Trace elements and oxygen isotopes are useful geochemical indicators of the chemistry of the waters from which the chert precipitated. |
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This attitude comes mostly from the idea that American middle-class values are the touchstone from which all else should be judged. |
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The polarity of the micro-gametophyte of flowering plants is related to the proximal-distal axis of the microspore from which it develops. |
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That threw the undercapitalized domestic banks into a crisis from which they never emerged. |
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The front undercarriage was retracted and the front of the fuselage, from which the cannon projected, slightly buried. |
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The solar motion is relatively constant, but the planetary motion appears to change greatly according to the direction from which it is seen. |
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He suffered multiple fractures and internal injuries from which he could not survive. |
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Finding no skyscrapers and tall buildings from which he can swing, he looks for an alternative. |
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The boiling point of an alcohol is always higher than the hydrocarbon from which it is derived. |
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Their undoing was their failure to capitalise on at least three overlaps from which tries beckoned. |
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Co-ordinated with a small parachute drop, it forced the Romanians to abandon the positions from which they were bombarding the port. |
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By drifting from side to side and dropping deep he found space from which to torment the other team. |
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A friend of mine maintains he survived because he wore slip-on shoes from which he managed to get free. |
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She also collected bookplates and the woodblocks and metal plates from which they were printed. |
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The drawer from which he had taken his only booty from the raid was locked now. |
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The baby's parents were sitting at a front-window table from which they had an unobstructed view of their child. |
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Near the place where we sat down there were some large boulderstones, from which hung pointed icicles. |
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In the center of the homestead is an unroofed, fenced cattle pen, the sibaya, from which women are barred. |
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Many possess, at the base of the ovary, a disc-like nectary from which nectar is secreted via modified stomata. |
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No matter from which angle we analyze this theme, the other angles can never be completely bracketed out. |
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A heavy snowstorm came upon them and he contracted a cold from which he never recovered. |
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They believe their own hype, and they have a powerful soapbox from which to promote it. |
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No one criticizes a singer for failing to present evidence, or neglecting to cite the sources from which the singer obtained information. |
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The word brake or bracken is one of the many plant names from which some of our English surnames are derived, as Brack, Breck, Brackenridge, etc. |
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He resigned because of ill health and in 1889 suffered a mental breakdown from which he never properly recovered. |
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Most farmers breed pigs, sheep, and dairy cattle, from which they obtain meat, wool, milk, cheese, and butter. |
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Shortlisting may apply to all posts and panels may be formed from which future vacancies may be filled. |
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Bob hangs his head and acts like he's sheepish and sorry, but he's entered into a world, within himself, from which he will not emerge. |
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Its head looks like a dandelion clock, from which flows a long tail which broadens and splits about a degree or so along its length. |
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Yet the report provides a broader vantage from which to assess such advances. |
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Bravais space lattices represent the 14 basic lattice types from which according to Bravais, practically all natural crystals originate. |
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The moist duck is an ideal platform from which to show off the unusually tasty brown sauce. |
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In the west are well-watered hills, rich in iron ore, from which run several rivers to the dry veld in the middle of the country. |
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There are dozens of beaches from which to choose and they are long, sandy and sheltered, with clear, sparkling water. |
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The settlement was long abandoned now, reclaimed by the verdure from which it had been carved. |
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This provided a stable framework from which to generate hypotheses, and a sense of conceptual unity and veridicality about the work. |
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Thus began the great trance from which he was to emerge on the full moon day of the month of Vesak as a Fully Enlightened One, a Buddha. |
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On the domestic front, plants provide the materials from which we build our houses and landscape our gardens. |
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The company carefully monitors the effectiveness of its advertising spend, and monitors the sites from which punters travel to place bets. |
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Stem cells, taken from embryos, are the basic building blocks from which tissues and organs grow. |
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Latin and Greek were long coupled together, because of the contiguous history, mythology and culture from which they descended. |
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Crookes's tube consisted of a glass bulb, from which most of the air had been removed, encasing two metal plates called electrodes. |
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The spikemosses are creeping or ascendant plants with simple, scale-like leaves on branching stems from which roots also arise. |
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This new borough was also endowed with land, the income from which was used to pay the salaries of two burgesses at parliament. |
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The vegetation also provided splints from which the Indians wove baskets, which were considered vital for religious use. |
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For example, the team recovered six larger stones known as cores, from which flint tools used for butchering the elephant were chipped. |
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He told her how he had been suddenly placed in a position of terrible difficulty, from which neither honour nor duty would allow him to recede. |
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What's more, the house had a cache of hidden rooms from which one could access ever-grander aspects of it, including a movie theater. |
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In some of his writings he describes this emptiness as the nowhere from which joy emerges without a cause and the nowhere to which it returns. |
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He walked up the stairs and to the main hallway, from which stairways led up to different floors. |
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The hagiology from which he has benefited in the last 50 years suggests that he may well have been right. |
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A central computer then allocates a saddle cloth number to each horse and determines the stall from which it will start. |
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You will also have your own phone from which long distance calls can be made by calling collect or using a charge card. |
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He jumped away from it, off the edge of a steep cliff, from which he now knew he may simply fall forever and never hit the ground. |
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Nearby on the floor sat her knitting basket, from which she leaned over and pulled a crochet hook and a ball of gold-colored yarn from. |
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University campuses are always some of the most interesting places from which to view a shifting world. |
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This seemed a good starting point from which to develop strategies for resistance to trafficking. |
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The white marble from which Michelangelo carved his statues came from these mountains. |
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Andrea Pirlo takes it, but the ball cannons off the wall and goes out for a corner, from which Inter clear. |
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Often, as is the case here, it is a handy tool for misdirection or a neat handle from which to hang accusations. |
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He's got enough steaks in the freezer, and a warehouse of odds and ends from which to pull together a packet of rarities. |
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He carefully poured some of the flask's contents into a cup from which rose a thin column of white steam. |
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You could see where the old range had been and the rings from which the hunks of meat would have been hung. |
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It is wonderful to have a convenient airport from which to jet off on holiday or on business. |
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They not only have the law to answer to, but the Hackney Carriage Licensing Authority and the taxi office from which they work. |
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Italy get a free-kick wide on the left, from which De Rossi deliberately stands five yards offside. |
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Wild-type conidiophores are radially symmetrical and consist of a stalk with a single vesicle from which multiple primary sterigmata bud. |
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They normally possess a central square from which lanes and streets extend in a straight line to four cardinal points. |
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A sty is an infection of one of the follicles from which the eyelashes grow. |
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The name of the game is carom, the original game from which billiards and later snooker developed. |
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On cue, Ashby entered with a cart possessing several trays from which delicious aromas rose. |
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To answer this, one must look at the heritage from which this trend has arisen. |
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The billingsellaceans may form the ancestral stock from which all the subsequent articulate brachiopods are believed to have been derived. |
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The scientists found that primitive freshwater plants provided the ancestral stock from which all of the earth's green land plants are descended. |
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They are close to the ancestral stock from which other pteraspidiforms evolved. |
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I was at the peak of my hawkishness about the cold war, and that was the perspective from which I was teaching. |
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This ongoingness of negotiation builds an institutional memory in Coreper from which the permanent representatives learn to draw. |
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In massive wooden sculptures achieved by direct carving, Raoul Hague world to reveal the individuality of the trees from which they were cut. |
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Another staple of Liberian cuisine is cassava, a tropical plant with starchy roots from which tapioca is obtained. |
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Briant painted a picture of a meaningless post-pub altercation, an open-handed push, a momentary spat from which both parties walked away. |
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It is a subject familiar to us from screwball farces, and one from which a straight drama could also be drawn. |
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A line from which unstressed syllables have been dropped is said to be truncated or catalectic. |
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Two different regions of activity were identified for DIA, from which only the most cathodal was consistently interpreted. |
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Officers made 43 arrests, from which 23 people have been charged or received official cautions. |
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The print from which this was struck was in remarkably good shape as there is little in the way of wear and tear. |
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The print from which the transfer was struck isn't perfect, but its flaws are minor. |
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The print from which the transfer was struck is riddled with pocks and specks. |
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A bronze figure of Hercules supports an ormolu bowl surmounted by a triple row of plumes, from which rise the three candle branches. |
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She was as large and powerful as the animal from which her blanket was made. |
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They have to believe that the core business is going through a bad patch, from which it will recover. |
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It was outfitted with a comfortable seat, providing an oddly serene viewing platform from which to contemplate the glowing installation. |
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As it turned out, their stuttering progress entitled them to an easier second round, from which they went on to win the thing. |
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The surrounding snow-capped peaks are hidden by thick cloud from which frozen rain floats lazily down, reflecting light from illuminated windows. |
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These, when provided with permanent garrisons, would become the centres from which the countryside could be subdued and governed. |
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The Amen bottle reinvents the lines of a hip flask from which the Mugler signature star emerges. |
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From it, blown green glass dolphins supported a smaller basin from which sprang bizarre blown-glass hippogriffs. |
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But the specific Sufism from which the whirling dervishes originated, which is Turkish, is as simple as this. |
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The climb lands in a pool, from which the water flows off left and down a steep shaft for 10m to a little sump. |
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It is the necessary baseline from which Harris makes the leap into her imaginative world, but it can sometimes get a bit too close to home. |
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Furthermore, Hawaii was a major naval base from which we operated our Pacific fleet. |
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They painstakingly isolated more than 6,000 virgin females from which they collected pheromone chemicals. |
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I actually had a menu from which to make my meal selection and the food was incredibly palatable. |
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The gaseous mixture from which the C 1 chlorocarbon is recovered comprises one or more noncondensible gases. |
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She fought back and sustained severe injuries from which she bled profusely. |
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They are decorated with stylised masks on cartouches, from which there extend swags carrying fruit. |
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To the left of the kitchen is a pantry and utility room, from which there is access to a large storeroom. |
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As a further incentive, include a swatch of material from which to base individual outfits. |
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She was a paraplegic, but she still held a job, most of the money from which her father used for beer. |
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In later life he had what his colleagues regarded as Parkinson's disease or a related movement disorder, from which he died. |
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Her grey hair fell in a combed central parting to her earlobes, from which pearl ear rings hung. |
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What follows shows the synchronicity of ideas and events around the year 1884, from which some conclusions are drawn. |
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And if they could expect a pay day only if they won, that made them partners in an enterprise from which they expected to profit. |
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I suspected, though, that Donald had more than a touch of hypochondria, a malady from which a number of our relatives suffered. |
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The cheese gets its name from a variety of pear from which perry is made, and in which the cheese is washed. |
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They set out the next day and at evening approached a small hut from which a poor peasant emerged. |
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In awe of your older brother Dane, you shot a pea-shooter at his horse, causing it to throw him and inflict injuries from which he later died. |
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He was looking out his window, from which he could see the sheep pen perfectly. |
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These were put in brackish water near Martinez, from which point they began a coastwise migration. |
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It holds true that culture makes up the fabric of any society from which people draw their individual and cultural identity. |
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All enzyme assays were performed with naked seeds, i.e. seeds from which the pericarp was removed. |
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The pericopes are necessarily abbreviations of the larger sermons or stories from which they are taken. |
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The gamma function is undefined for zero and negative integers, from which we can conclude that factorials of negative integers do not exist. |
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The heads will face one another topped with a helmet and lamp from which beams of light will illuminate the carriageways. |
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History was a realm of illusions, a dream or a nightmare from which the wise seek to awaken. |
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Michael's health began to fail about two years ago and it deteriorated seriously from which he did not really recover. |
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Obdurate and immovable, they stood, no less than the stock from which they had come. |
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It is central to the notion of personhood and community and is not something from which an individual can easily withdraw. |
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In the modern practice of the Church of England, the term faldstool is given to the reading desk from which the litany is read. |
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So having wandered round the battlefield inspecting the impedimenta of the combatants, we come at last to the question from which it all started. |
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Orhan Veli's colloquialism is radical and transcends the middle class from which he came. |
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The laboratory has about 19 primary colours of dye from which they can produce around 6000 different colours and shades. |
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The materials alchemists used were typically impure mixtures whose composition varied according the site from which they originated. |
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There are many sorts of inappropriate behaviour from which our children need protection. |
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There is something right about commending the body to the care of the earth, letting the earth from which we came work its quiet dissolution. |
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Through the late 1960s, there was no operating experience data from which to derive cost estimates for commercialized nuclear plants. |
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The Flower Fund is funded by bequests, along with donations given instead of flowers at funerals, from which it takes its name. |
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This the survey from which rates originated and gives information on every householder, house and land holding in every townland in the county. |
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Wheat berries are the mother grain from which pasta, bread, and flour are derived. |
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Wood, now 17, began to take Pilates to strengthen her midsection, the area from which a dancer's strength emanates. |
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Spermatogonia are the mitotic germ cells of the testis from which sperm arise by spermatogenesis. |
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The traffic in human body parts is a grisly business from which most Nigerians will go a long way to keep their distance. |
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Each of these are milestones on a road that's inexorably leading us into a one-way street from which there is no return. |
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At the last count, Caouette had 1,349 films on VHS, Betamax and 16 mm, and 2,046 LPs and CDs from which he sourced material. |
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The World Cup is not a mattress to lie back on, it is a trampoline from which to spring to a new era. |
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As well as sheadings, the island was sectioned into 17 parishes, each having a patron saint from which it got its name. |
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The early settlers kept small flocks from which they sheared wool that was needed to clothe their families to protect them from the severe cold. |
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The great white marble dome of the mausoleum is flanked by free-standing minarets from which the muezzin calls the faithful to prayer. |
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Absinthe was also put up in so-called mignonettes, comparable to the one-drink miniatures from which spirits are dispensed on airplanes today. |
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The winds, from which we had been somewhat shielded when we were behind the superstructure, began to churn the helicopter with new ferocity. |
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And he realises he is trapped in a vice from which he cannot escape, so he resorts to repression. |
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Millions of working people and their families are trapped in a vicious circle from which there is no escape. |
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At the park itself my run of bifurcations comes to an end as there are only three gates from which to choose. |
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I lose an hour traversing left to a dubious bridge, from which I leap onto the face, metal-clawed hands and feet stabbing into the snow. |
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A traverse then leads to a ledge from which a short narrow descent may be rigged to the streamway below. |
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At the very least, any melt must represent a minute fraction of the mantle from which it formed. |
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It begins with a train crash, from which there is one survivor, miraculously unharmed. |
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To them, public-spiritedness and unity of purpose are the soil from which big government springs. |
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Let's say I'm moving to a shooting box from which I'll be engaging easy targets. |
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This is not to deny that socialists can use parliament as a tribune from which radical ideas can be put across to help build workers' confidence. |
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To create an in vivo code, highlight the word or short passage that strikes you as significant and from which you want to create a node. |
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As the first half drew to a close, Lytham won a short corner that was well worked to create a clear shot from which they scored. |
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The panel will also help draft the selection criteria from which a shortlist of candidates will be chosen. |
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In Somerset and Herefordshire mistletoe grows on the apple trees from which cedar is produced. |
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Theropods are the line of mainly carnivorous, bipedal dinosaurs from which birds evolved. |
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Del Piero won a corner for Juve, from which Zambrotta got in a shot on goal. |
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The color of bistre varies with the wood from which the soot was derived, but in general it has a warm, transparent brown tone. |
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The cell is oval with a truncate apical region, from which the flagella and haptonema originate. |
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He died of tuberculosis, a disease from which he had suffered for many years. |
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An eyrie has been observed as long established, from which a gentleman usually obtained his cast of hawks. |
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His arrest and deportation in 1907 was his first baptism in fire from which he emerged a high-minded statesman cast in a heroic mould. |
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Well, look at this term as a new turn of the wheel from which you could gain. |
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The fundamental question concerns the nature of the blastocyst from which stem cells are derived. |
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Helena suffers from Type One Spinal Muscular Atrophy, a muscle wasting genetic disease from which her twin sister Saskia is mercifully free. |
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The feline Juanjo twisted himself into a stable position from which to strike, but biffed his shot wide of the post. |
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The missile is deployed in a transport-launching canister from which it is launched through the mortar start technique. |
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Called Gaia, she is the first mother goddess of the world, from which all other gods came. |
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The bloodline I come from is a line from which many great warriors have come from. |
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She threw his body into the sea from which she herself was born, and as he sank below the waves, anemones opened and flowered in his wake. |
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I received intelligence of it from a friend at court, who pointed out to me a good position, from which to view the close of the proceedings. |
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But I think it is a necessary confrontation, a final break with the wild and uncivilized world from which Enkidu derives. |
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Science seems to offer him a point from which to view the helter-skelter human sagas created by the phantasms of mind and emotion. |
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The new canal-side reserve will include special boardwalks and hides from which the wildlife can be viewed. |
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Neither do his pictographic dramas have any resemblance to the covers from which his characters hail. |
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From any such adverbially qualified sentence, we can validly infer a sentence from which one or more of the adverbial qualifiers has been detached. |
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If you were building a hide from which to observe them in their natural habitat, you would probably situate it somewhere in the north-west between Liverpool and Wigan. |
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Also, look for berms and structures 20 to 30 meters away from your location that can provide cover and concealment from which to command detonate devices. |
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From almost the same spot from which Sheppard scored the opener David McPherson unleashed a powerful shot, but keeper Lee Ward acrobatically tipped it round the post. |
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The atomists held that there are smallest indivisible bodies from which everything else is composed, and that these move about in an infinite void space. |
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He pushed the legless ends together on the ground so as to form a virtual hub, from which the crossbars radiated up and outward like the spokes of a giant horizontal wheel. |
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Its share of the vote is back to where it was in the 2004 local elections, and from which it went on to win the following year's general election. |
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Yet the worst that can reasonably be said about his performance is that he made an indefensible remark from which he ineptly tried to climb down at first prompting. |
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The main line of investigation is reportedly an effort to conduct DNA testing to determine the geographic origin of the castor bean plant from which the ricin is derived. |
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The tree, which also produces the gum chicle, from which chewing gum is made, was cultivated in the region long before the arrival of the Spaniards. |
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The Reuters Building does not strive to be a perfect whole but is a fuzzy, indeterminate figure that blends into a context from which it takes its cues. |
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There are usually ten from which to choose, including cabochon making, faceting, silversmithing, wirewrapping, micromounting, competitive exhibit judging, and many others. |
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Those who ask from science a final argument, an ultimate proof, an unassailable position from which the issue of God may be decided will always be disappointed. |
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How do our research methods differ from those of the social sciences, operations research, linguistics and others from which we have obviously borrowed? |
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Within three weeks of Castillon, Henry VI suffered a mental and physical collapse which lasted for 17 months and from which he may never have fully recovered. |
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Back to the contemptible hive of infamy from which you came! |
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Renovated and restyled a few years ago, The Roman Bath was formerly structured to allow punters to look down on to the 2,000 year old caldarium from which it takes its name. |
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To the contrary, investment by multinational corporations can help alleviate the hellacious environmental conditions from which poor nations suffer. |
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They stand before us as inert models of a species of social respectability that is as unbudgeable and dependable as the wood from which they seem to have been fashioned. |
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Such a scenario would place the quiltmaker in the vicinity of mills from which she acquired the checks, plaids, twills, glazed cottons and calicoes to make her quilts. |
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Henrik Larsson sends a low cross fizzing into the Bulgaria box, but Predrag Pazhin does well to hoof the ball over his own bar and out for a corner, from which nothing comes. |
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The castle was sacked in 1644, but according to legend, not before the family jewels were thrown into the river, from which they were never recovered. |
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A challenge to the array involved a party objecting to the composition of the panel of potential jurors from which the trial jury would be selected. |
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Before Hiawatha's story begins, we are introduced to the Master of Life and one of his gifts to mortals, the red pipe stone, from which the calumet or peace pipe is made. |
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Louis Begley is perhaps currently best known as the author of About Schmidt, the novel from which the recent acclaimed film starring Jack Nicholson was adapted. |
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For McDonald, it was a moment of undiluted embarrassment as he gifted possession to Alan Thompson and gave Celtic the platform from which they scored their second goal. |
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It is also not uncommon in medium to long cases, for jurors on the panel from which the final random selection will be made, to be asked to answer a short questionnaire. |
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The sky was the roof of a vast cavern from which there was no escape. |
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To the extent that it repudiates those duties, it is accountable to the society in which it functions and from which it enjoys its freedoms, privileges and perquisites. |
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As I write, two propositions from which every mainstream Jew in the last millennium would have instantly recoiled have become legitimate options within Orthodox Judaism. |
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They were hard times but through it all Mae showed a remarkable resilient nature, aided by her deep faith from which she drew sustenance and strength. |
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Apart from the rooms where patients are treated, the main clinic from which he works in Kitarare, has a nursery and there are plans for an herbarium. |
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These experiments will serve as a 'proof of concept' from which to design further explorations of natural nanoporous materials and their environmental effects. |
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About 200-300 unpurified colonies from each selection were inoculated as patches in a regular array on the same selective medium from which they were taken. |
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It is also unclear whether the vial contained the bacteria botulinum, from which the toxin is drawn, or the toxin itself, as Mr Kay claimed in interviews over the weekend. |
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Nowadays cream is separated mechanically in a centrifuge, a revolving circular vessel in which the cream migrates to the centre, from which it is drawn off. |
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At the college level relatively few native-born Americans are choosing to study the hard sciences or engineering, from which so much innovation flows. |
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Lixouri is a pleasant, quiet village with an appealing square lined with restaurants, from which can be heard on balmy evenings the strains of the bouzouki and the mandolin. |
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Maggie remembered all those past years from which she had made splendid dinners and light sandwiches for snacks and heaven knows how many cups of tea. |
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The defendants used a solvent in degreasing pelts at their tannery, which was located 1.3 miles from the plaintiffs borehole from which water was extracted for domestic use. |
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Large fields of green grassland can be seen, one after anther, from which intense green, red and blue roofs stand out, making the scene look a little like fairyland. |
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With each seasonal death of the marsh, some of the carp, crabs, and crayfish succeed in escaping to the brackishness of Sonoma Creek, from which they migrated. |
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This alone had made it possible to seize ocean bases from which to launch the final attack and force her metropolitan Army to capitulate without striking a blow. |
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There's a heroes' guild from which you choose quests, and a bragging platform where you gain additional fame by opting to take on specific missions. |
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But there was certainly nothing phony about the police officer who met up with her in order to personally escort her to the bank from which she received the cash originally. |
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And, of course, when the area from which tissue seemed to appear is wiped clean by the surgeon, the skin appears to be restored to its original unwounded condition! |
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Her first zine, from which the collection takes its title, presents a young girl's most embarrassing memories, which steadily build in outlandishness. |
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Neptune's embrace reminds us of the ecstasy of paradise and of the bliss of uroboric sameness from which we each derive our very sense of self-hood. |
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In 1987 66,000 fry were released in the river and in a few other south Jutland rivers from which the houting has disappeared since the beginning of the century. |
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A stallion starts a harem by abducting females from other herds, but the dominant stallions from which he steals do not give up their females easily. |
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Tunesmith and songsmith aren't entirely parallel compounds, since in them the first element denotes the thing crafted rather than the material from which it is crafted. |
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And the higher the perch from which someone falls, the bigger the thud he makes when he splatters on the concrete of reality. |
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Chinese military music played softly in the background, and black-and-white photocopies of the actual images from which the sculptures were made littered the floor. |
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The pork schnitzel with Swiss cheese was especially to be recommended, but there is a substantial Thai and international list of dishes from which to choose. |
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The village is built on top of a relatively large hill, and represents a perfect vantage from which the windswept and rain-fed beauty of the surrounding landscape can be seen. |
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My bet is that the Court will issue a stay based on him, for the same reasons from which, as Simon noted earlier, the Justice dissented in another recent case. |
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She turned to the south, the direction from which the noise had come. |
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The growing prestige of Parliament as an institution gave the aristocracy a powerful base from which to challenge the monarchy and defend itself against the commonalty. |
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Residents were transported to an emergency centre set up at Falinge Park High School, from which some were shifted to temporary overnight accommodation. |
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The breeds from which the sheepdog sprang are not identified, though some people maintain that Scotch bearded collies played a significant role in the sheepdog's development. |
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If the scientists come back and say this virus is part of the variety of things from which people acquire immune deficiency, I have no problem with that. |
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Short of seeking inspiration in mind-altering drugs, this is a good state from which to write from the stream which some claim to be consciousness. |
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The song, from which I removed the family name, was published in the 1890s, and bewailed the loss of the family name, in the 17th century, by Royal proscription. |
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Whether you choose to paint, stain, shellac, or just leave the natural color depends on the type of wood from which you built the project and how you want it to weather. |
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Their ancestral array could have existed on the autosomes of the progenitor of the A. gambiae complex, from which some repeats were translocated onto the Y chromosome. |
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Dering's proposals for a transmarine telegraph are contained in his patent specification of August 15, 1853, from which we condense the following account. |
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Full details of the analytical results from which the summary tables presented in this section are derived are available on request from the authors. |
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Thus, it may be that, in certain situations, abusive and nonabusive men may differ in terms of the available repertoire from which they generate and select a coping strategy. |
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All the leachate drains by gravity from the leachate collection layer to a sump, from which it is pumped out of the landfill for treatment and disposal. |
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When all the young people leave, regions, even large regions, can sink into a poverty trap from which they cannot recover. |
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Various denominations have periodically arisen intending to form churches ever closer to the original from which they believed current churches had fallen. |
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He suddenly takes a U-turn and begins to attack Cartesian epistemology, the very basis of research from which this impressive body of scientific knowledge comes. |
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The drawings themselves will be used to produce the zinc templates from which workmen in the Minster stoneyard will work when they begin to carve the replacement stones. |
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Never mind that the club will be evicted from their ground at the end of the season, which will be bulldozed into a building site from which bijou homes will arise. |
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In the open, in front of this unlikely holy of holies, are a few rows of hard wooden benches, from which time has long since eroded the protection of varnish. |
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There are whole pages full of Masonic toasts from which the presiding officer could select, and after every one of which a bumper was drunk by the Brethren present. |
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These possess the original quality of the one or two varietals from which they are vinted and make up 18 per cent of the country's wine production. |
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Which is always a shame, but never more than now, when Canada extends an example from which Americans could profitably learn. |
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They've set up a house bank account from which they pay the rent, hydro, internet and phone bills, and they're beginning to pool resources for organic groceries. |
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He detailed the unacceptable groups like the NRA, big sugar and Monsanto, from which Michaud had taken donations from. |
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He underwent an emergency splenectomy, from which he made a full recovery. |
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I hoped that having the area framed within an international discourse of significance would give Shoshone advocates for saving the quarry a stronger point from which to argue. |
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Some of these provide rich discussions from which to draw, but many do not, In these cases, Rose reads discussions of related issues cleverly to infer about mixed marriages. |
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She believes it's no coincidence that the Greek goddess of health was named Hygieia, from which our word hygiene comes. |
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It consists of irritating the spider so that it attacks and envenomates a device from which the venom can be extracted. |
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There are about 55 species and they hybridise freely, so there are many more cultivated varieties from which to choose. |
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But there are many viburnums, both evergreen and deciduous, from which to choose, many of which are highly scented. |
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The Duke of Kent accompanied the Queen in the glass coach, from which they waved and inspected the Household Cavalry. |
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To earn the inheritance, Tse will have to keep discovering new substances and processes from which to bring forth her polytocous cr eations. |
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The Adagio for Glass Harmonica is revised in the new form, as are fragments of the master's work from which Goldstone has constructed a sonata. |
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A region surrounding an amphidromic point from which radiating cotidal lines progress through all hours of the tidal cycle. |
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He spoke about counterterror efforts and emphasized the need to dry all up all sources of from which terrorism receives funding. |
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A second smaller procession appeared carrying a feretory with relics of the saints, from which was suspended the sacrament in a pyx. |
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It's height ranges from 30-45 cm with an underground creeping rhizome from which roots grow gregariously. |
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If you want to drive an offroad vehicle in Namibia, you may want to get a course in offroad driving in the country from which you come. |
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This centering point on the rubber is the point from which the pitcher pushes off the rubber with his driving back leg. |
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Amperis has a wide range products from which are ohmmeters, network analyzers, and electrical test equipment or test equipment transformer relay. |
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But neither does it look like typical imagist poetry, from which Logue clearly derives his aesthetic. |
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It is not a summa theologica, or indeed ethica, but the basis from which an endless series of summae can be assembled. |
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Pahlavi spoke at Georgetown University in Washington DC, from which his daughter graduated two years ago. |
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There are different types of crepe rubber, depending upon the type of starting materials from which they are produced. |
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The Marines have set up a secure drop zone from which United Nations trucks will start distributing the food aid. |
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This cloud, known as the Oort Cloud, is believed to be the reservoir from which comets emanate. |
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Seurat did not attempt to test his expertise in the actual arena from which he drew his motifs. |
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Asking psychology students to open-endedly describe the sources from which they hear different stereotypes would also be potentially valuable. |
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As a student in the College, from which he graduated in 1950, he had Nobel laureates Enrico Fermi and Harold Urey as teachers. |
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Propane's journey to end users begins during the processing and refining of crude oil and natural gas, from which propane emerges as a byproduct. |
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In this way, he pictorialized the sculptural object, controlling the vantage from which it is seen and thereby heightening its optical effects. |
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It also provides the input from which government agencies speculate fecklessly about prospective costs and benefits. |
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Civil society groups bring knowledge and analysis of conventional weapons problems and solutions from which state officials may be distant. |
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Tyler Vallance left 12-week-old Isabella with catastrophic brain injuries from which she never recovered. |
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Pryor's group studied nitro-PAHs based on three linked phenyl rings from which a nitrogen dioxide group dangles. |
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The pollution was traced to mixed wastewater from the industrial park that was dumped into rivers and streams from which vapors outgassed. |
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Kibble at England's National Physical Laboratory, this method offers a precise value of the Planck constant, from which one derives Avogadro's number. |
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Digitalism is a medical condition arising from which poisonous plant? |
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If you see one chair alone, it's like an orphan, it's synecdochic, a part that speaks to a larger whole that's absent, from which it has been removed. |
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The Standard Model describes the fundamental particles from which we, and every visible thing in the universe, are made, and the forces acting between them. |
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