
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Protein and RNA syntheses were examined during hyphal germ tube emergence from sporangiospores of a dimorphic phycomycete, Mucor racemosus. |
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Two different routes have been followed by liberal institutionalists in their attempt to explain the emergence of regimes. |
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It briefly reviews the history of chiropteran viruses and discusses their emergence in the context of geography, phylogeny, and ecology. |
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Society and the state evidence the need for the emergence of and functioning of military leaders, commanders, who enjoy authority. |
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We see the emergence of these men and women of conscience as a positive and hopeful sign. |
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A classic case, going back 20 years, was the emergence of the deep freezer. |
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Seeds were scored daily for radicle emergence through the testa or PE envelope. |
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The emergence of terminal and hospice care, and subsequent endorsement of the specialty of palliative medicine, is a clear expression of this. |
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However, I'm encouraged by the emergence of a new genre of quieter, less gory horror films in the early years of the new century. |
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His emergence halfway through the novel turns a loony horse opera into a reflection on the loss of rural pride. |
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We use the emergence of these patterns as hypotheses that may be investigated in real fish schools. |
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Flowering date was marked by emergence of the first panicle from the leaf sheath. |
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Technology has nothing do with the emergence of the explicit lyrics of gangsta rap. |
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Many studies have highlighted the emergence of important gastrointestinal coccidian parasites. |
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The emergence of the new economy, with digital media and biosciences replacing traditional industries, has led to issues of sustainability. |
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The emergence of improvement as a dominant ideology derived from three of its characteristics. |
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Almost immediately, the emergence of the Cold War undercut hopes that the United Nations could serve as a means of collective security. |
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Economic and political unrest plagued the nation throughout the 1960s and saw the emergence of the terrorist group, the Tupamaros. |
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One of the most remarkable economic phenomena over the past few years has been the emergence of Internet business. |
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The world has recently seen an emergence or re-emergence of infectious diseases such as smallpox, SARS, West Nile virus, and monkeypox. |
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For Fuhrman, the emergence of poetry as fruitful untruth is a source of fascination. |
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But for many in the South, the annual emergence of fertile, winged termites swarming furiously to scatter and search for mates isn't one of them. |
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He played a very important role in the emergence and furtherance of ecumenical teaching and thought. |
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They emerge early in the year and have short, synchronous emergence periods. |
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Changing family structures, such as the emergence of blended families, have further obscured set expectations for male providers. |
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Then of course we have the emergence of words like funner and funnest into common parlance. |
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Is this latter development so different than the evolutionary changes brought about by the emergence of the modern symphony orchestra? |
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The emergence of post-structuralism in the 1960s had radical implications for humanist thinking and the ideas of personhood. |
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The advent of television and the emergence of the modern couch potato sounded the death knell for such activities. |
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In 1991, we forecast the emergence of a new generation of American youth, born after 1982, whom we then named the Millennial Generation. |
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The Atdabanian epoch saw the emergence of the calcareous shelled Nisusiidae, the earliest and most primitive of the articulate brachiopods. |
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Due to the expansion of capitalism and the emergence of a global culture, pluralists recognized a growing interconnectedness between states. |
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We now know that the latter situation is conducive to the emergence of resistant mutants. |
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Another new development in Europe in the 1980s and 1990s has been the emergence of parties from the Far Right. |
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The tutor facilitates emergence of specific learning outcomes established by the instructor. |
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The modern period has witnessed the emergence of many new forms of poetry and popular fiction. |
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The treatment of head lice is now complicated by the emergence of resistance to pediculicides. |
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A second underlying focus of this Theme Area relates to the emergence of the subfield of neuroeconomics. |
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The styles were then removed from each flower just above the point of emergence from the hypanthium and passed to the evaluator. |
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He postulates that complexity is the key to understanding the emergence of classicality. |
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The former mechanism redistributes wealth by reducing the gap between the rich and poor, leading to the emergence of a middle class. |
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The facility's original design included a display case for visitors to observe the actual emergence of the butterflies from their chrysalids. |
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The emergence of a solid block of Republican red states across the map has come as a shock to Kerry supporters. |
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In Vietnam, this changed with the emergence of a largely working-class military. |
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His late writings examined the emergence of Russia as a world power, opening an era of global imperialism and war. |
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He will set no time limit for their possible emergence into the senior squad at Maine Road, preferring to allow them to find their own level. |
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The triumph marked a successful emergence from a prolonged hibernation for the sport in Myanmar. |
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A regiment of armed Reaper guards in full hooded cybernetic armor stand and await the emergence of the prisoners. |
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The author also tells us about the economic history, the changing socio-political milieu and the spatial emergence of Bangalore. |
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Bats typically accumulate body fat in autumn, which serves as the main energy source until emergence from hibernation in spring. |
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The result was the emergence of the Zulu, Xhosa, Pedi, Venda, Swazi, Sotho, Tswana, and Tsonga nations, along with the white Afrikaners. |
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For years people have bemoaned the emergence of shareholders as the owners of football clubs. |
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Movement of animals and disease vectors is perhaps one of the most common causes of disease emergence globally. |
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Ever since the emergence of the early state, various handfuls of people have been laying hold of inordinate amounts of wealth and power. |
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The emergence of free agent workers can be seen as a natural outgrowth of changing concepts about careers and career development. |
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The big news is that for all the Sturm und Drang, we may be seeing the emergence of a remarkable expert consensus. |
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On emergence from anesthesia, nearly all patients experience immediate pain relief and mild sensory loss. |
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The reasons for his sudden emergence as a real power in the land were essentially political. |
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The 1780s saw the emergence of the Sturm und Drang movement, which attempted to overturn the ethos of the German Enlightenment. |
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Throughout Europe, republicanism and republican forms of government have been associated with the emergence of strong business classes. |
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Berni Searle's emergence as an artist of international repute coincides more or less with South Africa's first decade of democracy. |
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For anime fans, this is a landmark production seen as marking the full emergence of otaku culture. |
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Recently, there has been an emergence in customer-centric marketing where the focus has shifted from a product focus to a customer focus. |
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We should realize that maybe the emergence of UPS will arouse us from a state of complacency and readies us for the grim challenges lying ahead. |
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There is a significant contrast here with the slow and unsteady emergence of both Biblical canons. |
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The deregulation of the telecoms market has seen the emergence of 17 telephone operators. |
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This scenario postulates the emergence of an expansionist power with global reach. |
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These data have implications for the emergence of nucleated Oneota groups at Red Wing and Apple River. |
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A dangerous schism in the Russian party developed with the emergence of the view known as Economism. |
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Red rice density is modeled as a function of seed bank, emergence rate, and the kill rates associated with the crops in rotation. |
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Grenada's emergence from international obscurity was the culmination of four turbulent years of revolution and social experimentation. |
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Written well before the emergence of identity politics, it has no a priori commitment to the telos of its hero's self-understanding. |
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Feeding also may continue after emergence as wireworms tunnel into the lower stalk of corn plants. |
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This prevented the emergence of a privileged hacendado class as in other Latin societies. |
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Seed bacterization with Bacillus subtilis AF 1 enhances seedling emergence and nodulation in pigeon pea. |
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Conditions favorable for the emergence of antigenic shift are thought to involve humans living close to domestic poultry and pigs. |
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In the early 1960s, the emergence of the theory of plate tectonics started a revolution in the earth sciences. |
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This is notably true before the emergence in his poetry of the dogmatising tones that mar some of the poems that follow The Waste Land. |
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The emergence of terrestrial vertebrates from fish in the Late Devonian was one of the most significant events in the history of life. |
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With the emergence of a new bull market, growth shares are coming back into fashion. |
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According to this idea, loss of Uox activity might result in a quantum jump in intellectual capability and thus trigger emergence of man. |
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One of the main reasons for the emergence of protectionism can be found in the distributive consequences of trade. |
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Nor does it justify the emergence of a new religion based upon only this unverifiable testimony. |
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During a mass emergence of periodical cicadas, almost any animal, from raccoons to raptors, will prey on them. |
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With careful, economic and compelling prose they follow the virus from its first emergence to its containment. |
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With the exception of D. articulata in 1992, all shrub microsites had higher emergence rates than open interspaces. |
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Upon emergence from hibernation the lizards were caught by hand or by noosing. |
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The state was being challenged internally by the emergence of ethnic and other forms of identity politics. |
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In addition, such distinctness enhances the between-group variance so essential to group selection and emergence of a higher-level unit. |
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His possible genetic markers promise to help identify and locate the emergence genes on the chromosomes, one of the goals of the genome project. |
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Astute observers commented on this trend to eliminate force even before the emergence of relativity and quantum mechanics. |
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Specifically, leaf emergence in black oak occurred very soon after the first release, resulting in a generally high survival rate in gypsy moth. |
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Over time, with the emergence of smaller houses to suit the nuclear family, they were discarded as unwieldy and old fashioned. |
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To examine germination in various mutant strains, conidial swelling and germ tube emergence were observed under the microscope. |
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In turn, this has fueled the emergence of a new consumer drive, vigilante consumerism. |
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In a new study, researchers show that special viruses are the culprits behind the emergence of virulent select new bacterial strains. |
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Hand in hand with European expansion went the gradual emergence of industrial capitalism. |
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The emergence of standard languages, as well as literary forms, is intimately connected with socio-political context. |
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For instance, the oral stage can be seen as the emergence of symbolic capacity, in the complex biological matrix of a mother nursing her infant. |
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Firstly, with the emergence of DVDs and pirated VCDs, not many film buffs visit theatres anymore. |
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The only glimmer of hope for these wretched people is the emergence of organised resistance to the present policies. |
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The age of gingival emergence was determined by closely spaced repeated observations of 14 young from three litters. |
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Early in the thirteenth century, the monastic map of western Europe was transformed by the emergence of the mendicant friars. |
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These observations suggest that there may be links between sexual maturation and the emergence of preferences for specific body shapes. |
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Later emergence does not exclude biological explanation, but it is crucial to a social or biosocial explanation. |
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How does its emergence affect the overarching patterns of American letters and the enterprise of modern literary criticism? |
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The development of Skolithos trace fossils on the upper surface of some beds suggests periodical emergence into an intertidal zone. |
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Several other species of marine fishes spawn on beaches, although actual emergence of adults from water is rare. |
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Patriotism becomes articulated through passion, and passion can indeed spur the emergence of stirring words. |
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At first sight, the emergence of the EU as a regional grouping seems to be in contradiction with the direction and thrust of globalization. |
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There are no castes and only recent evidence of the slow emergence of classes. |
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Such a system appears to have come into existence only after the Mississippian emergence and the appearance of chiefs. |
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Impatience with non-violence and the deafness shown by political leaders led to the emergence of more militant groups such as The Weathermen. |
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Where they got the law from, and how they did it, is the whole story of the emergence of substantive common law. |
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Against this background, the emergence of new human infectious diseases or viruses is unsurprising. |
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The late twentieth century saw the emergence of another class, a small group of businesspeople. |
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These institutions tend to arise naturally, he argues, with the emergence of a socially mobile middle class. |
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Moreover, the book treats the emergence of modern advertising, not advertising, whose history antedates the author's period of study. |
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Appropriate use of antibiotics will delay and in many cases prevent the emergence of resistance. |
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Two seeds were sown into each pot and thinned down after emergence to standardize initial seedling size. |
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The anti-capitalist movement marks the emergence of a new generation of politically thinking youth. |
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Under aerobic conditions, the radicle emerged first from the seeds, but root and shoot emergence occurred nearly simultaneously. |
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Haiti's emergence meant much more than a major black victory over whites and the creation of a black state. |
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With the emergence of molecular biology and genetics, these two points of view have become ever more synthesized. |
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Leigh Brown says that the inappropriate use of drugs is contributing to the emergence of resistant strains. |
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It will spur corruption and create an oligarchic elite that opposes the emergence of competitive markets. |
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And this was before the emergence of gay marriage, partial-birth abortions, or stem cell research as subjects of controversy. |
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His interests span a broad range of topics in astrophysics, from cosmology to the emergence of intelligent life. |
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So the first phase of emergence is rarely a wholehearted embrace of freedom but rather a resurrection of the enemy just defeated. |
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From its inception, it was meant to ward off the emergence of a hereditary aristocracy in the United States. |
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The 1980s witnessed the emergence of suburban housing developments and shopping complexes. |
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The conclusion of World War II saw the emergence of the US as the unchallenged and pre-eminent capitalist power. |
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Military education and its associated teaching awaited the emergence of states and their standing armies. |
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However, if you do this, increase seed rates, as unconsolidated seed beds lead to slow emergence and slug damage. |
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Already, we are witnessing the emergence of this shift in Afghanistan and Iraq. |
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With the emergence and spread of AIDS in Japan in the 1980s, insensitivity toward gay men heightened. |
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Because of lack of efficacy or the emergence of adverse effects, stimulant therapy is unsuccessful in 25 to 30 percent of children. |
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A pioneering initiative launched a year ago is stimulating the emergence of a new wave of Asian businesswomen in Bradford. |
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At the same time the freshly granted freedoms of publication and association did facilitate the gradual emergence of radical movements. |
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With the emergence of organized political parties, the holding of a national party convention to select presidential candidates developed. |
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Their later emergence is profoundly related to the notion of change in a common law tradition. |
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The earlier signals which hinted at the emergence of fiscal prudence, quickly faded out. |
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And on his emergence from Howard University Hospital yesterday, the flamboyant rapper managed to stay staggeringly on-message. |
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An analogy could be made with how the emergence of European fascism should be taught. |
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The worldwide emergence of bacterial resistance to antibacterial agents has produced a need for new methods of combating bacterial infections. |
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The second factor behind the creation of a new concept of school was the emergence of the nation-state. |
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No. 2 is the longer by 13 minutes, and notable for the emergence of a poignant viola tune in the big lento finale, and for a shocking last bar. |
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This, combined with more spending power, saw the emergence of teen idols of which Frank was one of the first. |
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At the far end, this dimly lit corridor compresses itself so that your emergence into a luminous skylit dining room is all the more striking. |
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The team's left-winger admitted he was surprised at the sudden emergence of positive tests against top players. |
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Early spring emergence and rapid growth, high palatability and herbage production make the grasslands ideal for grazing and forage production. |
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One of the most profound ideas to emerge from World War Two was the emergence of an international human rights culture and legal system. |
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In the United Kingdom the emergence of clinical governance is greatly changing paediatric urology. |
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Organisms obtained from these animals, when inoculated into uninfected animals, proved to be unresponsive to atovaquone therapy, suggesting the emergence of drug resistance. |
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We're seeing the emergence of risk-averse venture capitalists. |
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Macropodine marsupials offer unique insights into current theories expositing centromere emergence during karyotypic diversification and speciation. |
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With the emergence of Nepali-language rap and mix music in the mid-1990s, the use of the English language within a predominantly Nepali context became much more frequent. |
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This musical tradition was developed in the seventeenth century with the emergence of opera, oratorio, and cantata and their attendant forms of aria, recitative, and chorale. |
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Offspring were sexed at emergence and maintained in single-sex cultures. |
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The member states were persuaded that an independent audit body was warranted, given the emergence of an EU budget with supranational characteristics. |
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No credible billing service exists on the Internet today for microtransactions, but I predict the emergence of one within a very short amount of time. |
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The emergence of British Asians in contemporary music is a good example. |
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Among children, the 1990s saw the emergence of new theories of intellectual development, and patterns of cerebral lateralization in the maturing child. |
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There is a relatively high amount of territorial behavior found in brook trout and territory is established shortly after emergence from the redd. |
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In contrast to many other Latin American nations, Chile has not experienced the emergence of strong regionalism or conflicting regional cultural identities. |
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When you hear what he has to say in Unstoppable about the emergence of a new bipartisan politics, you may be inclined to scoff. |
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Even more important, we need to pay attention to the emergence of militarism among some military officers. |
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However, the stress she places on their emergence because of, not in spite of, a schism in the cultural industry ignores their colonized positions. |
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In opposition to the Newtonian mechanistic view of nature he sees nature as an organic system of opposed forces with a built-in telos towards the emergence of consciousness. |
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Issues covered include the changing nature of malware, the growing prevalence of Trojan horses and the emergence of new threats such as ransomware. |
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One can only imagine the chaos, the cratering economy, the emergence of all forms of social disorder. |
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On the point of losing everything to the rebels, the king's triumphant emergence in the theater of war helps push back the enemy and offers a possibility of victory. |
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We are also concerned about the emergence of essay banks on the Internet. |
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The ending of the aldermanic system and the more frequent turnover of councillors have probably reduced the possibilities for the emergence of such experienced influentials. |
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The story of the emergence of theoretical population genetics, out of a tension between biometricians and Mendelians, has been told eloquently by Provine. |
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He explained that there may be a time lag between the creation of a favourable entrepreneurial environment and the emergence of an entrepreneurial class. |
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As water migrates to the soil surface, it replenishes soil water around the seed and new roots during the critical germination and emergence period. |
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We saw the emergence of fashion designers who specialized in creating abayas. |
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Instead there was the emergence of a Tea Party movement that brought many traditionally low-propensity voters to the polls. |
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Nomani said her activism, which took root before the emergence of social media, has often been lonely and isolating. |
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The emergence of new technology can have the most unexpected results on human behavior. |
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The depth of seeds within the soil during the germination and emergence periods may ultimately be the factor that restricts emergence between beds. |
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Soon enough the dance halls were dominated by the ska beat, which eventually metamorphosed into rocksteady, this transformation paving the way for the emergence of reggae. |
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It tapped the growing middle class anger with corruption, and civil society's urge to tackle the warts that blot the country's emergence as a progressive, modern nation. |
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On the database front, Oracle continues to baffle customers with its bizarre fractional pricing scheme to handle the emergence of multicore chips. |
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First we discuss climate warming as an important driver for the emergence of disease associated with Umingmakstrongylus pallikuukensis, a nematode lungworm of muskoxen. |
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We suspect that many losses after emergence were due to avian predators. |
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The transformation scene, done with trick camerawork, doesn't match Barrymore's, but March's manic delight in the emergence of his simian side has a superb energy. |
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Whenever press ownerships have been allowed into commercial television ownership, the situation has been favourable to the emergence of media moguls. |
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Sub-optimal drug penetration also influences the emergence of multiply drug resistant variants, which may also predominate in this anatomical viral reservoir. |
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Until the 1960s this remained the intellectual agenda of U.S. anthropology, which largely ignored the emergence of both functionalism and structuralism in Europe. |
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For example, consumers are increasingly able to choose between energy suppliers, with the emergence of multi-utilities offering to provide both gas and electricity. |
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The emergence of the Greek revival style is evidenced by the rear piazza, which was supported by four Roman Doric columns, each hewn from a solid log. |
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The emergence of the overclass means that lots of people can enjoy the security of being liberated from necessity and the freedom to pursue happiness. |
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If nothing else, this administration provides some space for the emergence of a post-civil rights black leadership not subservient to the Democratic Party. |
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Through its overemphasis on democratic accountability in the name of transparency, the present social system stands in the way of the emergence of such a self-appointed elite. |
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It was that match that saw the emergence of the gifted Mauro Bergamasco at openside flanker in succession to the old warhorse, and captain, Massimo Giovanelli. |
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Leaf emergence pattern is synchronic when leaves emerge as a flush during a short period, or continuous when leaves emerge gradually during the growth period. |
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The end of the Cold War and the emergence of the United States as the only superpower raised several questions concerning the direction of the country's foreign policy. |
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Only recently have we seen the emergence of female factional leaders. |
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Another reason for the relative decline in barley sent coastwise was the emergence of Berwick and several other towns in the borders as centres of the brewing industry. |
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Last night the emergence of a clear paper trail over the visa application for his lover's nanny hastened the collapse of his own political credibility. |
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Such systematization is all about providing a stable platform for the emergence of what are, I trust, the more interesting sorts of complexity and diversity. |
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A global system implies the emergence of multinational companies which operate in a number of states, and which own especial loyalty to no one state. |
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Lock starts the chapter with an interesting historical review of the emergence of the female climacteric or menopause in medical and psychoanalytic discourse. |
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However, the use of drug combinations is designed to limit the emergence of multiply drug resistant variants and may suppress plasma viraemia more effectively. |
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The emergence of primates, with their close-set eyes and stereoscopic vision, coincided with the appearance of flowering plants and the new host of insects that fed on them. |
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With the emergence of the first decent wind of the week, this was links golf at its best, challenging the mental and physical endurance of all concerned. |
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The past five years have seen the emergence of robust, scalable natural language processing systems that can summarize and answer questions about online material. |
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The relevant historical materials suggest that this emergence derived from the deep embeddedness of survey photography in an instrumental matrix of graphic disciplines. |
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I do not however see how the late emergence of the evidence matters. |
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But his followers found solace in the rapid emergence of a cult. |
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Today we observe the emergence of new forms of user experience. |
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In Western Europe, the long postwar boom and the lack of progress made by the Communist parties there led in the 1970s to the emergence of a trend known as Eurocommunism. |
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Enlightenment is man's emergence from his self-imposed nonage. |
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In the first chapter, he traces the emergence of the modern conception of the gene back to the 18th century debate between preformationists and epigeneticists. |
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Two decades of affirmative-action policies did increase the stake in the economy of ethnic bumiputras and led to the emergence of a Malay middle class. |
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The emergence of new startups and the reappearance of the backyard inventor is no real mystery. |
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The ambiversion of the advanced personality, under control of the soul, is not easily defined because the stage of its emergence in human life still lies in the future. |
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As it is, the working of the lottery might well result in the emergence of a sub-group of phylakes whose interests had become contrary to those of the governing group.
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Upon emergence from hibernation, the lizards were caught by hand. |
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It does not have the centralisation of religious authority which can both unify people around a coherent set of values and prevent the emergence of extremes. |
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Once hatched in the incubator, the chick should be left undisturbed for up to eight hours so that it can rest and dry after the emergence process. |
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While it is true that Margaret's scientific theories support the emergence of a new image of female selfhood, I would argue that they exceed such revaluing of the feminine. |
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The foreign sales of weapons manufacturing know-how led to the emergence of international consortiums that set up base in many countries of the world. |
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Studying how they evolve and move through human and animal populations might identify new flu reservoirs and enable the emergence of new strains to be predicted. |
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The recurrence of fever after an initial defervescence suggests a septic or nonseptic embolic event, a drug hypersensitivity reaction or the emergence of a resistant strain. |
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These documents include accounting records which appear to offer some vital clues relevant to the emergence of the double-entry system of accounting. |
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The emergence of specific-purpose vehicles like PPPs has changed infrastructure investment, but the need for government borrowing is still substantial. |
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Although the plantation setting was crucial for the emergence of pidgins in both areas, in the Pacific laborers were recruited and indentured rather than slaves. |
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And they are very far from any thought that their licentious groupings would provide an avenue for the emergence of a patriarch with a retinue of teen-wives. |
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This principle, applied in concert with the concept of human capital mentioned above, can explain the emergence of a lingua franca, a common language. |
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The most dramatic change of all is the emergence of an Islamist party long persecuted by zine El Abidine Ben Ali's regime. |
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Right around that time was the emergence of rock and roll and I lived it. |
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None the less, it is a step forward and will stimulate debate about the emergence of neurology from the closet of esoteric and untreatable syndromes. |
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They note the emergence of large private business in the post-bellum U.S. following the courts' reinterpretation of shareholding companies as a legal person. |
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The development of concrete music promoted the emergence of musik elektronische in 1950 at the Nordwest Deutscher Rundfunk in Cologne, Germany, initiated by Herbert Eimert. |
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The hallmark of the disease is the emergence of multiple areas of inflammation and scarring of the protective myelin sheath that covers nerve fibers. |
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In Iraq, there is a real concern over the emergence of Alnusra Front and Salafists who are most averse to Shiites in the region. |
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Four years after its emergence as a political force, the Tea Party is now coping with its adolescence. |
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But did The Hague just witness the emergence of a new bloc to bloc rivalry, triggered by events in the Ukraine? |
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Human evolution is the part of biological evolution concerning the emergence of anatomically modern humans as a distinct species. |
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This contrasts with other known animal speciations, in which the emergence of the new species occurs only once. |
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It midwifed emergence of similar liberationist theologies across the globe and impacted the theological enterprise in many significant ways. |
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Moyn then goes on to identify the emergence of the extermination camp as another synecdoche. |
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Such fruits were tied with nylon fiber to the twigs of guava plants to allow the formation of the holdfast and the emergence of the haustorium. |
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Upon discussing these possibilities, the emergence phase becomes known when a decision is made about which solution is to be used. |
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The emergence of the Nuragic culture in the Bronze and Iron Ages has played an important role. |
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If there is one person who can be held responsible for the emergence of cocaine as a recreational pharmaceutical, it was Freud. |
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In February 2004, avian influenza virus was detected in birds in Vietnam, increasing fears of the emergence of new variant strains. |
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Capitalism in its modern form can be traced to the emergence of agrarian capitalism and mercantilism in the Renaissance. |
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This definition and more recent studies of equivalence classes share a common theme, the emergence of untrained relations. |
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The emergence of South American organisms is due to the widening of that organisms' ecological niche. |
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The Al-Aqsa Intifada that began in October 2000 served as a catalyst for the emergence of the Bat Ayin Underground. |
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The dominant position of French language in international affairs was overtaken by English, since the emergence of the US as a major power. |
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Many theorists have noted that this increase in global GDP over time coincides with the emergence of the modern world capitalist system. |
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This has resulted in the emergence of some new physician specialists called Laborists, Sugicalists, and Traumatologists. |
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The Nara period of the 8th century marked the emergence of a strong Japanese state and is often portrayed as a golden age. |
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The final pandemic originated in 1961 in Indonesia and is marked by the emergence of a new strain, nicknamed El Tor, which still persists today. |
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The birth of Rock and Roll was upon us with Teddy Boys, drain pipe trousers, and the emergence of a young American singer called Elvis Presley. |
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It has been noted that they exerted a significant influence on the emergence of new religious movements such as spiritualism and occultism. |
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The emergence of this new political entity in the frame of the Cold War was complex and painful. |
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The emergence of clans had more to do with political turmoil than ethnicity. |
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Many of those who bet on the emergence of a real axis to oppose the Syrian-Iranian axis are now facing disappointment. |
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It specifically recognises its rapidly changing role in society, marked by the emergence of the digital cooperative. |
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From a historical perspective, the emergence of alternative medicine, if not the term itself, is typically dated to the 19th century. |
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Vigorous moss growth can inhibit seedling emergence and penetration of water and fertilizer to the plant roots. |
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With the emergence of new technologies, such as optical media, micrographics often appear as the Cinderella of information storage technology. |
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The subject of the emergence of castles is a complex matter which has led to considerable debate. |
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The Kingdom of Mercia predated the emergence of heraldry, so there is no authentic Mercian heraldic device. |
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Alfred's emergence from his marshland stronghold was part of a carefully planned offensive that entailed raising the fyrds of three shires. |
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The Bengal Renaissance shaped the emergence of modern Bengali literature, including novels, short stories and science fiction. |
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The use of digital technology is growing at a very fast pace which led to the emergence of systems based on the cognitive infocommunications. |
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The Renaissance's emergence in Italy was most likely the result of the complex interaction of the above factors. |
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Demand for music as entertainment and as an activity for educated amateurs increased with the emergence of a bourgeois class. |
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He saw in the Renaissance the emergence of the modern spirit of individuality, which the Middle Ages had stifled. |
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This saw the emergence of a small, politically active commercial class in Barcelona. |
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As the largest manufacturing unit in Europe this come to symbolise the emergence of the factory system. |
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