So yeah, if I broaden my horizons and meet interesting and amusing people, then so much the better. |
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Widening the gastronomic horizons are the Cantonese, Japanese, Afghan, Punjabi, Mughlai, Indonesian styles, all there to whet one's appetite. |
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Alexander's new job is to tub-thump for more business start-ups, better training, better skilling, raising our business horizons. |
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We wanted to expand our horizons a bit and include more francophone content. |
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You are closer to achieving your heart's desire as you move towards new business opportunities and wider horizons. |
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We are trying to broaden their horizons and give them valuable life skills or interests. |
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The skies were clear, the horizons were infinite, the landscape rolled and undulated for miles in every direction. |
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The pork fondue was chosen in an attempt to broaden the gastronomic horizons of a 75-year-old woman from Popovo. |
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They did a lot of soul-searching after the deal fell apart and concluded that they had to expand their horizons. |
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Butterflies fluttered thistle to thistle and flat fields stretched to low horizons but south, a mile away, the Wolds rise sharply. |
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My generation was lucky to start climbing when horizons were wide and there were still unsurveyed areas on maps. |
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Many of the young people are quite untravelled and unsophisticated, and have very limited horizons. |
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Between the two horizons, occasional bands of brackish corbiculids intercalate with sediments containing freshwater gastropods and charophytes. |
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Thinking leaves us open to correction and growth, to continuing to see our horizons expanded and our lives transformed. |
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After mapping the chosen horizons throughout the study area, we constructed selected isopachs and structure maps. |
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Tectonic ironstones are typically 5-10 m thick horizons that are continuous for hundreds of metres to several kilometres. |
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Traditional architects must wake up from dreams of ancient techniques that consign them to little things and low horizons. |
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The lenses are separated by locally discordant horizons of ferruginous, silicic or graphitic, strongly schistose sedimentary to volcanic rocks. |
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Artists come and go, gaining notoriety and popularity before heading off into distant horizons. |
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Both boxers enjoyed the trip and are looking forward to furthering their horizons later in the season. |
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One moment he is in the middle of a peroration about horizons, and the next he is inexplicably talking about beautiful garbage cans. |
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The red mudstone horizons preserve extensive pedogenic textures and desiccation cracks indicative of mature palaeosol development. |
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It is the variety of imported cooking pots in assemblages 1 and 2 that distinguishes fifth-century horizons from those of the fourth century. |
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Strata were examined in the field for evidence of fossil content, and those horizons that appeared to be fossiliferous were sampled in bulk. |
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Palaeosol horizons are interbedded with these units, representing the pedogenic alteration of exposed floodplain sediments. |
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Now, Blackwell is expanding his horizons to satisfy an audience that he feels has been ignored. |
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The experience of work and travel will broaden horizons and may well open up totally new possibilities. |
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Mankind is constantly striving to expand his horizons, to push back the boundaries of the unknown, and to challenge himself further and further. |
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For myself, the best part was expanding my horizons and meeting people I wouldn't have otherwise. |
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Finally, we explore risk-adjusted returns between acquirers of private and public targets over several event horizons. |
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Hintze gave qualitative estimates of relative species abundances at particular sampling horizons, but did not list total sample sizes. |
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In this paper, nearly 700 in situ fossil trees are described from 13 entisol or inceptisol horizons. |
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Wheat price is clearly an endogenous player in the system, particularly at midterm and longer-term horizons. |
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We first cumulated these returns to obtain the cumulative sum unadjusted and market-adjusted returns for the selected aftermarket time horizons. |
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She has two daughters with him and accepts her fate in life until a skein of circumstances widens her horizons. |
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I saw sequoias as tall and straight as skyscrapers, celestial waterfalls and a wilderness stretching to unseen horizons. |
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The fen part of the county, with its vast horizons and lonely windswept fields, has always been an acquired taste. |
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His gravitation towards people and things that expand his horizons is absolutely inspiring. |
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For others, it's seen as a genuine adventure fuelled by the desire to broaden horizons and experience another culture. |
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I know that my own horizons have been expanded by writing and reading of blogs. |
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We are all constantly yearning to fly, chart new vistas, explore new horizons and find our own path. |
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His zest for exploring new horizons made him choose neurosurgery at a time when the specialty was unknown in Asia. |
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Some of them still had work, their lives were following a plan and a purpose, and their horizons, if not bright, were certainly visible. |
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It limits our horizons, narrows our imaginations, and encourages an obsessive preoccupation on the personal and petty aspects of our lives. |
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Try roller-coasting over Turnhouse Hill, Carnethy Hill and Scald Law, and let the wide open skies and the distant horizons exhilarate you. |
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For them we provide an international forum where they can widen their horizons and meet and interact with senior scholars in the field. |
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Commonly there is a partitioning of sinistral and dextral criteria on alternate horizons, but horizons occur where both senses coexist. |
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In his range of interests and enjoyments, he keeps goading me to broaden my own horizons. |
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You never know what you can achieve if you don't give it a try and I don't want to limit my horizons. |
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That support has created a second scientific revolution, opening horizons beyond previous human experience. |
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Cardiff is just the place to expand your culinary horizons, meet your canny Celtic cousins and do a little name-dropping. |
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There may be more spectacular mountains offering unforeseen horizons at their summits, but Blue Hill is an effortless peak to climb. |
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With the breakdown of its instrumental existence, Dasein stops to perceive the horizons of its being, the limits of its relation to the world. |
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If we adopt a responsible approach to our use of the Internet we can only expand our horizons through the marvel of this new technology. |
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So, is it possible that a woodchuck might expand its horizons, meet with a richer fate, and get a bang out of a ride in the opposite direction? |
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Hazy purple horizons, the norm on these rolling prairies, stretched away in all directions. |
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The burrowing activities of earthworms increase the soil horizons most conducive to worm health and growth rate. |
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The dilemmas with which they had previously wrestled appear to be momentarily overshadowed by their new horizons. |
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Thankfully, though, I believe that the Scottish art world has wider horizons than such navel-gazing, self-pitying introspection. |
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The intense blue of the sky and the sweeping horizons accentuate the sequestered villages. |
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Winged subsoilers are used to break up compact subsurface horizons to improve drainage and to increase effective rooting depth. |
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Our measure of risk-adjusted returns, a variation of the Sharpe ratio, is shown for each sub-sample for different event horizons. |
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The fossiliferous horizons occur in greenish to greyish siltstones and brown to black fissile shales associated with mollusc shells. |
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In some shale horizons, layers of laminated chert occur along anastomosing foliation planes that are subparallel to bedding. |
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Given the shortness of political horizons, it would be advantageous to have the quickest possible retribution for bad behaviour. |
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The seismic horizons have been calibrated using biostratigraphic and lithological data from exploration boreholes in the UK and Faroes sectors. |
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The high trace fossil abundance but low diversity in the heavily bioturbated horizons points to a relatively restricted or stressed environment. |
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But one need not be a fan of old-fashioned hero worship to see this as a problematic development, which points at a lowering of human horizons. |
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This is fabulous walking country, a land of far horizons and rare tranquillity with vast areas of rounded hills and heather moors. |
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Understanding as involving a fusion of horizons requires the application of what is to be understood to the interpreter's hermeneutic situation. |
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Life here is shrinking, the horizons drawing in, and the backdrop to our small world seems to be fading and becoming indistinct. |
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The quartzitic horizons change along strike into carbonaceous shale and sericite-chlorite schist. |
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Apparently, the filmic horizons are as infinite as the limits of the sky for these amazing moviemakers and their crazy creations. |
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I still think the staleness is there and very flattering to people who actually prefer straitened horizons. |
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Trace fossils are concentrated towards the base of the member, where preferential cementation of the bioturbation has resulted in prominent erosion-resistant horizons. |
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On the other hand, this prize does afford us a chance to broaden our horizons beyond the borders of whatever country we live in. |
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I crave snow-topped mountains, dreary wastes, and the cruel Northern sea with its hard horizons at the edge of the world where infinite space begins. |
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They keep the excess nitrogen from acidifying the upper soil horizons. |
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Let her spread her wings and expand her horizons on her next outing. |
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The equations of general relativity unambiguously predict event horizons forming if mass is sufficiently concentrated. |
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The side which has absolutely lorded it over English club rugby for the best part of a decade have shown that their horizons have stretched outside domestic domination. |
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The unit is composed of rhythmically bedded marls, horizons of laminated organic-rich black shales, rare marly limestones, clastic turbidites, and penecontemporaneous slumps. |
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He captures the seas as well as the tranquil horizons in his works. |
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These horizons are mainly massive in structure but with a crumbly texture. |
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For the next fortnight Aquarian Venus busily stretches your social horizons, whirling and swirling you through various, multifarious, interesting new possibilities. |
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His paintings often feature undulating horizons of rows of low hills, curves of muddy roads and snowdrifts, and patterns made by ploughed farmland. |
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I would argue that these groups merely express, if in a more explicit form, the narrow outlook and low horizons of Western politics more broadly today. |
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His father, however, disliked Alfred's interest in poetry and in order to broaden his horizons, sent him abroad for further training in chemical engineering. |
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She has never let her disability prevent her from broadening her horizons, taking part in trips and activities away from the school, sometimes with fully-sighted teenagers. |
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The formation is composed of red siltstones, containing discontinuous calcrete horizons, channelized sandstones and thin beds of current-rippled fine sandstone. |
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These discoveries have opened up new horizons in the field of cancer research. |
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Mottling is present within the upper and lower horizons of the palaeosols. |
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It's just that, I want to expand my horizons, meet new people, you know. |
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Interesting speakers have extended the knowledge and horizons of members. |
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And learning the language of one's country is a very valuable and intellectual experience which broadens the horizons of the traveller, both inside and outside Scotland. |
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Obtaining a certificate in forensic science will make them more suitable, attractive candidates, expand their horizons and broaden their knowledge. |
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It stands to reason that, if long intervals of time had elapsed between the supposedly-episodic lava flows, weathered horizons, and fossil soils should be common. |
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It's an Archaic Stage site spanning the period 7500 BC through to AD 1200 in fourteen distinct cultural horizons represented by over 10.5m of stratigraphy. |
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The combination of forms in use in a particular stratum defines each assemblage, and the relative sequence of the four horizons presented here is secure. |
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A provincial man, he perceived more clearly than most that his clubby colleagues in London needed to expand their horizons and broaden their base. |
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The study also indicates that the illuviation of clay particles and their subsequent accumulation in the Bt horizons have occurred in sodic environment. |
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Finally, Fama and Jensen suggest that the residual claims of professional partnerships are characterized by flexible sharing rules, inalienability and limited horizons. |
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This and other species of Prosopis are considered as facultative phreatophytes, i.e. with roots that can take water from shallow and deep soil horizons. |
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The beige-to-ochre tropical ferruginous soil displays in its first horizons a sandy texture at slope bottom, and is sandy-clayey on the remainder. |
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Travel widens horizons in more ways than one, and makes people wiser and more mature, besides developing the qualities of tolerance and forbearance. |
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It spotlights the 23-year-old Bob teetering on the cusp of acoustic folk music and the mind-expanding new horizons offered by acid, free verse and electricity. |
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Reading to a child opens new horizons and introduces him to the delights of reading which acts as a prod, an encouragement to begin reading for himself. |
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When the fore and back horizons are brought into line, the sextant reading is twice the angle of dip, assuming that the sextant is free from index error. |
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Some students take a gap year after finishing high school to broaden their horizons. |
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New forms of trade and expanding horizons made new forms of government, law and economics necessary. |
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When a job opportunity arose at a Prescot-based water cooler company, I decided to go ahead and explore new horizons. |
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These are soils that occur in the most arid segment of the climatic range of Chernozemic soils and have brownish-colored A horizons. |
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It makes sense to speak of numerous horizons of meaning, but not of numerous worldhoods. |
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The site has thick clayey soils, with subsurface horizons stiff with illuviated clay. |
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People perhaps suggest expanding the horizons of computer science with meta-knowledge derived from perspectives from other disciplines. |
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These processes are revealed in many horizons by well expressed hydromorphic features, like Fe mottles, Fe-Mn concretions and gley colors. |
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The strata of the slate frontage of the Wales Millennium Centre reminded me of the horizons just beyond Penarth Head. |
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My home-cooking horizons have been broadened and I'm over-excited about making tamarillo jam and peanut butter lollipops. |
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Since the Giants' minicamp last spring, Buggs already has begun to expand his training horizons, much to Arnsparger's satisfaction. |
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The project aimed to broaden the cultural horizons of pupils and the week culminated in a supervised demonstration of Tai-Chi. |
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This process consists in the translocation of claysize particles from eluvial to illuvial horizons. |
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Soil texture is silty in the eluvial horizons and clayey in the illuvial horizons. |
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In the deeper horizons where the pH decreases and with the accumulation of illuviated clay, the aggregates are more stable and persist. |
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The Lampia property has in excess of 676 drillholes, indicating the near surface presence of nickel rich limonite and saprolite horizons. |
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Many brunisols have brownish B horizons without much evidence of clay accumulation, as in luvisols, or amorphous materials, as in podzols. |
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Mountain lines and distant horizons lend space and largeness to his compositions. |
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Through his association with Frank Bridge, Britten's musical horizons expanded. |
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The names of the second pair, Ansher and Kishar, refer to the horizons of the sky and sea respectively. |
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The title has been translated as The book of pleasant journeys into faraway lands or The pleasure of him who longs to cross the horizons. |
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The evidence of fire revealed in each of the archaeological horizons is based mainly on the high frequency of microartifacts. |
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Exploration opportunities targeting the Ordovician Red River and Devonian Winnipegosis horizons appear to be particularly promising. |
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In this model, the poem is created, and is interpretable, within both noetic horizons. |
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Herein, new taxa are diagnosed, types are designated, and type localities and horizons as well as repositories of collections are indicated. |
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At the same time, it was the tendency to mythicize every ordinary reality in order to expand man's horizons and give him a legendary stature. |
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Rambert sought to widen the horizons of her students, taking them to see London performances by the Diaghilev Ballet. |
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Rocks in the lower part consist in general of mauve sandstones, siltstones and greyly green siltstones interbedded with a few intercalated mud boulder horizons. |
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In particular, the expansion of higher education and mass media has greatly extended the cognitive horizons of the public regarding environmental issues. |
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Initial observations suggest that the enriched iron horizons were derived from schistose banded ironstone, with schistocity now seen as specular hematite. |
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Cultural retranslation is a foundational postcolonial metaphor that might highlight the new horizons of transcultural and transnational relations and their political backdrop. |
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He broadened his horizons by finally trying Vietnamese cuisine. |
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That chafes a bit, his assumption that my horizons need unnarrowing. |
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Squatting, Dewey Dell's wet dress shapes for the dead eyes of three blind men those mammalian ludicrosities which are the horizons and the valleys of the earth. |
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Soil scientists use the capital letters O, A, B, C, and E to identify the master soil horizons, and lowercase letters for distinctions of these horizons. |
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If one can accurately measure the angle to Polaris, a similar measurement to a star near the eastern or western horizons will provide the longitude. |
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When haze obscures the horizon, navigators use artificial horizons, which are horizontal mirrors of pans of reflective fluid, especially mercury historically. |
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Overall, the Revolution did not greatly change the French business system, and probably helped freeze in place the horizons of the small business owner. |
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His consolidation of power allowed him to expand his horizons, and by 1062 William was able to secure control of the neighbouring county of Maine. |
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Spruce strongly podzolizes the top horizons of carbonate soils. |
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It greatly widened the horizons of the Greeks and led to a steady emigration, particularly of the young and ambitious, to the new Greek empires in the east. |
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Annelids such as Serpulites are common fossils in some horizons. |
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The Eagle Lake property lies within the Wollaston domain and consists of metasedimentary gneisses and schists, including pelitic schists and gneisses with graphitic horizons. |
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A much anticipated feature of a theory of quantum gravity is that it will not feature singularities or event horizons and thus black holes would not be real artifacts. |
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The illuvial accumulation of clay on the vertical macroaggregate surfaces of B horizons and formation of Argic diagnostic horizon were observed in these soils. |
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The purpose of this study was to determine if elements other than Al and Fe are chelated by soil organic matter and illuviated to deeper soil horizons. |
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Anthropological horizons touch our inner sense of freedom and destiny, which is realized in Atman-Brahman, the Christ, Purusha, or symbols of justice and the perfect society. |
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The presence of thin horizons containing glauconite grains, marine-affinity bivalves, and crinoids suggests a distal marine influence at various times. |
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On the other hand, some of these same authors have found a negative correlation between real gross domestic product and the GDP deflator at short forecast horizons. |
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In contrast, the Mount Cap microfossils from both outcrop and subsurface horizons are truly exceptional in terms of preservational quality and paleobiological significance. |
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He gave them extended horizons and some of his achievements with the orchestra, both at home and abroad, gave them quite a different constitution. |
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It set the tone nicely for'The Evoltion of Man', dancier still, as Example broadened his horizons to work with electro superstars like Calvin Harris and Alesso. |
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Both have the genetic condition Osteogenesis Imperfecta, usually known as Brittle Bone Disease, and both have refused to allow it to limit their horizons. |
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Bouma J, Jongerius O, Boersma O, Jager A, Schoonderbeek D The function of different types of macropores during saturated flow through 4 swelling soil horizons. |
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