The service will be launched at the end of the summer in time for the winter surge, but registration begins next week. |
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Blundell Park's six bars will be an alcohol-free zone after the Mariners forgot to re-apply for their drinks licence in time. |
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The government will reap an economic windfall in time for the next general election, economists have predicted. |
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The team wasn't affiliated in time for the opening day of the season but it's understood the lads will be in action this weekend. |
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If you travelled back in time two centuries on Christmas Day, you'd hardly recognise the festive season. |
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We'll go back in time to see what's driving the winds of change across the continent. |
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Beaver, who says he was passed the information by reliable military sources, says the equipment simply did not arrive in time. |
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It measures the rate at which small disturbances explode exponentially in time. |
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Working feverishly, the crew and shore team refitted the boat and sailed it to La Rochelle in time to rejoin the race in leg eight. |
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Depending on its complexity, the data might go as low as 500 kilobits and as high as 3 megabits at any point in time. |
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He was educated by Bishop Erc of Kerry, and in time became a famous abbot and monastic founder. |
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Champagne corks were popping when a three-week project against the clock was completed in time at a community centre in Ulverston. |
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Some question as to whether can you get your absentee ballot, vote on it and get it back in time for the election. |
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The three of them then turned to look at the subject of their topic, just in time to see a grey address book fall out with a thud. |
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They'll skip it in time, tuning in only to the rage around the resplendence. |
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The work will take six months, but should be ready in time for next summer, when the team hope to be on location at Loch Ness. |
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Sheathing my sword I called upon my powers and a pair of dragon wings came from my back and I flew out of the way just in time. |
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The referee was caught in traffic and did not make it in time for kick-off. |
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It is thanks to this additional work that phase one of the roadworks is now scheduled to end in time for the Christmas rush. |
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The organisers of the protest now face a desperate rush over the next month to ensure that they are ready in time for the summit. |
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Her surgeon and trainer both said she would have to drop some 20 kilos in order to heal in time for the Olympics. |
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Cultivating a much sharper fielding side in time for 2007 is high on his list. |
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It is hoped the repairs and redecoration will be completed by May, well in time for the expected royal visit. |
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However, it is hoped that the BBC will in time be able to expand its contribution. |
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One thing we can say about this starting value is that it must be very specially tuned if galaxies are to form in time. |
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Chloe should, in time, give thanks for her deliverance from corporate clutches. |
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The tunes would come in time, but Flowers dealt with the wardrobe issue almost immediately. |
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To release your physical tensions, march in time to the music as you are singing. |
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Daniel shook his head and began to move my arms backwards and forwards, in time with the music. |
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It is likely too that the cost of movies in digital format will reduce in time, according to Cummins. |
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Powerful drums in time like a metronome lead the way for trashy angular bass lines and wry energetic vocals. |
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You can tell because the lamp posts outside are jumping in time to the bass line. |
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A couple of horses grazed nearby, their tails swinging in time to the rhythm. |
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An articulated lorry pulled up alongside someway in time to the classical music on the radio. |
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Mass quantities of Harlequin Valentine ship today from Dark Horse, just in time for Valentine's Day. |
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He described synchronicity as an acausal principle that links events having a similar meaning by their coincidence in time. |
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Nat arrived in time for pizza, which we ate in my room because Ewan was still on the warpath. |
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Indian farmers are often indebted and credit constrained and do not have access to chemicals at the right point in time. |
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She had leapt out of bed and pushed aside the muslin curtains just in time to see two receding figures as they ran into the forest. |
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We pull ourselves away to pedal back to the hotel in time for wine o'clock. |
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What they say has relevance over time, even if their words were prompted by particular moments in time. |
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While the script jumps forward and backwards in time, Rose leaves more unexplained than he should. |
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The scenes cut between the characters and jump backwards and forwards in time. |
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Then in time, there's the same child handling the same duck like a pussycat! |
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I managed to spit out a stream of the sanguine liquid before dodging just in time to miss her foot. |
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The smoker returned in time for the special starter of fresh crab meat with crab claws. |
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The fact that he recanted in time to not lie under oath should, in fact, have reflected well on him. |
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With three or four days off in Spain ahead of me I am beginning to seriously doubt I can finish in time. |
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The formation of the association is seen as ordinary farmers and stock raisers banding together in time of need. |
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When Duncan starts moving forward and backward in time while psychic witches and warlocks control him, the show becomes ludicrous. |
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How much must this cost in time and paperwork, surely all that is required is a police presence? |
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And out just in time for its movie adaptation, seasons one through four of The Dukes of Hazzard can be purchased in one convenient box set. |
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They were also required to provide troops for the Lacedaemonian army and support Sparta in time of war. |
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He looked up in time to see Greta open her blouse and tuck the vial into the cup of her brassiere. |
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They found no hint of trouble and were able to make their launch window in time. |
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They apparently couldn't bear to have God's creative acts in time, so they allegorized the days to an instant. |
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For several weeks the new centre has become a hive of activity as community volunteers put up the fixtures and fittings in time for the big move. |
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Last Wednesday he saw a specialist and we didn't think he'd be fit in time for the Brighton game. |
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Individuals are considered at-risk for rearrest at a given point in time if they are not incarcerated and have not been rearrested. |
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An inaccurate weather forecast meant the gritters did not get out in time, and steps will be taken to ensure it does not happen again. |
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Many people will be pleased that they got in just in time, but even more will be kicking themselves that they missed out. |
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If you go to a world championship boxing match, you know, one of the boxers will come in inevitably thumping his fists in time with the drumbeat. |
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Let's suppose Arthur, having been brought back in time, had addressed the court with remorseful demeanour, clad in his regimentals. |
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I'm sure our leaders fought for this and kept their word to us the troops even in time of war. |
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I fell forward, but found my footing just in time and regained my balance by steadying myself up against a letter box. |
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They have to ensure contracts for services are completed in time because failure could jeopardise the award. |
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I could see him going back in time and a small, wistful smile curled up on his lips. |
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I can almost hear my heart beat in time with their intense swimming strokes. |
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There's a sense of nostalgia, an indefinable ache, that crystallises the artist's repertoire at a certain point in time. |
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As you sing the song the next time, you wave your left hand in time with the music. |
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Not out there in some wishful scenario of the future, but in a date nailed down in time. |
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We got the story back to Scotland in time for the first editions, and Patricia Ferguson managed to get hold of Jack McConnell in China. |
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They returned to the hall in time for the next item on the agenda, amid jeers and taunts from the Treasury benches. |
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Orders are now being taken in time for Christmas for Christmas cakes, puddings, mince pies, flower arrangements, holly wreaths and crafts. |
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She pulled him behind a large tree and peered out, just in time to see three gangly looking teenagers walk past, talking loudly. |
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Harmonic wind harps transpose the spirit of the wind into spontaneous, multi-layered music in time to nature's rhythms. |
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Too often the switching is not done in time and payments are missed, accruing considerable embarrassment and penalties. |
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We go back in time to trace the tensions between Sudanese, Arabs and black Africans. |
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Despite attempts to signal the conductor, the train was unable to stop in time, and it crashed into the derailed cars. |
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Given that many voters wouldn't have known his face until last week, he may have a tough time selling himself as Premier in time for the state election next year. |
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So if you feel like dropping in and going back in time through the ages of military history, or just a day out with the family, a great day is guaranteed. |
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More items came in time, as funding was available, like a slit-and-lace-up jacket and a line of boxer underwear. |
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Maier arrived in the coastal town of Newport, Oregon, just in time for the first brew. |
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Army spokesman Yoav Mordechai, a brigadier general, said the operation was not limited in time. |
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There's quietism on the one hand and militancy on the other and much depends on the conditions that people find themselves in, in any one point in time. |
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As I listened to the steady in-and-out of my own breathing, and the increasing rapidness of my heartbeat, I wished, for a moment in time, that Kerwin would kiss me. |
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This is one way of ensuring that the music will be played exactly in time. |
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All were well spaced, in time with the music and in tune with each other. |
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When A Christmas carol was published just in time for the Christmas of 1843, the holiday had been in a long decline in England. |
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The storyline jumps forward and backward in time in non-linear fragments. |
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But mothers who abandon their babies anonymously have no easy way to learn of the child's status or prove their maternity in time to appear and contest the adoption. |
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But I can say with a good conscience and an airy wave of the hand that if you have a different opinion we can all just try our best and in time the truth will emerge. |
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His notion of synchronicity is that there is an acausal principle that links events having a similar meaning by their coincidence in time rather than sequentially. |
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In case they fail to secure it in time, they are helping him get an absentee ballot. |
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The account goes some way in showing just how present the Quds and other forces are in Iraq at this point in time. |
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This allowed us to test whether the delay in time to sexual maturity was associated with reduced size of the testes or accessory glands in day 36 sugar-fed males. |
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According to Belkovsky, both officials got out in time to escape new Western sanctions. |
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There have also been instances during this air war when combat aircraft are not available in time to strike a target that pops up. |
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The Gauls tried to climb the Capitol at night, eluding the watchdogs and the Roman guard, but the flock of geese sacred to Juno spotted them and roused the Romans in time. |
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In alternating chapters, the two narrators of the novel describe their lives with Isaac, from two different periods in time. |
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They were dreading a race against the clock to get there in time until the M.E.N. stepped in to help organise cut-price air fares for the dedicated dozen. |
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Just in time for Cinco de Mayo, award-winning Latin recipe queen Deborah Schneider is out with a new book, Amor y Tacos. |
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Thus a scenario or process explanation which reasonably accounts for what we know at a particular point in time is not a bad thing, so long as we understand its hybrid nature. |
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She wanted him to settle down and become a coalman, home in time for tea. |
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Well, if you don't want butter, you go to pull the dasher out in time. |
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In addition to its striking formal presence large and strong and yet flowerlike the quatrefoil has iconographic resonances that go far back in time. |
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No soldier shall, in time of peace, be quartered in any house without the consent of the owner, nor in time of war be in a manner to be prescribed by law. |
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Now comes the perfect storm of avian, swine, and human flu, just in time for a national health plan. |
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The president is barnstorming factories in swing states, banking on a return of jobs in time for the election. |
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At the moment she is agitated and distressed, but I'm sure in time, with the help and understanding from the carers, she will adjust to her new home. |
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From here he suggested that in seeing quasars created from the center of galaxies, we are actually looking back in time 6000 years and watching creation as it happens. |
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Again, they will in time be able to exercise some kind of supervision. |
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We jump-cut in time, meeting everyone from a prostitute turned schoolteacher to a father who dials his disappeared daughter at a sex-shop number where no one ever answers. |
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Those razor sharp hips sliced the air as he moved in time to the music. |
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Class contradictions in the U.S., in time, came to be defined largely in the context of race and settlerism. |
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Rock goes for the belt but HHH barely gets there in time. Back out on the floor, and HHH gets slingshotten into the ladder. |
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Showing an unexpectedly fleet turn of foot, she ducked through to safety, smartly shutting the door in our faces just in time. |
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Rosenbaum does an admirable job of characterizing the philosophy behind the Usonian and its particular place in time. |
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You must send your vote-by-mail ballot by Friday for it to arrive in the election office in time to be counted. |
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Amira is finding her form in time for the National Mountain bike championships on July 22 in Wasing, near London. |
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Grab a glimpse of the science behind Doctor Who, go back in time to see the dinosaurs and sign up for the chance to design your own water rocket. |
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As of Sunday, you could still order the bobblehead in time for Christmas. |
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A unique honor for a first-time author, Alef takes the reader on a journey back in time to California's tumultuous beginnings. |
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When individuals work at nontraditional hours, their bodies find themselves in time warps. |
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We reached the rim of the canyon just in time to catch the last hint of alpenglow on the peaks. |
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They were accidentally misnamed on the ankle bracelet as they bathed them, but the mistake was caught just in time. |
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The banding furnishes a map in time and space of both spreading rate and polar reversals. |
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Lord accepted and again removed and relaid his turf in time for the start of the 1814 season. |
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Farming permitted far denser populations, which in time organized into states. |
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The store sent out all its mail orders in time for the holiday. |
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We live in time and through it, we build our huts in its ruins and we cannot afford all these abandonings. |
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She reached the hospital in time to receive the antidote for the snake venom. |
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While we are not able to assist you at this point in time, we will be sure to call you if an opportunity arises. |
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The idea is solid awesome sauce, I just don't see it as a feasible undertaking for this project at this point in time. |
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I woke just in time to hear the first blowie of the day buzzing around. You know the night's over when you hear the first blowie. |
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He came running around the corner at a breakneck pace and couldn't stop in time to avoid hitting the fruit stand. |
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They stated that the reason they were late was because their relief did not arrive in time for them to return to the guard house and clock out. |
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Dance games, where the player dances on a pad in time with on-screen cues, are a popular form of exergaming. |
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So in time Mother learned to perceive me through the mirror. Even to smile at me. |
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The oddity of the situation was so flabbergasting I couldn't react in time for anyone to see it. |
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Maxwell made a lunge at his flabbergasted guest, who ducked just in time to escape the great hands reaching for him. |
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Flora, initially an ivory-pale, dark-haired funest beauty, whom the author transformed just in time into a third bromidic dummy with a dun bun. |
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Keen lemon-yellow hurts the eye in time as a prolonged and shrill trumpet-note the ear, and the gazer turns away to seek relief in blue or green. |
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The Godardian vision of a universe that is both lost and recuperable in time is the thread that holds this movie and all his others together. |
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These grafts persist however as homostatic grafts and are completely replaced by host tissues in time. |
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Then Aristotle proceeds and concludes that the actuality is prior to potentiality in formula, in time and in substantiality. |
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Each legion in Britain had a commander who answered to the governor and in time of war probably directly ruled troublesome districts. |
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Around the year 1080 Archbishop Thomas started building the cathedral that in time became the current Minster. |
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And being from the beginning greivous, and incomportable, in time it discovered it selse to be but weak. |
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She distinguished as to this, the inexistence in God from eternity, and the figurative manifestation in time. |
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Medieval fleets, in England as elsewhere, were almost entirely composed of merchant ships enlisted into naval service in time of war. |
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It may even be seen further back in time to the first of the French and Indian Wars. |
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It was discovered in time with eight conspirators executed, including Guy Fawkes, who became the iconic evil traitor in English lore. |
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A forced march from Vienna by Marshal Davout and his III Corps plugged the gap left by Napoleon just in time. |
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Hardwick believes new prison officers cannot be trained and become effective in time to prevent further trouble. |
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You didn't come to me in time. And by the time you came to me that fool of a doctor had bled and leeched the lifeblood out of Timmy. |
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A New Routemaster was developed that year, and entered service on 20 February 2012, in time for the 2012 Summer Olympics. |
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The tram was out of service during the early part of 2014 due to an electrical problem but returned in time for the August bank holiday. |
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Another shed is now externally complete but the inside is now being fitted out in time for September when Amazon will move in. |
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Originally, the target for completion was in time for the 2012 London Olympics and Paralympics. |
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Lord willing and the creek don't rise, we'll have that new barn finished in time for the harvest. |
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At this point in time a majority of Methodist members were not attending Anglican church services. |
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They were the only glassworks capable of fulfilling such a large order and had to bring in labour from France to meet it in time. |
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The black dog I hope always to resist, and in time to drive, though I am deprived of almost all those that used to help me. |
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It is done in hard shoes, which are used to help keep track of how the dancer keeps in time. |
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By November 2005, WNSL were still hopeful of a handover date of 31 March, in time for the cup final on 13 May. |
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The FA commissioned a replica cup in case the original cup was not found in time. |
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This meant, I believed, that we were in a position to move things forward and complete the transaction in time for the January transfer window. |
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Minter recovered and returned in time to reclaim his team place for the next event, the Ulster GP at Dundrod in August. |
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Davies arranged for the vocal score to be published by Curwen in time for the concert at the Queen's Hall on 28 March and began rehearsing it. |
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The Gibraltar national football team was accepted into UEFA in 2013 in time for the 2016 European Championships. |
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It has also applied to be part of FIFA and hopes to be accepted in time for eligibility for the 2018 FIFA World Cup qualifying. |
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Germain gave his approval to this, believing that Philadelphia could be taken in time for Howe to coordinate with the northern army. |
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In ratifying it, the Ottoman Empire agreed to permit international shipping to pass freely through the canal, in time of war and peace. |
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A secondary aim was to bring security to the Helmand Valley in time for presidential elections, set to take place on 20 August. |
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New coal mines were sunk nearby to feed the furnaces and in time produced coal for export. |
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They then moved north to Varna in June, arriving just in time for the Russians to abandon Silistra. |
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And this path he opened to all who choose to follow him in time yet to come, thus saving the human race. |
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Whiteread turns the boathouse inside out thereby capturing a moment in time. |
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This rule was changed in time for The Return of the King to receive the Oscar for Best Music Score. |
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The last hour of a match must contain at least 20 overs, being extended in time so as to include 20 overs if necessary. |
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Just as all phenomena exist in time and thus have a history, they also exist in space and have a geography. |
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To measure the longitude at different location on Earth, he suggested using eclipses to determine the relative difference in time. |
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In rivers succession is virtually absent and the composition of the ecosystem stays fixed in time. |
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I made my jail break just in time to keep from being invited as chief guest to a necktie party. |
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She sent for King James, who was at Falkland Palace, but he did not come in time. |
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Word of the first expedition did not reach Scotland in time to prevent a second voyage of more than 1000 people. |
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Even allowing for this estimate overstating the case, in time of war, the Highlands was seen as a significant recruiting resource. |
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However, the strikes were so fleeting that it was very difficult to turn the antenna in time to positively locate one. |
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Well, it was nip and tuck, but everything worked out fine. Santa Claus got there in time to bring toys to all the boys and girls. |
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While not a combatant themselves in Spain, they absorbed many of the lessons learned in time to use them. |
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Gruffydd was nearly captured, but was warned in time to escape out to sea in one of his ships, though his other ships were destroyed. |
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A few other minor Welsh nobles submitted in time to retain their lands, but became little more than gentry. |
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Strata from widespread locations containing the same fossil fauna and flora are said to be correlatable in time. |
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Hence the fossil record is very incomplete, increasingly so further back in time. |
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This makes it easier to place many more species in time relative to the beginning of the Ordovician Period. |
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Construction began in September 1997, and was completed by June 1999, in time for the Rugby World Cup. |
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The club moved to the ground in 2010, in time for the start of the Super League XV season. |
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Given Sam's predicament, he avoids revealing his suspicion that he may have travelled back in time, for fear that others will think he is insane. |
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In time this gave birth in time to American whiskey and Kentucky bourbon, and its infamous later cousins moonshine and Everclear. |
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At this point in time the area would have been positioned around the equator and would form part of the Pangaea supercontinent. |
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On inquiry it was found that this neurosis corresponded in time with the oncome of the catamenia. |
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Strassburg nearly approached the battlecruisers but saw them in time and turned away. |
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The various tribal chieftains met each spring to elect an overlord that would lead them in time of war. |
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It took him two days, arriving in time to relieve the French garrison, but he discovered he could not rescue his fleet. |
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British reinforcements at Boulogne and Calais had arrived in time to forestall the Germans, when they advanced again on 22 May. |
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Eight of the nine Panzer divisions in Normandy were to be used in the attack, but only four could be made ready in time. |
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Compared to other birds of prey, the fossil record of the falcons is not well distributed in time. |
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Quirinus is thought by modern scholars to have been the patron of the armed community in time of peace. |
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He noted that tides varied in time and strength in different parts of the world. |
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The fact that mitochondrial DNA is maternally inherited enables genealogical researchers to trace maternal lineage far back in time. |
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Conchobar had pledged to marry Deirdre himself in time to avert war, and takes his revenge on Clann Uisnigh. |
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Sometimes funding can disappear when lawmakers cannot approve budgets in time. |
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This came in time for the start of the summer season on the Isles of Scilly and the World Pilot Gig Championships. |
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The distance in time to the event it describes may mean that it was embellished to add a dramatic touch. |
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Construction began in March 1997 and was completed in time for the 2001 season. |
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This technique is more experimental than practical, but may yield results in time. |
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Johnny is a good planner. He starts his work in time to get it finished by the deadline. |
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Rather than chronicling events as they happened in time, Suetonius presents them thematically. |
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The Chinese People's Liberation Army began as a peasant guerilla force which in time transformed itself into a large regular force. |
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At that point in time, approximately only 10,000 indigenous people were still alive in Hispaniola. |
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That there was a difference in time was guaranteed by the terms of the bill. |
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Since they have to be back in time for work the next morning they make a pact with the devil. |
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By April 1629 the States Army counted 77,000 soldiers, half as much again as the Army of Flanders at that point in time. |
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The fleet of two or three ships was anchored out of gunshot range, and no one could respond in time. |
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These numbers were only feasible in times of peace, however, and dwindled in time of conflict. |
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Certain aspectual distinctions express a relation in time between the event and the time of reference. |
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It is also possible for chain shifts to occur synchronically, within the phonology of a language as it exists at a single point in time. |
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Features overlap each other in time, as do suprasegmental phonemes in oral language and many phonemes in sign languages. |
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In urgent situations where a Council decision cannot be made in time, the President is empowered to act on behalf of the whole Council. |
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I can do a quick-and-dirty market analysis in time for the meeting tomorrow. |
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Ed liked to pore through his old photographs, looking back over moments of his life quick-frozen in time. |
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At some point in time, Rakshasas and asuras attacked them, but Yajna, accompanied by his sons the Yamas and the demigods, killed them. |
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Historically, therefore, they were granted only when they were necessary to encourage invention, limited in time and scope. |
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The European Parliamentary Elections Act 1999 changed the system in time for the 1999 election. |
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Effective sanitation practices, if instituted and adhered to in time, are usually sufficient to stop an epidemic. |
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The doors of his temples were kept open in time of war, the time in which the ideas of contradiction and conflict are most naturally regnant. |
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Securities with an active secondary market mean that there are many buyers and sellers at a given point in time. |
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The work was completed on 11 May 1966 in time for the introduction of electric expresses to London. |
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The sun's right ascension in time is useful to the practical astronomer in regular observatories, who adjusts his clock by sideral time. |
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Positrons, as antiparticle of the electron, are described as electrons moving backwards in time. |
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The festival will see youngsters encouraged to get into the spirit of swingtime by stepping back in time and learning a few Jitterbug moves. |
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In today's busy life there is not much time for workouts, but tweak in time for random walks and a few minutes of physical activity. |
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Vennegoor of Hesselink now faces arace to be ready in time for next Sunday's Old Firm derby along with groin injury victim Scott McDonald. |
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By tracing the orbits of the 20-odd fragments back in time, the astronomers infer that the present body had a diameter of 2 kilometers. |
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But the French coach warned that Rafa Nadal will refind his best form in time for Roland Garros. |
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But she went wide as she flew over the final bump and could not refind her rhythm in time through the swinging gates to the finish area. |
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She had repotted it but wanted to get the red leaves on the top in time for Christmas. |
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This is released on Boxing Day just in time to catch all those New Year Resolutioners who feel they've over-indulged during the festive season. |
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Will Raul Castro ironically be responsible for ushering in a wave of Cuban ballplayers to the Yankees or other MLB teams in time for next season? |
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My roses, damascenas and banksias were gorgeous and out in time for my Charity Garden Opening in April and so were greatly admired. |
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Before the lake was raised by a dam in the 1930s the small village of Mardale Green stood at the head of the valley, now only revealed in time of drought. |
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But he concludes by saying that in time of scarcity such Poor Laws, by raising the price of corn more evenly, actually produce a beneficial effect. |
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I shall go to Japan and hence will not be here in time for the party. |
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It took the combined skills of three great civilizations far apart in time to frame that godlike concept in which the tangible universe itself was only a single factor. |
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The engine, however, behind us, not being aware of our mishap, came pelting on at a smart pace, without receiving its signal for checking motion in time. |
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An estate is the net worth of a person at any point in time alive or dead. |
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In this process the ministry has a special responsibility and task, caring for the continuation in time of the mission of Jesus Christ and his Apostles. |
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My pup likes to run as fast as he can, yet cannot always stop in time! |
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The Samoan word for dance is siva with unique gentle movements of the body in time to music and which tell a story, although the Samoan male dances can be more snappy. |
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A MAJOR pounds 4m refurbishment at one of Chester's top hotels has been completed in time to mark the sponsorship of MG Sport and Racing by Ramada Jarvis. |
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In Twain's work, a reading of the text in modern times is interrupted by a mysterious stranger who claims to be a Yankee who was sent back in time to the Arthurian era. |
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Stu turns his back on first love 'sweet lady' Mary and goes on a bender of 70s excess, realising just in time there's more to life than pulling the laydeez. |
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Chancellor had found a way to Russia, and though in time it was superseded by a better one it remained for years the only feasible route for the English. |
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These first inhabitants, from whom the Papuan people are probably descended, adapted to the range of ecologies and, in time, developed one of the earliest known agricultures. |
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A point on the Equator that passes directly in front of this observer later in time has a higher planetographic longitude than a point that did so earlier in time. |
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To do their job, the pilot waves must travel to the far slit and return in time to influence the electron's path depending on whether that slit is open. |
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The relative abundance of each type of flake can indicate what sort of lithic work was going on at a particular spot at a particular point in time. |
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The company had sought to sell its current base, and relocate elsewhere in West Cornwall to raise funds, although no suitable site was found in time to save the service. |
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The rebuilding work was completed in time for last Christmas, but the church had not become fully functional without its altar, lecturn, font and processional cross. |
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The concept of the Mitochondrial Eve is based on the same type of analysis, attempting to discover the origin of humanity by tracking the lineage back in time. |
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Tidal phenomena are not limited to the oceans, but can occur in other systems whenever a gravitational field that varies in time and space is present. |
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Just in time for the Easter holidays, Lufthansa employees will be handing out Kermit and Miss Piggy sleep masks to passengers at the hubs in Frankfurt and Munich. |
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Since the mantle and the lithosphere continuously respond to the changing ice and water loads, the state of stress at any location continuously changes in time. |
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The relative neglect of the army, led to a theory of limited liability until 1937, in which Britain would not send a great army to Europe in time of war. |
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However, there are some warning signs of an impending tsunami, and automated systems can provide warnings immediately after an earthquake in time to save lives. |
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And though this be a great foredeal, and an excellent jewel, yet the great and unspeakable glory, that in time to come shall be declared in us, hath not yet appeared. |
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Vikings would plant crops after the winter and go raiding as soon as the ice melted on the sea, then return home with their loot in time to harvest the crops. |
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Aragorn defeats the Corsairs and uses their ships to transport the men of southern Gondor up the Anduin, reaching Minas Tirith just in time to turn the tide of battle. |
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Some, as above, were made out of artistic licence whilst others were deliberately inserted to confuse the issue of whether Sam Tyler was in a coma, mad or really back in time. |
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There is too, at this point in time, an aesthetic disadvantage to filmsetting in that the range of type faces specially designed for it is still extremely limited. |
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What should a wheelchaired person do if he waits by the stairwell for assistance in a fire but help never comes in time to carry him down with an evacuchair? |
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National Leagues One and Two were then rebranded as Championship and Championship 1 respectively, with the change being implemented in time for the 2009 season. |
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The proceedings volume of the 31st History of Astronautics Symposium contains 25 papers on subjects ranging in time from the late 19th century through the Cold War years. |
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Meanwhile, Japan ranks 26th out of 63 countries in a 2014 English Proficiency Index, amid calls for this to improve in time for the 2020 Tokyo Olympics. |
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Due to the remoteness of some of the locations, the crew would also bring survival kits in case helicopters could not reach the location to bring them home in time. |
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The end result is that the multiderivative time integrator allows us to obtain high-order accuracy in time while keeping the number of implicit stages at a minimum. |
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Some hospitals are introducing just in time workflow analysis borrowed from manufacturing industry to speed up the processes within the system and improve efficiencies. |
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They were ready in time for hostilities to start on 19 March. |
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They were also damaged by the harsh British response to the Easter Rising, who treated the rebellion as treason in time of war when they declared martial law in Ireland. |
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Despite difficult winter conditions, a few took the oath in time. |
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After a new pit building, the Silverstone Wing, was completed in time for the 2011 race, the start of the track was relocated to between Club Corner and Abbey Corner. |
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A new retractable roof was built in time for the 2009 championships, marking the first time that rain did not stop play for a lengthy time on Centre Court. |
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The name of the winning team is engraved on the silver band around the base as soon as the final has finished, in order to be ready in time for the presentation ceremony. |
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Broccoli's 007 Stage in time for filming to commence on A View to a Kill. |
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The hall was destroyed by fire in 1969, but Britten was determined that it would be rebuilt in time for the following year's festival, which it was. |
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Monroe stopped the letter from being sent just in time, and, after Paine's criticism of the Jay Treaty, Monroe suggested that Paine reside somewhere else. |
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Higher quality ciders can be made using the champagne method, but this is expensive in time and money and requires special corks, bottles, and other equipment. |
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He organized the civilian rebellion and abolished or halted the Zamindari system in time he was active and gave the farmers proprietorship of their own land. |
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Peter and Mania found a pensione whose view was of chestnut woods and a horizon looped by peaks lustred with last winter's snow, distant in time as well as space. |
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