Globalization has come to us, and no nation, country or government can escape from it. |
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For some, there was fascism, a desperate escape from the nullity that was all that democracy seemed able to offer. |
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I was desperate for some escape from the loneliness and from my own violent mood swings, but I was also determined to finish out the semester. |
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As you get older or if your immune system gets weak, the chickenpox virus may escape from the nerve cells and cause shingles. |
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Police nabbed the stabber while he was trying to escape from the apartment where they both lived. |
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The festival was an outcry against everyday life and a short escape from the treadmill of the work-eat-sleep regime. |
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In 1995, his second book, Ocean of Sound, provided a handy escape from the journalistic treadmill. |
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The manager has already pulled off one miraculous escape from relegation in the Premiership. |
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A youth standing near the parked vehicle, had a miraculous escape from death. |
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He was glad for the escape from the competition, and grateful for the diversion that driving provided him. |
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In our primal human context, conflict scenarios required immediate escape from, or intense combat with, fierce predators or competing clans. |
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Whether you wish it or not, you need to undergo the trials and tribulations of the sunny days and sultry nights as there is no escape from it. |
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Exerting a massive effort, she finally wrenched them open, then immediately shut them again to escape from the bright sun's dazzling rays. |
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They were cast as self-interested actors desperate for an escape from poverty, happy to embrace whatever the developed world could offer. |
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Lijiang, a poetic place in South China's Yunnan Province, offers a heavenly escape from earthly troubles and anxieties. |
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The very nature of popular film is to provide an escape from daily reality and monotonous routines. |
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It would be ironic if the commuters had tried to escape from one vomiter only to run into the path of another. |
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There is no escape from violence in either sphere, no pastoral alternative to the bleakness of the run-down city. |
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When did it become wrong for the silver screen to become an escape from the heartache and pain around you? |
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Before they arrived, three male neighbours found a ladder and helped two girls and a boy escape from the upstairs bedroom. |
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He plans his escape from the provincial small-minded perceptions of the immediate community. |
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Let us escape from the mucky world of politics for a day and enjoy the cleaner healthier world of heavy engineering. |
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Battle was only a momentary distraction, a simple, uncomplicated escape from the troubles of his life. |
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Aboriginal people said that they still can't escape from nightmares relating to earthquakes, mudslides and collapsed land. |
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Nobody gaffs and puts back pike into Lough Mask so it must have managed to escape from a bungled gaffing attempt. |
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One day, I will have a flat there as a bolthole for an occasional escape from everything. |
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This year they are in a reduced living space and there is no escape from each other. |
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Before the disaster it was universally accepted the safest way to escape from a fire was via the stairs. |
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Pound wished poetry to escape from what he felt was a rising tide of sloppy, flabby, sing-song verse, inaccurately and unobservantly phrased. |
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An escape from slavery is an expansion of experience and cultural consciousness, one that fugitive slave narratives record repeatedly. |
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Cover the container with a cover that the froglets can not escape from and will maintain the humidity. |
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There, he enters the forest of his mind, delighting in the escape from everyday restrictions. |
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And frankly, who wouldn't want to pop a few placid pills or love potions just to escape from the long list of wicked words mentioned above. |
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A drug addict burglar tried to strangle a policewoman during an attempt to escape from Basingstoke police station. |
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It signals an opportunity to escape from your normal routine and experience activities ordinarily constrained by employment restrictions. |
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My birding is restricted only by my own inability to escape from the confines of city life. |
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Set within the confines of a crumbling mansion, a child bride finds an unusual way to escape from her loathsome mill owner husband. |
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There is no privilege here, no escape from the insolent booth attendants, the ceaseless demands of the homeless, and the pungent overcrowding. |
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We need to escape from our food culture, which inhibits us from creating and reaching out to a better future. |
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Since the tyre is tougher than a tube, it takes a long time for the air to escape from it when it is pierced by something sharp. |
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The picaro's constant movement symbolizes his desire for social improvement, or perhaps even for escape from an island-prison. |
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Damion and I, however, were only peasants, commoners seeking a means of escape from the terrors of poverty. |
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Often, persons with low frustration tolerance experience a strong impulse to escape from, or avoid frustrating situations. |
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The screen has millions of tiny perforations across it to allow sound to escape from speakers placed behind. |
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But its inherent limitations meant that it could never fully escape from its identification with victimhood. |
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And they revere anybody who climaxes their complaint with an escape from Washington. |
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Usually dark, damp and stained, with imagined muggers lurking in the shadows, they are claustrophobic places to escape from as fast as possible. |
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Their suburban Boston clients envisioned their basement home theater as a place to escape from the humdrum of daily life. |
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As a means of escape from his convalescence he began learning about birds and watched swallows and swifts returning from Africa. |
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The schoolboy wizard and his chums have to unravel the mystery of Sirius Black's escape from the infamous prison of Azkaban. |
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She offered Billy a clear route of escape from his drab existence, even if was hard to understand how she could really be interested in him. |
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Only the movies and the daring exploits of aviation's record seekers seemed to offer any escape from the harsh realities of daily life. |
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The main storylines follow his turbulent, and pathetic, attempts to escape from his chronically insipid persona. |
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Waxed and painted furniture, recycled wood and whitewashed brick conspire to give a homey, relaxed atmosphere, an escape from the city. |
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He's getting caught up in his own controversy, situating himself in an ethical quagmire he might not be able to escape from. |
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One of the main drives behind this campaign is to get proper services in place for women who want to escape from abusive relationships. |
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They say Carnival is an escape from reality and gives people the chance to participate in a little fantasy for two days. |
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To escape from the scorching, sultry summers of Delhi he would take his trainees to the sand dunes of the Yamuna at Okhla, South Delhi. |
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And if the virtual world is broad, it obviously isn't broad enough to enable one to escape from this kind of corporate hocus-pocus. |
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Toilet doors and interior doors jammed in the train, making it difficult for passengers to escape from the coaches. |
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What it wanted was its accustomed fare of light entertainment, something to help escape from the working week. |
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What will not work is to try to resolve the matter by using weasel words and sophistry to escape from a moral obligation. |
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Chemotherapeutic and radiotherapeutic strategies induce apoptosis, so escape from programmed death signals is important. |
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I started this blog as a creative outlet, a much needed release, an escape from reality. |
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The PM and his wife boarded a flight to Portugal today, as politicians plotted their summer escape from the Westminster village. |
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Unfortunately, this feeling is actually an illusion, a short-lived escape from reality. |
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Online many people express fantasies or adopt identities precisely because they are an escape from reality. |
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Most of them are happy to use the bureaucratic machinery to escape from taking the rap. |
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The whips go to the covert and watch for the fox to go away, and then they signal the fox's escape from the covert. |
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We went back to the set and I watched the Falcon escape from bondage and alert the cops to where the crime boss and his rats were hiding out. |
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The rationale behind protecting the head is to escape from the vertical heat rays. |
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The effects provide a temporary escape from reality by relieving fears, tension and anxiety. |
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So, in order to escape from actually working, I decided to learn a bit more about Hocktide, and came upon the delightful Beerfordbury Bugle! |
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We see no escape from the logic of the judge's reasoning and Mr Nicol could suggest none. |
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What drew Osburn to Edwards was the chance to escape from behind the computer and get on the flight line to work with planes and aircrews. |
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Holes in the seal between the air conditioner and the window frame allow cool air to escape from your home. |
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A family of four from Pewsey has spoken of its narrow escape from the flooding disaster that devastated the Cornish village of Boscastle. |
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It will certainly offer some protection in terms of sheep being worried by dogs that escape from hunters. |
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And finally, let's stop to consider exactly which law would be broken in an escape from detention. |
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Drug use becomes more attractive as an alleviator of stress and strain and as a means of escape from a harsh reality. |
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It was through the personality and leadership of Moses in their escape from Egypt that the Israelites experienced the redemptive power of Yahweh. |
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Whatever injuries he may have sustained on the escape from Afghanistan is clearly healed. |
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He followed her, settling his weight on top of her in a most possessive way and not allowing her any room to escape from his relentless pursuit. |
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If rings are too loose, liquid may escape from jars during processing, and seals may fail. |
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Doherty still has a chance of saving the frame but misses the penultimate red when attempting to escape from a snooker behind the yellow. |
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I certainly felt bound to the river for restoring my equilibrium, for calming my senses and for providing me with an escape from the city. |
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A group of strangers barricade themselves into a house in order to escape from a horde of flesh-eating zombies. |
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In the first process, zoospores escape from the zoosporangium which is located in the parent algae and they develop into filaments. |
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Only a few weeks later, as he tried to escape from jail, he was shot and killed. |
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The retardation of proton escape from the membrane surface was previously explained by the damping effect of immobile pH buffer at the surface. |
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For Hewitt, nature becomes a refuge, a place to which he can retreat and escape from the rigours of life. |
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The majority of immigrants are from North Africa, especially Morocco, and are seeking escape from the grinding poverty in that country. |
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The event horizon is where light loses the ability to escape from the black hole. |
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To avoid detection, these rocks were hidden on hillsides and in valleys, so as to allow for a quick escape from the authorities. |
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The implication reminded Smollett of a narrow escape from a duello at Ghent in 1749 with a Frenchman. |
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It is his escape from an arduous and unrewarding job and the home he shares with his mentally-ill mother, troublesome children and stressed wife. |
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On one level he does not like to talk about those years, but on another, he cannot escape from doing just that. |
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In the course of making an escape from prison Taylor shoots the prison chaplain. |
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Anyone in his position would have wanted to completely forget about his escape from the long arm of the law. |
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The Austrian eagle was only to escape from one enemy, to be displumed by another. |
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Married to a stereotypical, asexual soccer mom with two young kids, he sees Kathy as his escape from such mediocrity. |
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While beanbags are safe they pose a risk if loose beads escape from the bean bags. |
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Her desire to get what she wants throws her life into a chaos she may not be able to escape from. |
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Do you consider actors to be outsiders, taking on various guises, heroic, villainous or whatever, to escape from themselves? |
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George Clooney and some cheeky chappies escape from a '30s chain gang and sing Deep South ballads while having misadventure after misadventure. |
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The children either came from troubled single-parent homes or had run away from home to escape from the pressures at school. |
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Entry into office jobs does not necessarily represent an escape from the bad, hazardous and low-paid conditions of manufacturing. |
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I had made my escape from Alcatraz, survived the storm-tossed Irish sea, and was back in civilisation, or a decent approximation thereof. |
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It is a sad reflection on our societies that we have to escape from reality in these ways. |
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His initial reaction is to escape from a stifling home environment, school bullies, and poverty. |
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Black holes are objects for which the gravitational attraction is so strong that nothing, not even light, can escape from it. |
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Moreover, colourful and spectacular films provided a welcome means of escape from the austerities of the post-war era. |
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I prefer the magic of ghosts I think, they at least hold out the promise of the escape from embodiment and hitting the singularity. |
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I really enjoy having, in my own home, an escape from those exhausting summer days of high temperatures and stifling humidity. |
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Mr. Williams let an angry growl escape from his throat, grabbed the digital clock from his desk and slammed it against the wall. |
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Psychiatric labels that define certain behaviours and beliefs as deviant are particularly sticky and difficult to escape from. |
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If a massive object lies entirely within its Schwarzschild radius then no light can escape from the surface of the object. |
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High on the chalk Downs there was no escape from the elements and within seconds ladies wearing light Summer clothing were thoroughly soaked. |
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Call it a digital detox or an escape from the online world, scientists say our brains benefit from down time. |
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But whatever it is, it's something that I will be stuck with for the rest of my life, and something I will never be able to escape from. |
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Even though she was sure that she could escape from the Martians once she was captured, she wasn't so sure that she could do so unscathed. |
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Lush, fresh and green, the shady forest was a welcome escape from the heat of the rising morning sun. |
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The alliteration and dramatic significance of the term had caught the public imagination, and thenceforward there was no escape from its use. |
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Each individual has to burn out his own karma and escape from the chains of maya, reincarnation, and all that. |
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In the interim, Veikko, with the help of only lichen and cold water, has ingeniously made his escape from his Promethean securement. |
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It was not as if she was trying to escape from an immediate threat of violence to her. |
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As the boys try to escape from the village, they encounter a large tanker truck, which the audience initially believes is an oil rig. |
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It was impossible for her to escape from her captor, who seemed to have arms made of steel. |
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She claimed she was beaten repeatedly by members of her partner's family and decided to escape from them at the first opportunity. |
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It seemed so easy to just escape from her captors, more so than any previous attempt at her imprisoning. |
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Soon they are trying to piece together why they were framed and how to escape from their life of imprisonment! |
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When meteorites hit nearby worlds, they kick up bits of rock, some of which might have enough speed to escape from their planet entirely. |
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The parents had thrown the child to the passer-by, who caught it as they struggled to escape from the thick smoke which had engulfed the upstairs of their Cook Street home. |
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It is hardly a rejection of adulthood, rather a momentary escape from routine. |
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The Secret Rescue By Cate Lineberry The story of non-combat heroes and their escape from Nazi-occupied Albania. |
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Hirst's portrayal of the scene is reminiscent of Gilles Deleuze's description of his escape from the bondage of academicism in postwar French philosophy. |
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The intersections become street-performing pitches, and crowds of hundreds watch someone escape from a straitjacket or juggle machetes or eat fire. |
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Her adventures as a photographer were, she believed, an escape from huge, too-silent apartments, and teachers who thought her juvenilia brilliant. |
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When her fort was under siege by the British, the rani escaped from the besieged fort in disguise, reminiscent of Shivaji's escape from Aurangzeb's imprisonment. |
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One of the reasons we watch movies is to escape from real life into a world where the good guys in the white hats win in the end, where the guy gets the girl. |
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He suffered numerous injuries, managed to escape from his prison, walked for two weeks through the jungle eating live frogs before he was recaptured. |
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That Nolan was there to play his part was a near-miracle in itself after the youngster's lucky escape from that morning's dramatic smash that wrecked his car. |
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The only light relief is the story of a narrow escape from death. |
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Like the elaborately choreographed escape from default, it was a signal moment of Washington unreality, more farce than tragedy. |
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The one dramatic moment in the film, when Wayne tries to escape from his captors, is a let-down, and it doesn't last nearly as long as one would hope. |
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Global systems theory based on transnational practices is an attempt to escape from the limitations of state-centrism and to avoid the exaggerations of globalism. |
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Waiting 5 to 10 days after the fly-safe date ensures escape from fall infections of barley yellow dwarf and lessens the potential of root rot and early season foliar diseases. |
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Plus, read an account of an escape from Scientology's Sea Org and a Scientology glossary. |
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They suggest that fish are very rare in Cambrian and Ordovician rocks because they were active swimmers and could generally escape from the underwater avalanches. |
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You need to escape from the cares and worries of everyday life. |
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Watching Meryl Davis and Charlie White's ice dancing was a welcome escape from reality. |
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This is a chance for their players to escape from the relentless pressure of a relegation scrap and revel in the media attention that this tie will attract. |
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For example, seed dormancy, leading to the production of soil seed banks, allows escape from unfavourable conditions in time rather than in space. |
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Tallinn, he boasts, is a favorite destination for liberal Russians seeking escape from their more authoritarian society. |
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Once the reproductive phase has been completed, the daughter cells differentiate as biflagellate cells, escape from the mother-cell wall, and swim away. |
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The story tells how he miraculously managed to escape from his icy tomb and then crawl with his broken leg for three days and nights to reach the camp. |
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Perhaps the only escape from the inevitable Big Rip would be to create some extra-dimensional wormhole passage to a universe with less hostile parameters. |
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A man tells of his lucky escape from a mob and finding acceptance in America. |
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That this list appears in a free publication that's widely available, however, qualifies it as a cheap escape from the blahs for the duration of the time it takes to read it. |
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In the entire war, he was the only American who managed to escape from North Vietnam. |
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The trapped bees try to escape from the flowers by climbing the sepals, but escape is made even more difficult by the slippery waxy sepal surface. |
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At dinner parties, or at house parties with no dancing, or at any occasion where there is no escape from constant, unrelieved social interaction, I can sometimes struggle. |
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Alleys, snickets and paths used by criminals to access properties and escape from crime scenes across York could be shut off under a groundbreaking scheme. |
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This was her escape from the harsh reality of the real world. |
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He then merely raised his hands above his head and ancient phrases started to escape from his lips as a black sphere of nothingness started to appear between his palms. |
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Decadent, adults-only desserts that warm over your soul provide an escape from hum-drum food found in university cafeterias and surrounding student-oriented restaurants. |
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Orlando itself, that is, is a form of escape from novelistic conventions, perhaps even a gypsylike text in that it is adventurous, marginal, playful, and defiant. |
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His second ordeal is to be turned into an old hag, disguised in the clothes of an old aunt reputed to be a witch in order to escape from Mr F again. |
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A lack of empathy with republican ideals leads him to doubt the value of the desire for independence that impels subjugated peoples to seek an escape from empire. |
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So what's the next best option to escape from the sultry weather? |
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Set on the fringes of South Lakeland, the village is a much quieter place which attracts visitors looking for an escape from the honeypot tourist towns of the Lakes. |
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Fire brigade spokesman Laurent Vibert said the four victims choked to death on the fumes of the fire as they tried to escape from their rooms to the roof of the hotel. |
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Its location, however, offers an easy escape from the hubbub of the downtown area and an ideal resort for enjoying rich cultural heritage and beautiful scenery. |
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Maybe it's an escape from the outside world where many of us do battle with the small inconsiderations of strangers and the big ones of colleagues and businesses. |
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Of course, we wish to be inscribed in the book of life, but it should be a life that we wish to be in rather than one that we seek to escape from. |
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When there is separation from the familiar, when there is escape from the habitual, rules of social convention are not enforceable with the same efficacy as at home. |
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The migration of former slaves to the Midwest during the Civil War was a flight toward freedom as well as an escape from the violence and chaos of war. |
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Foucan sees Free Running as more than a spectacle, it is a way of life, with a spiritual dimension plucked from popular culture and allowing an escape from everyday reality. |
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He was screaming and carrying on and raving and cussing and taunting me and trying his best to escape from whatever restraints we put him in so that he could come after me. |
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The victim apparently tried to escape from the attic fire by crawling toward the furthermost point from the chimney, where a cubbyhole might have provided an exit. |
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Too often, outmatched pilots looking for escape from a losing battle will feign a fatal hit and nose their aircraft over into a bogus death spiral. |
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The notion of escape from the present is ubiquitous in these works, consistent with the presumption underlying the idea of Utopia as a place of retreat from the present world. |
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She'd thought that as an apprentice she'd be able to escape from some of the more uncomfortable luxuries of her wealthy background, but even at the Temple proprieties ruled. |
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For the fiction writer, the prose poem may be exhilarating because it allows an escape from the exigencies of the novel, novella, and short story. |
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Some people would tell the story of your earlier life as an escape from the austerity and puritanism and greyness and lack of colour of Britain at that time. |
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The actual art-historical purpose of this show is to help Signac escape from the shadow of Georges Seurat, the master theorist of pointillism, or divisionism. |
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The first recorded sighting of the Loch Ness Monster dates from the 6th century when one of Saint Columba's monks had a narrow escape from its jaws. |
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This tropical China native is a rare escape from cultivation. |
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Work can provide an escape from debilitating poverty, sometimes by allowing a young person to move away from an impoverished environment. |
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The crew and the captain went to the foreship to escape from him and he tried to get them there as well. |
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The fueros provided a means of escape from the feudal system, as fueros were only granted by the monarch. |
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He tried to escape from the castle in 1648, but was unable to get through the bars of his window. |
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Obtaining freedom was not a guarantee of escape from poverty or from many aspects of slave life. |
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Water and other volatiles can more easily and gradually escape from mafic lava. |
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Hence the ability of hydrogen to escape from the atmosphere may have influenced the nature of life that developed on Earth. |
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The trip offers an escape from the banalities of daily life. |
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However, he managed to escape from the castle after killing his guard and moving down by using a rope made of bedsheets. |
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In May 1942, three youngsters, Peter Hassall, Maurice Gould, and Denis Audrain, attempted to escape from Jersey in a boat. |
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Despite the death of Robert, his army won the battle and Charles the Simple had to escape from the battlefield. |
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Other plausible explanations include escape from predators, shedding parasites, or to gulp or expel air. |
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Joseph Harrop in his 1764 A New History of England, suggests that after his escape from Ely, Hereward went to Scotland. |
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Its intelligence was apparent both in its ability to escape from fishnets and in its collaboration with fishermen. |
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He was captured after the failed Second Cornish Uprising of 1497 and executed in 1499, after attempting to escape from prison. |
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Roy Flechner also asserts the improbability of an escape from servitude and journey of the kind that Patrick purports to have undertaken. |
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They spend their lives in the water, having to mate, give birth, molt or escape from predators, like killer whales, underwater. |
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Like other marine mammals, seals sleep in water with half of their brain awake so that they can detect and escape from predators. |
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Entering the lobby, one thus also enters an associative net that at once physicalizes anxiety and suggests an escape from it. |
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Camelot chief executive Dianne Thompson said that daydreaming provided escape from the pressures of modern life. |
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An aggressive strain of mutant giant piranhas escape from the River Amazon and head for Florida. |
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So, eager to escape from the norm, I tried the fillet steak pitta with chargrilled veg. |
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They spend most of their lives in the water, but come ashore to mate, give birth, molt or escape from predators, like sharks and killer whales. |
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Symbolists sought escape from reality, expressing their personal dreams and visions through color, form, and composition. |
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Following escape from a pressurized submarine, the crew is at risk of developing decompression sickness. |
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Mr Arnold''s dad, leading stoker Walter Arnold, aged 27, was the last of four men to escape from the sub before the escape hatch jammed. |
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Habermas, in Bronner's view, seeks escape from relativism yet becomes mired in liberal establishmentarianism. |
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Players will control characters such as Steve McQueen's baseball-loving GI as they try to escape from the World War II prison camp. |
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The delightful British film recounts the story of a group of brave hens plotting to escape from a factory farm. |
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A smoke alarm is there to alert you in enough time for you to escape from your home. |
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As new viruses are made, the genetic material is packaged into spherical immature capsids that HIV uses to escape from the infected cell. |
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Connie Fisher stars as Elvis-obsessed parking meter attendant Gemma Perkins who starts stealing cash to fund an escape from her dreary existence. |
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But even knowing that he had a narrow escape from injury or death, the 50-year-old Manhattanite does not regret his choice. |
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The salivary gland then becomes swollen and feels painful during eating because saliva cannot escape from the gland into the mouth. |
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The beleaguered pair are on a nightmare rollercoaster ride trying to escape from an armed swat team and killer bees. |
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Rambunctious pigs no longer escape from Zona Ainsworth's place and scamper across Mission Gorge Road to root among the willows. |
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Together, they leave Bree after another close escape from the Black Riders. |
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However, the much feared and loathed anthropic principle can provide an escape from the discomfort. |
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Gruffudd died in 1244, from a fall while trying to escape from his cell at the top of the Tower of London. |
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Montgomery was granted half of Conn O'Neill's land as a reward for helping him escape from prison. |
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With great social, political, and religious upheavings, it is trying to escape from the thraldom of the dark ages. |
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This hut consisted merely of a bench with a small roof, but it provided shelter from the frequent rains and escape from the house. |
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Once inside, they tire themselves trying to escape from these false exits, until they eventually fall into the tube. |
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Ten prisoners had been condemned to death by starvation in the wake of a successful escape from the camp. |
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When the aliens try to escape from Area 51, General Shanker calls for two of his men to stop Gary Supernova. |
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Malankara Nazranis used this opportunity to escape from Latin persecution with the help of Dutch East India Company. |
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He had a narrow escape from death, when in an incautious landing several of his companions were killed by people of Seram. |
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In 1640, John Punch was sentenced to lifetime servitude as punishment for trying to escape from his master Hugh Gwyn. |
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In 1553 a ship carrying slaves from Panama to Peru was stranded on Esmeralda, and the 25 slaves on board managed to escape from their captors. |
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He managed to escape from prison and plotted a rebellion that would free the island's slaves. |
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The museum has researched and documented the African Seminoles' escape from southern Florida. |
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To escape from the heavily polluted air of Caerphilly, his father accepted the offer of a new job and the family moved to Exeter, Devon, when Cooper was three. |
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But for Mississippians and visitors who classify themselves as the adventurous sort, the Shack Up Inn in Clarksdale may be the perfect escape from the ordinary. |
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It is possible to measure the average kinetic energy of constituent microscopic particles if they are allowed to escape from the bulk of the system. |
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He said, 'I foresee in the next five years needing a full time team just to retire Biomorphs who escape from their masters during city-wide role-play games. |
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Both regions are large, tidally influenced estuarine systems with multispecies salmon runs and shallow-water habitat for escape from killer whales. |
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Firstly, the force of gravitation would be so great that light would be unable to escape from it, the rays falling back to the star like a stone to the earth. |
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Sources said that some unknown persons opened fire killing a man near Dabba More in Orangi Town here, while the accused easily managed to escape from the scene. |
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In September he spent a fortnight on the island of Jura in the Inner Hebrides and saw it as a place to escape from the hassle of London literary life. |
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And, just to prove it, a few peat notes escape from their fruity clutches to add weight and depth, the intensity increasing as the temperature and oxidisation increases. |
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In a statement following Mirza's video confession, Wada said that all those named should be put on the Exit Control List so that they are not able to escape from Pakistan. |
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Angel also set world records for the longest time submerged under water, longest body suspension and quickest escape from a straightjacket upside-down. |
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Various species of rat demonstrate a similar function with their tails, known as degloving, in which the outer layer is shed in order for the animal to escape from a predator. |
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Thermal energy causes some of the molecules at the outer edge of the atmosphere to increase their velocity to the point where they can escape from Earth's gravity. |
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Not all that far into the future, these wonky phrases will escape from editorial pages and policy papers to become the stuff of extortion, gunplay, and mob bosses. |
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To escape from growing debt and rumour, Byron pressed his determination to marry Annabella, who was said to be the likely heiress of a rich uncle. |
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While light can still escape from the photon sphere, any light that crosses the photon sphere on an inbound trajectory will be captured by the black hole. |
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To escape from growing debts and rumours, Byron pressed his determination to marry Annabella, who was said to be the likely heiress of a rich uncle. |
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However, data also suggest that challenging behavior may also be maintained by negative reinforcement in the form of escape from demands, as well by access to tangibles. |
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Members of the lobate genera Bathocyroe and Ocyropsis can escape from danger by clapping their lobes, so that the jet of expelled water drives them backwards very quickly. |
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In 2011 Andrey Korotayev suggested that the emergence of major sociopolitical upheavals at the escape from the Malthusian trap is not an abnormal, but a regular phenomenon. |
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It is helpful to understand that ladybugs and stink bugs are driven into heated structures as they try to escape from the cooling outdoor temperatures. |
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This was seen in the Atlantic Salmon population when high levels of escape from Atlantic Salmon farms into the wild populations resulted in hybrids that had reduced survival. |
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Original petition for writ of habeas corpus to obtain release from custody under sentence to five years imprisonment for aiding coprisoners in endeavors to escape from jail. |
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And when he had hooked a fine perch, and Miss BELL made a dash at the line, And the fish flobbered back with a flop, JACK'S escape from a cuss cut it fine. |
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So credit is due to Stockport Metropolitan Borough Council for stepping in to try to help Stockport County escape from the iron grip of Sale Sharks owner Brian Kennedy. |
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Contemporary accounts of his time there describe it as happy except that he apparently found the summer heat oppressive and liked to escape from it to Cambridge. |
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Sand eels typically burrow in the sand to escape from predators. |
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Nothing, not even light, can escape from inside the event horizon. |
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Teesside's most senior judge told Tran he accepted that he was trapped with nowhere else to go if he had tried to escape from the farm in central Stockton. |
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Only a small fraction of the fish found in the Adriatic are attributed to recent processes such as Lessepsian migration, and escape from mariculture. |
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