There isn't much to say about loops, buttons, zippers, and drawstrings except that they should be sturdy and long-lasting. |
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That might not have mattered, except that they kept me waiting for about 20 minutes. |
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The building's exterior is largely unchanged, except that the carved mammal heads on the keystones of the first floor windows have been removed. |
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And she would shrug in recollection, unable to remember anything except that dull relief. |
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The men move and take as at draughts, except that in capturing they move either forwards or backwards like a draught king. |
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Well, I don't know much about him, except that he's a hunter, a woodsman, and a mercenary. |
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I'd like to see it myself, except that someone would probably recognize me and try to knock my block off. |
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But several requests to lay proposals before the bank met with no serious response except that the bank should simply lend more money. |
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They don't say very much about the cleaning liquid except that it comprises alcohol, tensides, lubricants and odorants. |
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I noticed Rob had a pretty good set of china, except that it showed its age with minor chips and scratches in the decal. |
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Nothing was that different from what could be seen in Los Angeles, except that the signs were all in French and there were no SUVs in sight. |
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Extant contracts do not give information about the profile of the roadbed except that it was not to be below the level of the adjacent ground. |
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We would have called a Rasta roko or a chakka jaam, except that we realised that we'd simply be replicating what's already happened. |
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We are little wiser about her wishes or perceptions, except that she would have liked to stay at The Arc. |
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Archery is like darts, except that the arrows are launched, not by hand, but by a recurve bow. |
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The side view would be slabby except that it is broken well by a crease along the door handle lines and a well-placed rubbing strip. |
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I've had some run-ins with Australian customs officials myself for no reason except that I was singing as I was waiting for my bags. |
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But then again, what would purposeful self-sabotage prove except that his listeners are all just force-fed lunkheads? |
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I can't remember much of the day except that we ate chips on the seafront and laughed at the sheer tackiness of everything. |
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Our lab manager helpfully suggested we could use regular water and then autoclave it, except that the autoclaves in the building don't work yet. |
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In the silence of the grove, she heard the pleasant babble of the stream, except that it was no longer a quiet sloshing. |
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The whole terminal looks like a giant school portable, except that it's got better air-conditioning. |
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The procedure is identical to that used for welding steel except that a special thermit mixture is required. |
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It is a land that is difficult to grow anything in, except that flora which is tough, resourceful and thorny. |
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So, what have we learned, except that I'm more or less a completely conflicted emotional basket case? |
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She had been here a month and almost nothing had changed except that she had more meat clinging to her bones. |
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It's similar to kick-boxing except that it incorporates grappling, throws and take downs. |
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Perhaps it shouldn't matter, except that the IPCC made such a big deal of the results at the time. |
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It would be fine, except that her pony tail keeps flicking in my face, and there's nowhere else for me to move. |
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It felt sort of like home except that dotted among the tick trefoils and geums were beautiful yellow oncidium orchids in full bloom. |
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I overuse semicolons for no particular reason except that I've always liked them. |
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Her house looked the same as Terry's on the outside except that the house was naked of flowers and trees in the front yard. |
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Soon coffee was prepared and served, just as it would be in any village home, except that the beans were crushed in a tin can with a crowbar. |
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In a word, he looked exactly like the ape dressed in the habit of a merry andrew, except that he had no hair. |
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It seems there is no good reason, except that we have had backwards-and-forwards toing and froing between parties. |
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According to Lee, the AFM is just like those used for metrology except that it actually comes in physical contact with the photomask. |
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In a nutshell, biennial plants are just like annual and perennial plants except that it takes them two years to complete their life cycles. |
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This photo and the one produced by Father Ernetti were identical, except that one was the mirror image of the other. |
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There is nothing wrong with his performance, except that he is drastically miscast as a quiet mathematician. |
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The consist was essentially the same except that this train had just one sleeper whereas our southbound had two. |
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Not a lot else to add really, except that I think I mixed my drinks a little and had a killer hangover that lasted well into Sunday afternoon! |
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It's in the same family as Daphne and the tubular flowers resemble those of its cousin, except that they are a bright, buttery yellow! |
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I'll say no more for fear of spoiling the fun, except that the twists don't alter the film's comic tone. |
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Now there is nothing immediately sinful about the process except that it probably wastes a lot of research time. |
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It almost feels normal sitting in English class, except that there are the underclassmen who look in the doorway to look at me. |
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The side view would be slabby except that it is broken well by a crease along the doorhandle lines and a well-placed rubbing strip. |
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In this play, the set also represents the urban slag heap of life, derelict it would seem except that it's not derelict. |
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He could muster no answer except that perhaps his eyes had minds of their own. |
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Markus didn't know what to think, except that they were demons, unordinary monsters. |
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There is no limit to the punishment except that it must not be unreasonable. |
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The game of wheelchair tennis follows the same rules as able bodied tennis except that a wheelchair player is allowed two bounces of the ball. |
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We do not know who won the high jump or the triple jump except that a couple of Swedes have gone bounding down the track in delight. |
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He was identical to the falling boy, except that instead of inky black wings, he had snowy white wings. |
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Soldiers resemble worker termites, except that they have enlarged brownish heads and strong, well-developed jaws. |
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The assay is similar to the Southern blot except that restriction enzyme digestion and denaturation of the mRNA are not needed. |
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Counting by fours is like counting by two except that every other count is skipped. |
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Growth conditions of the spring genotypes Lina and Manley were similar to those for winter genotypes except that no vernalization was required. |
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The sector is very similar to the one described in the text, except that it lacks the line of versed sines. |
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It might, except that the heavy right spin placed on the cue ball imparts a small amount of left spin to the object ball. |
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The Spaniards have no claim to property there except that they have established a few settlements and named rivers and capes. |
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The skull of a capybara is very much like that of a guinea pig, except that it is very much larger and more robust. |
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This is the same game as Three Card Brag, except that four cards are dealt to each player. |
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We hear very little of them except that they spoke a different language from their lords and the probability is that they never spoke Carib. |
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B Grade is similar to B Heart except that it permits sapwood as well as heartwood. |
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An interesting observation was that Compound D is identical to Compound Q except that they are optical isomers. |
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I had a normal pregnancy with no complications except that I got the hiccups a lot. |
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The means of subsistence were practically the same as those of to-day, except that cattle-raising was more general. |
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The arms of Dublin are virtually identical to those of Armagh, except that the Y-shaped pall has five rather than four black crosses on it. |
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He might even get 130, except that the remaining 100 is likely frozen up in this horn of plenty. |
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It is an exact duplicate of the regular stove, except that this one is all hand-made and chromium-plated and has my name engraved on it. |
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I have no affiliation with her company, except that I once reviewed the product that is now being pirated and circulated freely around. |
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Most people, including therapists, can tolerate nearly any epithet about themselves except that they are humorless. |
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He has every intention of refusing, except that Logan is not a man to cross, being pathologically unhinged. |
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Everything's just fine now, he reassured them, except that the design isn't finished and the architect is mysteriously taken ill. |
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I would even have believed that I imagined the whole thing, except that there was a cold bottle of water left on the seat next to me. |
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The fourth scenario is similar to the third except that the danger is not as imminent. |
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People don't know that much about him, except that he makes incredible music. |
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He seems to have had little direct contact with the British Museum, except that in November 1943 he presented one French incunable to the museum. |
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No great surprise there, except that this common-sense finding demolishes the implied presumptions of fervid gun control advocates. |
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This approach is not so different from scientific thinking, except that this is only the first step in science, not the final conclusion. |
|
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Last November she pitched up in York knowing nothing of the city except that Bettys' Tearooms was based here, and without a friend to her name. |
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I cut an overly sweet cake and got a gift I do not remember except that it was covered with plain silver wrapping paper. |
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This might all be fine, except that many isolationists I've talked to seem unhappy with their relationship to their team. |
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Slides were prepared using the same enzyme treatment employed for fluorochromes, except that they were not aged before staining. |
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After that, the game could have gone either way, except that Tipperary were again forcing the pace. |
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We don't know much about it, except that it's got a creepy girl on the front. |
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All there except that the suppliers sent the wrong crispbreads and the crackers were out of stock. |
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The exercise is performed in essentially the same way as the rotating french press except that you won't rotate your forearms. |
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Filling in the various forms is a bit like filling in a cryptic crossword, except that the answers aren't published in the paper the next day. |
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Little is known about him except that he was curule aedile c.67, praetor c.64, and later a pro praetor. |
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It began to read like a predictable novel, except that the baddies always seemed to win. |
|
We still get people who have no interest except that they are having something for free. |
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It's reminiscent of other press gleanings, except that he makes no pretense that his work is objective. |
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This was an underwater version of gliding and parachuting, except that we had to avoid missing another drop-off. |
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There is no specific division between a wine glass and a goblet except that the latter is larger, but a very small glass is called a cordial. |
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Nothing else was done to the land, except that it was resumed for the purpose of preventing cattle being depastured on it. |
|
Now, your idea of a dictionary attack is interesting, except that as I pointed out above, most people don't go looking for an 8 character word. |
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It would have made for marvelous photos, except that I was too busy hanging on to my horse for grim death. |
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Point B represents the same total cost to the economy except that now emissions trading is prohibited. |
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The harsh regime resembled the worst British factories, except that it took place in a stifling and disease-ridden climate. |
|
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It's not much of a guide to anything, except that the car won't disintegrate in the next 20 minutes. |
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If I should accede one day to Heaven, it must be there as it is here, except that I will be rid of my dull senses and my heavy bones. |
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Max and Matthew are twins and they look completely similar except that Max dyed his blond hair black. |
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The second half was really a mirror of the first, except that the Wolfhill defence was more solid. |
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Pretty ordinary flat type food I think except that we hardly ever had vegetables. |
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There was a light, cool breeze, which was pleasant enough except that it made the skin feel chilled and clammy. |
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He understood them, except that there were some parts he was not able to finish. |
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It has nothing to do with it except that it has a lot to do with his own credibility on various issues. |
|
It's all like home, except that here food is made and served with scrupulous hygiene. |
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It felt like I was in the torture scene from a science fiction movie, except that it didn't hurt. |
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The Medium Lobster is a higher being, except that it doesn't look that way to us. |
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I have a similar problem, except that mine is all to do with people who are lost. |
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It was said to have a similar appearance to the original homestead, except that it was built in brick. |
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Similar techniques are also being used to produce chocolate which is normal in every way, except that it is chewy. |
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It was like being in busy shipping lanes, except that they were full of whales. |
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The main design of all the houses was the same except that it varied in size. |
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And this for a game which had no special appeal except that it featured the old rivals. |
|
So far, no word is out on where the show will be shot exactly, except that it will be somewhere near Panama. |
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It's an impressive record, except that it loses some of its gloss on closer examination. |
|
The plant goes 24 hours a day, 7 days a week except that operations are reduced on Dominion Day, Labour Day and Christmas Day. |
|
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He was similarly dressed except that his shirt hung more loosely over his body. |
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I have no quarrel with your terminology except that it has connotations of teenage American witches in my mind. |
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Among the Caribs, the girls undergo a similar ritual, except that stinging ants rather than wasps are used. |
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That should have ended it, except that certain newspapers have grown irritable and waspish with Tony Blair. |
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The tank has a turret that can be used like the water cannon, except that it destroys whatever it hits. |
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Players must follow suit, except that a non-trump lead may be trumped even if you have a card of the suit led. |
|
I will erect a rabbit-proof fence like the famous one Down Under, except that my fence would be about 1,100 miles shorter. |
|
This diagram is the same as the one above except that the major pressure and wind zones have been replaced by a typical isobaric weather map. |
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As usual, nobody seems to know where the words originated, except that they both grew out of gambling, the race track and general raffishness. |
|
Then came the bullfights, except that the toreadors, being slaves or convicts, had been given no chance to practice, so the bull usually gored them to death. |
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Oddly, as Hewitt and Garrett continue their colloquy, they seem to expose the threadbare nature of the story, except that they manage not to notice. |
|
We know little about him except that he is a commando with the rank of E-8 or master sergeant. |
|
It was the same kind of clipping that you do yourself every week, except that only a small piece of only one nail was clipped. |
|
In this case, not a lot has changed in the past millennium and a half, except that we're more likely to be wearied by tedium, ennui or heartsickness than by physical fatigue. |
|
But now, 30 years later, he seems to be doing the same thing except that this time he's accepting the new conventional wisdom that the domino theory was overblown. |
|
And Jerry Lee never said much of anything about it, except that day, when he had a long talk with McCauley. |
|
It is similar to the two wheeled speedway racers, except that these competition vehicles are 20 times the size and go one and a half times quicker. |
|
The evenings probably weren't all that unlike the other readings, except that the material was probably more instantly accessible, and, arguably, discardable. |
|
Many men, in these post-feminist times, would like to follow women down the road of reclaiming their bodies, except that there is no-one to reclaim them from. |
|
I am not sure how helpful that is, except that the communing certainly keeps us from feeling totally isolated in our perplexity. |
|
|
These junctures are analogous to the contacts occurring in an annular solar eclipse, except that now the dark object is much smaller than the Moon. |
|
Taking off backside isn't much different than frontside except that now your weight is centered low towards the inner edge on the middle of the board. |
|
Back in the eighties when the money was flowing, the place stank of evil and unacceptable moral standards, pretty much like today, except that the economy is in the toilet. |
|
That's all fine and dandy, except that it propagates a potentially false story from an unsavory source. |
|
Electron paramagnetic resonance is a spectroscopic technique similar to nuclear magnetic resonance except that microwave radiation is employed instead of radio frequencies. |
|
She would have done the same to Judith, except that Carol and Tyreese interrupted her. |
|
He was pleased to find the club more or less as he remembered it, except that the couch and chairs had been re-covered, and the espresso machine had recently been upgraded. |
|
She'd come close to hitting him except that he'd finished with such a charming smile that she couldn't stay irritated at him for being a chauvinist pig. |
|
As I write this, the police are looking for some creep who murdered an innocent young woman, apparently at random and without any motivation except that he's a fruitcake. |
|
In the first movement the oboe introduces the melody, quasi-ironic in its soupy neo-Romanticism, almost crass except that it avoids predictability, and is counterpointed. |
|
She had been unable to say where she was except that it was wooded. |
|
Those who were chosen by God were no better than reprobates except that by his irresistible grace the elect could be brought to hate their sin, as Sir Walter does. |
|
The general pattern is similar to that in Figure 4, except that the leftmost fragment in the FRI region now appears to be associated with flowering time. |
|
There is not much of a case for this, except that basketball is played indoors on a manmade surface and is of its own invention rather than an outgrowth of another sport. |
|
The results presented in Table 3 are calculated similarly to those in the rightmost columns of Table 2, except that no limitation has been placed on annual SIPP payments. |
|
Immediately she was pushed away and the ground would have cushion her fall except that would have hurt, but she was cushion by a warm body instead. |
|
Day in and day out, the therapists gave back rubs and applied hot packs to people who were perfectly healthy, except that their backs were killing them. |
|
I can't tell you more about this fragile play, except that Vada and her coevals Enid and Marybell like to play canasta and gossip in a tree house. |
|
All my efforts come to nothing except that I am seen as an interferer. |
|
Most importantly, monokaryotic hyphae can produce basidia and spores that are indistinguishable from sexually produced spores, except that they are all the same mating type. |
|
|
What more can one say except that a lot of us will feel, in heart and body, a continuing sense of loss at the disappearance of this admirable business. |
|
Well, we see the world in our own colours, or perceived colours, which is not unlike normal people, except that some of our colours tend to merge. |
|
The scoring is the same as for the players' hands except that a flush in the crib only scores if all four crib cards and the start card are of the same suit. |
|
Horizontal sliding windows are like double-hung windows except that the sashes are located on the left and right edges rather than on the tops and bottoms. |
|
Since they spend many months of the year at sea, the Horned Puffin's diet is not completely known, except that the chicks are fed almost exclusively fish. |
|
The lovers' tiff seems inconsequential, except that you know it's not. |
|
It functions in the same way as normal television reception, except that viewers need an extra box attached to their TV aerial to decode the digital signals. |
|
Swimming forward of the bridge, the wreckage resembles that of the stern decks, except that the anchor machinery and forward masts have fallen to the seabed. |
|
For a long while zinfandel was the mystery grape, apparently sui generis except that nobody knew where it came from. |
|
This behavior is also found in the Nearctic gray jay, Perisoreus canadensis, except that, in this species, allofeeding may be allowed during the fledgling period. |
|
Nothing much happened except that I discovered the automatic paper towel dispenser and proceeded to contort my body into various positions to get the thing to work. |
|
The classic Range Rover shape is kept in the new design except that the squareness is softened by some subtle rounding off at the edges and front. |
|
He also distributes untold numbers of these papers to various parts of town, except that he can't at the moment, because his beater car finally died. |
|
There's nothing to say about Erik Benson except that his essays are chock-full of genius ideas, and you should read everything he's written for the last month. |
|
It was much like modern gallery openings, except that it was held during the afternoon so that gaslight would not throw off the subtleties of Whistler's harmonies. |
|
Nothing especially surprising there, except that she kept opening the door instead of leaving it ajar while cleaning. |
|
Total RNA preparations were made as described in Ashburner, except that tissues were homogenized directly, without previous grinding in liquid nitrogen. |
|
This binding is the same as Fig.4 except that one side of the bias strip is first attached to the hat and the loose side is slip-stitched into place. |
|
No one was quite sure how Pepper made it to the bitter end, except that the show's producers loved the drama she provoked. |
|
An obligee may reject the obligor's partial performance, except that the partial performance of its obligations does not harm the obligee's interests. |
|
|
Rock wool loose-fill insulation is similar to fiberglass except that it is spun from blast furnace slag and other rock-like materials instead of molten glass. |
|
Sunday was spent in similar vein, except that it involved me reorganising the shed, and then installing a set of hooks in the shed to hang the bikes up. |
|
But it is based on the chord structure of what I played before it, except that it was based on a diminished scale. |
|
There is no effective treatment for pityriasis rosea, except that patients who experience severe pruritus may benefit from topical corticosteroids and oral antihistamines. |
|
I found a newsletter re Polarbound but very little was given except that he may be stuck in ice floes at this time. |
|
He was tall, dark and handsome. He was considered the catch of the day, except that he never got caught. |
|
Explain that a cryptarithm is a like a crytogram except that the letters represent numbers. |
|
Roman law was not consistent about the status of slaves, except that they were considered like any other moveable property. |
|
His will reveals that he had two infant children in England, of whom nothing is known except that they were in the care of a nurse. |
|
It is similar to outdoor cricket except that is played in an indoor sports hall with 6 players per team. |
|
They were governed much as royal colonies except that lord proprietors, rather than the king, appointed the governor. |
|
These scats are black and twisted and can be confused with those of the fox, except that they reputedly have a floral odor. |
|
The distinction between these orders and decorations is somewhat vague, except that these honorific orders still implied a membership in a group. |
|
A color television system is identical except that an additional signal known as chrominance controls the color of the spot. |
|
The Big Breakfast is the main item at cafes, which is similar to the British cooked breakfast, except that it seldom includes black pudding. |
|
Ptolemy's maps reflect generally the same tribal names as the Tabula Peutingeriana, except that the Tabula does not mention the Sicambri. |
|
Amphibious turtles normally have limbs similar to those of tortoises, except that the feet are webbed and often have long claws. |
|
After that, there was peace in Italy, and the appearance of restoration, except that the central government now resided in Constantinople. |
|
Mr Vholes remained immovable, except that he secretly picked at one of the red pimples on his yellow face with his black glove. |
|
Not much is known about this war, except that the Roman generals included Marcus Valerius Maximianus, Pescennius Niger and Clodius Albinus. |
|
|
Little is known of Vasco's early childhood except that he was the third of four boys in his family. |
|
Michael's troubles may be over soon, except that Christal claims to be preggers with triplets. |
|
There is no more information about Taibuga except that some say he drove the Novgoroders from his lands. |
|
The tensile test is basically the same, except that it measures the pullout strength. |
|
The OED quotation from 1609 does not say what a mere is, except that it looks black. |
|
All well and good, except that it had taken almost 14 days for the first of the whiteners to arrive. |
|
Bushy juneberries have the same qualities as the trees do, except that they are more multi-stemmed and shrubby. |
|
What's wrong with that, except that it denies HS2 fantasists the world's most recklessly expensive train-set? |
|
We still know nothing about her at this point, except that in Paris she is reduced to begging. |
|
Vestiture as in male except that abdominal venter has long slender setae and the carapace and abdomen lack the conspicuous recumbent scales. |
|
Valence state is similar to oxidation state except that a further stipulation of the energy levels of the electrons in the orbitals must be made. |
|
The brassiest move would constitute fraud, except that lawmakers have been open and honest about what they're doing. |
|
The Smurfs 2 belies no ambition to be different from the first film except that change in locale. |
|
The Rancho del Oro material is identical to living coots, except that the ulna and tibiotarsus are slightly more slender. |
|
To be caught in a speed trap does not prove anything except that it is the victim's turn to be on the wrong road at the wrong time. |
|
Third, both lines are identical except that one line is transposed upward by some standard musical interval. |
|
An example is the inflorescence of Gleditsia triacanthos, a system of racemes except that it is terminated by an ebracteate flower, as in a cyme. |
|
We use a puck, which is just like an ice hockey puck, except that it has a heavy metal centre to it so it stays on the bottom of the pool. |
|
The gentle alaunt is built exactly like a greyhound, except that he has a short, thick head. |
|
Today there is very little variation throughout the Southern States in general, except that Savannah, Austin, Miami, and New Orleans are excluded from the merger. |
|
|
Consequently each language contains many pairs of verbs, corresponding to each other in meaning, except that one expresses perfective aspect and the other imperfective. |
|
Telicity might be considered a kind of lexical aspect, except that it is typically not a property of a verb in isolation, but rather a property of an entire verb phrase. |
|
This dictionary was similar to the previous published one except that it normalized the pronunciations for all characters into the pronunciation of the Beijing dialect. |
|
IgG enzyme immunoassays for MCPyV and TSPyV were conducted as described, except that we omitted subtraction of antigen-free background in the MCPyV assay. |
|
Not much is known about them except that they lived in the area between 100 BC and the coming of the Europeans and created World Heritage rock art. |
|
The services during Bright Week are nearly identical to those on Easter itself, except that they do not take place at midnight, but at their normal times during the day. |
|
There wasn't much difference, except that the coffee wasn't so groundy. |
|
It looks like any other clear glycerin soap and acts like it, too, except that it smells very pepperminty and left my skin smelling sort of sharp. |
|
The River Avon formed much of the border with Gloucestershire, except that the hundred of Bath Forum, which straddles the Avon, formed part of Somerset. |
|
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. |
|
I like this very much, except that it is difficult to pronounce in French. |
|
The created reservoirs are similar to those of tidal barrages, except that the location is artificial and does not contain a preexisting ecosystem. |
|
It has always been the last part of Sir Henry Wood's Fantasia on British Sea Songs, except that for many years up until 2000, the Sargent arrangement has been used. |
|
They are quite similar to turbofans in many respects, except that they use a traditional propeller to provide the majority of thrust, rather than a ducted fan. |
|
This includes evolution of this new genre from traditional folk music, essentially contemporary folk music except that that English genre term is not commonly applied to it. |
|
Little is known about the young man John hired to instruct his son, except that he treated the younger boy harshly, chiding him for being slow and wayward. |
|
The term committee is also used to describe Grand Committee, where the same rules of procedure apply as in the main chamber, except that no divisions may take place. |
|
Pete Campbell would be just another irritating office brown-noser, a prep school Sammy Glick, except that he too has a screw loose and a mystical rapport with firearms. |
|
Each member may make no more than one speech on a motion, except that the mover of the motion may make one speech at the beginning of the debate and another at the end. |
|
Until World War II, counties played differing numbers of matches, except that all counties were required to play 28 matches in each season from 1929 to 1932 inclusive. |
|
|
The Chinese flowering ash is similar to the flowering ashes of Europe except that its flowers turn purple in the summer after first blooming a yellow color. |
|
Realised by advertising agency Butter, based in Duesseldorf, Germany, the calendar shows 12 models u except that the images are of their X-rayed skeletal structures. |
|
In the strictness with which he holds this view he belongs in the company of the novelists I have cited, except that he is unkinder and less charitable than they are. |
|
The left-hand figure remains in essence the same except that it is no longer rooted to the spot, but now it clearly accompanies the tuniest of tunes. |
|
I received one month's pay in specie while on the march to Virginia, in the year 1781, and except that, I never received any pay worth the name while I belonged to the army. |
|
It is not known exactly where his travels took him except that Milton later reported that Marvell had mastered four languages, including French, Italian and Spanish. |
|
Note that there are no approximations involved in these equations, except that each stability constant is defined as a quotient of concentrations, not activities. |
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A Grand Committee operates similarly to a Committee of the Whole House, except that no votes can take place, so amendments must be unanimously agreed upon. |
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