The Left has much in common with the radicals in the Green movement and wants to work with them. |
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That case has been applied by practically every court in the highest point of the hierarchy in common law jurisdictions in the world. |
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Journalists have one thing in common with historians, a residual obligation to truth. |
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The Aeolian mode takes a G sharp at cadences, and has many characteristics in common with the modern minor scale. |
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As different as Locke and Hume's empiricism was from Descartes' rationalism, they had something in common. |
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If someone is buying a property with a friend or relative, ownership can be held through joint tenancy or tenancy in common. |
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A day before their mano-a-mano in Miami, they appear to have a lot in common. |
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Its function has much in common with the formal groups like Brownies or Scouts but is not identical. |
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On the surface there might not be much in common between a large seaside tourist resort and a market town on the edge of the Dales. |
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He is married now, has been 10 years in common law marriage and has given birth to two children in that union. |
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Inventing a pattern where there is none is something that stories and conspiracy theories have in common. |
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It's all about meeting up with old mates, making new friends and being part of a massive crowd with one thing in common. |
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It is also available in common lumber and plywood sizes, as well as shakes and shingles for roofing and sidewall applications. |
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As I walked through the cold steel passageways, every room I entered had the same thing in common. |
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The only thing we had in common was that we were both appalled and shamed by the Waynes of this world. |
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We realised how our hobby was the thing we had in common and the most important part of that was sharing. |
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The only thing they have in common are the double rather than single quotation marks around them. |
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If you opt for tenancy in common and want to leave your share of the property to the person you buy with, you need to make a will and state this. |
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Although bottle nipples have enormously improved over the last 15 years, their structure and texture have little in common with a natural nipple. |
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The British Parliament had no direct equivalent elsewhere, although the Polish Sejm and Hungarian Diet did possess points in common. |
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What do zoning laws, progressive teachers unions and community organizing all have in common? |
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I cherish them, these people of all ages, all kinds of backgrounds and nothing much in common but all manner of tie-ins with me. |
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This section on mensuration certainly has more in common with Hindu and Hebrew texts than it does with any Greek work. |
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South Swindon people have a lot more in common with the fox than they do with toffs on horseback. |
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Insulin resistance is an important pathogenic factor in common metabolic disorders. |
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Together, they're a couple of test-lab refugees with little in common except for the three feet of chain that shackles them together. |
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A Spanish tortilla has nothing in common with its Mexican counterpart except its Latin root-torte meaning a round cake. |
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Contemporary fine dining restaurants and specialty beer breweries have several points in common. |
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But we had mutual friends in common, and the most significant one was this chap, James Coldhurst. |
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They had things in common with us nerds, and by graduating year the social strata were almost gone. |
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He is a devoted collector of usual and unusual objects with one thing in common, a history. |
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I see 8,000 miles of boreens each summer and notice a rapid, unsustainable decline in common meadows. |
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The oldest of the hardness test methods in common use on engineering materials today is the Brinell hardness test. |
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But talking to their namesakes, they realised that they had much more in common. |
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His is a thesis that Celts, Bretons, and Galicians had more in common with one another than they did with their inland kin. |
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If we can't laugh at a caricature of ourselves, then maybe we have a lot more in common with these self-important buffoons than we think. |
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It's not enough to be a member of a virtual community if you've got nothing in common with anyone there. |
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All the stones are local sandstone, undressed, and, in common with other circles on Exmoor, are fairly small in size, the largest only 1m long. |
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What do large athletes like bodybuilders and football players have in common? |
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Among the things that we share in common with animals are certain characteristic bodily functions. |
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I believe that writer and analyst are seeking forms or elements in common which come from the unconscious. |
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Thin and tired, she seemed to have little in common with the bright-eyed young go-getter. |
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Set in the Yorkshire countryside, two seemingly unalike young women discover one summer that they have more in common than they thought. |
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The internal pudendal artery may arise in common with the obturator or the umbilical. |
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Except for a vague similarity in the themes, there is nothing in common to them. |
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His relationship with his fellow referee was always spikey to say the least but the two men do now have one thing in common. |
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The tall, gawky, moon-faced 23-year-old Southerner in corduroy trousers had a lot in common with George. |
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The Hutu have much in common with the other peoples of these countries, the Tutsi and the Twa. |
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They have much in common with the other groups of this region, the Twa and the Hutu. |
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One reason for this can be determined simply by looking at what all those films above have in common. |
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What the above have in common, though, is the presence of a recognised, established quality striker. |
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Though we all hold in common that we are not of an Abrahamic faith, we are still too different from each other to be forced into the same mold. |
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Knowledgeable users maintain that chewing khat has more in common with coffee than cocaine. |
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At a quick glance, jawless fish such as the lamprey above don't appear to have much in common with jawed fish or any other back-boned creature. |
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Perhaps our closeness to the intricacies of identity, including race and gender, blind us to what we have in common with humanity. |
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Talk radio, webzines, list servers, message boards and now blog sites have one thing in common. |
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The way his poetry is structured, the verses and the stanzas have much in common with visual arts. |
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What do plastic garbage bags, human flesh, and the skins of apples all have in common? |
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In fact, I can even be friendly to him, because I know he's not a bad person, and we do have a lot in common. |
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Every cohabiting couple should know the difference between joint tenancy and tenancy in common agreements. |
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Bearing this in mind, we now look at joint tenancies and tenancies in common. |
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It is important, in these circumstances, to split any joint tenancy on the property so that the couple own the property as tenants in common. |
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Shojo comics have little in common with the corny romance titles of yesteryear. |
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Although the three opposition leaders are worlds apart on most issues of policy, they do have two very important things in common. |
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The complex has a lot of people who are in our age group and who are parents of young kids too, so we have a lot in common. |
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The ageless Neal Ascherson is one of Scotland's great national assets, fortunately now repatriated in common with the Stone of Destiny. |
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What all these countries have in common is widespread unemployment and illiteracy. |
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Most Milanese think they have more in common with suede than they do with Neapolitans. |
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All three forms have in common the flattened third scale degree, producing a characteristic minor 3rd with the keynote. |
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He knows that he has something in common with the neighbour, they are both doing a poo. |
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But what we did have in common was a dislike of soppy, sloppy liberalism, the idea that there are no moral absolutes. |
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Trials to date show similar rates of clinical cure in common respiratory infections. |
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It demands a class identity that recognizes difference, but defines what we hold in common in society and who the enemy is. |
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Though they share nothing in upbringing, they have already found that they have a workaday attitude to showbiz in common. |
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Good as they are for reading or study or the like, their real value or worth is in their being voiced in common prayer. |
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The word refers to an emotion briefly held in common by a gathering of people who may be strangers to one another. |
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The reality that confounds these mistaken stereotypes is that our religions have more in common with each other than with other religions. |
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Of course, both Naziism and Soviet communism were critiques of bourgeois liberalism, so maybe they had a lot in common to begin with after all. |
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Or is she, in common with most vegetarians, a lacto-ovo-vegetarian, consuming both eggs and dairy products? |
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The two of them had got on like a house on fire though, as they shared the same sense of humour, though they didn't have much else in common. |
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The only thing parents have in common is our curious relationship with our own children. |
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Instead it is some personality traits rather than biographical detail Brydon and Keith have in common. |
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But that could be because her last name was my last name so we had something in common. |
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As a last resort, Lambeau seeks out his old college roommate, who has a great deal in common with young Will. |
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What does the nitery crackdown have in common with cheating baht bus drivers, a hike in the price of visas and rubbish in the streets? |
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What they have in common is an urge to combine zippy new technologies with real-life social interaction. |
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What do aspirin, codeine, ipecac, reserpine, scopolamine, theophylline, and vinblastine have in common? |
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In many respects the modern shootist has many things in common with the brush popper of the past. |
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It is a worthwhile exercise to wrestle with that which we Anglicans hold in common apart from our shared history in the Church of England. |
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What do Persian kittens, angora sweaters and the romantic comedy Just Married have in common? |
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At first glance, the animals in the annelidan and molluskan groups look like they have little in common. |
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The rule as it has developed in common law jurisdictions is in fact an exception to an exception to a rule of evidence. |
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The only appendages that all crustaceans have in common is two pairs of antennae. |
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Although in common use, the geochemistry of modern arc lavas is not a safe discriminator for the tectonic setting of Archaean volcanic rocks. |
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All these subjects have much in common and might be grouped together as important features in a wildlife garden. |
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However, what they all had in common was great musical rhythm, enthusiasm, and ability. |
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When it comes to traditional restorative products and aphrodisiacs many pills and potions bare little in common with their label. |
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The 15 spaces have only their fierce commitment to individuality in common, ranging in style from slick minimalism to full-on kitsch. |
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But in these production areas regulation tends to be much looser so wines from the same appellation tend to have less in common. |
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She is a slow thoughtful eater and I gulp my food down but other than that we had lots in common. |
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We used to date sisters and we're both crazy as loons, so we have that much in common. |
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The only thing they had in common, aside from playing music, was that they played it too loud. |
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As for the ring scenes, they have more in common with a video game than the fight game. |
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Therefore, we cannot support Durham's derivation of New World lunulate clades from an ancestor in common with protoscutellids, either. |
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Also the genetic background in common laboratory and transgenic mice affects the phenotype. |
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The existing maces have far more in common with the same item that Kings of the period are shown holding when crowned or seated in state. |
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As infections go, mad cow disease and foot-and-mouth disease don't have much in common. |
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Precious or not, made-up stories take us forward or back in time and put us inside the souls of people with whom we have nothing in common. |
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He's still a bit too young and still way too green to realize just how much he has in common with those he now scolds and satanizes. |
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Cinnamon and allspice chime in a thin, sweet-sour broth that has something in common with sauerbraten or the darker moles. |
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What this seemingly unrelated bunch of foods has in common is lecithin, a crucial building block in cell walls. |
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A French philosopher had more in common with a Chinese mandarin than with his barbaric Frankish ancestors in the Dark Ages. |
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Well as a wicket-keeper, did you often feel a greater affinity, or that you had more in common with the other keepers in opposition teams than with your own team-mates? |
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The Harpa mollusc shares much in common with volutes and olives. All three families make up the Volutacea superfamily, all of which are active, carnivorous sand burrowers. |
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With whom else than Jasper's father could Darrell so properly and so unreservedly discuss a matter in which their interest and their fear were in common? |
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About all our books have in common is our shameless use of Shakespeare as a source. |
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What do a smiley-face shaped sponge, a toilet training device for cats, and a hands-free umbrella have in common? |
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For all their differences and ambiguities, empires have shared in common a will to power that should make us skeptical of their most optimistic self-assessments. |
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That lobby is a curious mixture of interests, reflected in influential sections of the newspaper world, with little in common except their hostility to Europe. |
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You now had jokes in common, passions, dreams, and that you had a weirdness of your own that she actually wanted to understand. |
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What they all had in common was that they weren't particularly democratic, being variations either on autocracy or on bureaucratic totalitarianism. |
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The senator from Texas and the anarchist busker from New York City have a lot more in common than you might expect. |
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The Photographer has emailed to ask if I'd like to have our semi-annual get-together, wherein he informs me of the many things I have in common with Satan, over drinks. |
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The change broke apart the Franco-German axis because Helmut Schmidt had less in common with the Socialist president than he had with the conservative Giscard. |
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What do dark chocolate, casual Fridays, and graduating from high school have in common? |
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Donors also apparently have a lot in common with kindergarteners who need to be bribed into napping. |
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The youngest children have something in common with their kuia and koro. |
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The newly-weds of the title are a couple of unpleasant people, who have so little in common that their life together is likely to last as long as your memory of this movie. |
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What do your intestines, the yeast in bread dough, and a developing frog all have in common? Among other things, they all have cells that carry out mitosis. |
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They quickly touched on how much they had in common and agreed to team up. |
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One thing they all have in common is a blurring of the traditional boundaries between subjects and objects, which automatically reframes the issue of social agency. |
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The decimal system is more commonly used now, although certain words from the older vigesimal system are still in common usage, especially when telling the time. |
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As a result, the commercial space revolution has less in common with the rise of the steamship or the airliner than with the invention of telegraphy or radio. |
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It probably comes as a surprise to many, but the army may have more in common with Norway than Sparta. |
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Clearly warfare conducted through massive land armies, battering rams, javelins and slingshots has little technically in common with warfare today. |
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But the other characteristic that this distinguished group, with few exceptions, shares in common is their outspoken opposition to school vouchers. |
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He guillotined existentialism just when we needed most to hear its howl, its barbaric yawp that there is something in common between God and all of us. |
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For example, a lot of the words that we would today classify as racial slurs were in common usage in polite society as recently as thirty years ago. |
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But the only thing these two crises have in common is that Republican obstructionism is making them worse. |
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The property is owned as a tenancy in common, rather than jointly owned. |
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Those who read Mr Cooper's article will discover that he is anything but a Colonel Blimp and that he does not have much in common with historical liberal imperialism either. |
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The novels of the Latin American boom have many traits in common. |
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I have always tried to keep up my existing friendship networks, and it really pains me to realise that perhaps I don't have much in common with my old friends anymore. |
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You remind us that men and women have imperfection in common, and are indivisible. |
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The arms protected, he wrote, were those that are in common use for lawful purposes, like handguns. |
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Even beyond the slings and arrows aimed at them both in public life, these two women have a lot in common. |
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This is the next Hobby Lobby By Irin Carmon, MSNBC Laura Grieneisen and Liz Miller have a lot in common. |
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In terms of character and content, these texts do not have much in common. |
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But what both men had in common was a streak of rugged individualism, stubbornness, and personal vision. |
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The one thing they all seemed to have in common was an utter lack of street smarts. |
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What do Canadians, left-handers, and libertarians have in common? |
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Yet physicists hope to learn something about memory by studying simplified computer models called neural networks, which have some properties in common with real brains. |
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The coaches who have trained under these men have quite a bit in common. |
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At first blush, Henry Ford, the founder of Ford, and Elon Musk, the founder of Tesla Motors, would seem to have little in common. |
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After three years of hard graft, Arden opened her first salon on Fifth Avenue and, in common with her rival, the nature of her financial backing remains shrouded in mystery. |
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While the texts of the other Lieder were rather simple rhymes in common rhyme schemes like a-b-a-b, the text here is very difficult, both to interpret and to sing. |
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But the Al-Shabab attackers were only able to kill the mortal part of him that he had in common with everybody. |
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Anybody care to start a pool for how long it takes a commenter to suggest that refusing to date people with nothing in common with us makes us all misandrists? |
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What do Tiger Woods, his numerous alleged girlfriends, and we, the ogling, obsessed onlookers all have in common? |
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It may be permissible to call them economic conflicts because they concern that sphere of human life which is, in common speech, known as the sphere of economic activities. |
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Finding the common bonds that help us realize that we have far more in common than that which separates us. |
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The church shows hallmarks of Modernism, but its monumental blocky forms, especially on the east end, have much in common with eleventh-century Romanesque churches. |
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In fact, as we would cheerfully admit to each other, we had nothing in common besides both being students and both having a soft spot for Hazell Dean. |
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A task, in common usability lingo, is a rough measure for a user activity. |
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Their proposal presupposes that the members of this set, i.e., laryngeals, pharyngeals, uvulars and velars, should have in common certain physical basis. |
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Nineteenth-century scholars and 11th-century landowners may not have had much in common, but they did share a profound suspicion of the state and its financial doings. |
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The knights stayed with the citizens rather than joining the baronage, with whom they had much in common, adding great weight to the Commons house. |
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Parita, in common with most new mums, spends most of her day running around after her toddler and says that there is not much time for anything else. |
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British architects, builders, developers and clients for buildings have something else in common with people involved in transport and distribution. |
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It may sound absurd at first flush, but politics and poker have a lot more than just bluffing in common. |
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In my experience, those who are close-minded tend to have certain personality characteristics in common. |
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The words Arkansan, Arkansawyer and Arkie are in common use. Each term has its partisans and its detractors. |
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Meditation appears to have something in common with biofeedback and autosuggestibility. |
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When I got fibro, the Internet was not in common use, so I didn't have the resources that a newly diagnosed person would have now. |
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It proved to be nothing more that a lizard of the geckotian family, hideously ugly, but, in common with all of his kind, perfectly harmless. |
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Determination of minor head loss is simple and straightforward, and a standared nomograph in common use is included at the end of the chapter. |
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Today, one third of the world's population live in common law jurisdictions or in systems mixed with civil law. |
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Well into the 19th century, ancient maxims played a large role in common law adjudication. |
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Celtic cultures seem to have been widely diverse, with the use of a Celtic language being the main thing they have in common. |
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This scenario may well have been the source of syntactic features in English, which the latter has in common with Celtic. |
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Henry had more in common with Charles, whom he met once before and once after Francis. |
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The majority of Anglicans, however, have in common a belief in the Real Presence, defined in one way or another. |
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Whether it is a tenancy in common or a joint tenancy, there are several ways to end the co-ownership. |
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Case law, in common law jurisdictions, is the set of decisions of adjudicatory tribunals or other rulings that can be cited as precedent. |
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Law professors in common law traditions play a much smaller role in developing case law than professors in civil law traditions. |
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However the label 'cathedral' remains in common parlance for notable churches that were formerly part of an episcopal denomination. |
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In its strictest sense, petroleum includes only crude oil, but in common usage it includes all liquid, gaseous and solid hydrocarbons. |
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By 1725 the Newcomen engine was in common use in mining, particularly collieries. |
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The orbital nature of the motorway, in common with racetracks, lent itself to unofficial, and illegal, motor racing. |
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However, throughout the Viking Age, runic alphabets remained in common use in Scandinavia. |
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Their tribal character is a feature which Irish and Welsh monasteries had in common. |
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The Methodist Church follows the Revised Common Lectionary, in common with other major denominations in Britain. |
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According to Dan Lusthaus, Madhyamaka and Yogachara have a great deal in common, and the commonality stems from early Buddhism. |
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Francis, members of the Third Order began to live in common, in an attempt to follow a more ascetical way of life. |
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A number of words which remained in common use in Modern English have undergone semantic narrowing. |
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Although procedures vary from one field of inquiry to another, identifiable features are frequently shared in common between them. |
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For example, mass and weight overlap in meaning in common discourse, but have distinct meanings in mechanics. |
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He just did not have much in common with people who did not share his intellectual interests. |
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Classical and metal are probably the two genres that have the most in common when it comes to feel, texture, creativity. |
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This contradicts the rule in common law that a person given a statutory power cannot delegate that power. |
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James I fulfilled the efforts of Protestant reformers who had been supporting the distribution of Bibles in common language for decades. |
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Apart from the Constitution Acts, 1867 to 1982, Canada's constitution also has unwritten elements based in common law and convention. |
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Hydrogen is the only element that has different names for its isotopes in common use today. |
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It took development by others over the next 20 years or so before effective electric lamps were in common use. |
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What all these parks have in common is that they are, at heart, knowledge partnerships that foster innovation. |
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Sir Miles Fleetwood was sent to commission the disafforestation and division of lands being used in common. |
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In the 1950s, the BBC SO, in common with the rest of the BBC's musical organisation, suffered from stagnation. |
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He thus came to the conclusion that psychoanalytic theories had more in common with primitive myths than with genuine science. |
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He had been born at Angolala in an Oromo area and had lived his first twelve years with Shewan Oromos with whom he thus had much in common. |
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Boats in common use include large container ships, a variety of ferries, passenger ships, sailing ships, and smaller motorised vessels. |
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The nationalisation of banking involved more significant changes to economic policy, and had nothing in common with Labour practices. |
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The Gaelic spoken in the Aberdeenshire Highlands shared most features in common with the Gaelic of Strathspey and East Perthshire. |
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The party claims that, taken together, these principles give the party a holistic view that is in common with all Green parties around the world. |
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The application of optical features is now in common use throughout the world. |
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The high iodine content gives the seaweed a distinctive flavour in common with olives and oysters. |
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What all these had in common was emphasising the downbeat of the music by enthusiastic footwork. |
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With the exception of the cormorants and some terns, and in common with most other birds, all seabirds have waterproof plumage. |
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Greek Cypriots and Turkish Cypriots share a lot in common in their culture but also have differences. |
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Myr is in common use where the term is often written, such as in Earth science and cosmology. |
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They hold at least eleven morphological traits in common, which are not found in other birds. |
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Although usually avoided in common speech, this form can be used instead of possessive pronouns to avoid confusion. |
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All dialects have in common an additional line of palatalizations, which is uncommon for a Germanic language. |
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There is a tendency, though, for such vowels to become reduced over time, especially in common words. |
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The main assessment may involve the MHC, where the degree of relatedness of two individuals is correlated to the MHC genes they have in common. |
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By the early 1980s, bromofluoroalkanes were in common use on aircraft, ships, and large vehicles as well as in computer facilities and galleries. |
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All sea lions have certain features in common, in particular their coarse, short fur, greater bulk, and larger prey than fur seals. |
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Midway Atoll, in common with all the Hawaiian Islands, receives substantial amounts of debris from the garbage patch. |
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The passeriformes have this toe arrangement in common with hunting birds like eagles and falcons. |
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In fact, Italian and French share many more root words in common that do not even appear in Spanish. |
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Mary died unmarried, leaving the estate in common between her nephew Maurice Bocland and her niece Jane wife of John Eyre. |
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Languages that belong to different families nonetheless often have features in common, and these shared features tend to correlate. |
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This indicates that runes were in common use side by side with the Latin alphabet for several centuries. |
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In fact, while by no means identical, the cuisines of Hamburg and Denmark, especially of Copenhagen, have a lot in common. |
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The Nordic countries have much in common in their way of life, history, religion, their use of Scandinavian languages and social structure. |
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The policies of the Nordic countries with respect to cultural life, mass media and religion have many shared values and features in common. |
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Modern Greek literature refers to literature written in common Modern Greek, emerging from late Byzantine times in the 11th century. |
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The term was in common usage in both the Boer republics and the Cape Colony by the late nineteenth century. |
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He is also commemorated in common with other saints of Rostov and Yaroslavl on 23 May. |
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In principle junk sails have much in common with the most aerodynamically efficient sails used today in windsurfers or catamarans. |
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The reason for this decreased oxygen affinity is due to the hemoglobin configuration found in common ostrich blood. |
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Therefore, in common ostriches we see use of more energy when compared to smaller birds in absolute terms, but less per unit mass. |
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Nevertheless, in common with many cities in the region, there are thousands of cyclists in the city of Bruges. |
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Sometimes an official name change is resisted in other languages and the older name may remain in common use. |
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Yet Rome and the Italians held far more in common perhaps than did Carthage and the Berbers. |
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It was adopted as the Postal Map Romanization of Guangzhou and remained in common use until the gradual adoption of pinyin. |
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Inertial Navigation Systems are still in common use on submarines, since GPS reception or other fix sources are not possible while submerged. |
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The Maya calendrical system, in common with other Mesoamerican calendars, had its origins in the Preclassic period. |
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However, for culinary purposes and in common English language usage, peanuts are usually referred to as nuts. |
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The case system of Dutch, simpler than that of German, is also simplified in common usage. |
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Linguistic identity has not yet established which terms shall prevail, and all three are used in common parlance. |
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This could explain why creole languages have much in common, while avoiding a monogenetic model. |
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Similarly, in common with most of the Commonwealth, the final letter of the alphabet, Z is pronounced zed. |
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The Scouse accent is highly distinctive, and has little in common with those used in the neighbouring regions of Cheshire and Lancashire. |
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It remained largely confined to this area until the 13th century, continuing in common use while Scottish Gaelic was the court language. |
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The Philadelphia dialect is now retreating away from many of the traditional features it once shared in common with New York City. |
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The Articles argue against some Anabaptist positions such as the holding of goods in common and the necessity of believer's baptism. |
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English civil procedure shares much in common with the civil law systems of other common law countries. |
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This instead has, in common with several other treaties, an optional protocol prohibiting capital punishment and promoting its wider abolition. |
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Many of the most important questions of law had been decided on demurrer both in common law and chancery. |
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Contributory negligence in common law jurisdictions is generally a defense to a claim based on negligence, an action in tort. |
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Restatements are rare in common law jurisdictions outside of the United States. |
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However, in all cases the course of descent specified in the patent must be known in common law. |
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Historically, in common law countries, high treason is treason against the state. |
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Water wheels were still in commercial use well into the 20th century but they are no longer in common use. |
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In the traditional open field system, many subsistence farmers cropped strips of land in large fields held in common and divided the produce. |
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During the 16th century a treadle wheel with flyer was in common use, and gained such names as the Saxony wheel and the flax wheel. |
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Nearly all boats were made out of wood until the late 19th century, and wood remains in common use today in boat construction. |
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In Bellamy's utopia, property was held in common and money replaced with a system of equal credit for all. |
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Until the branch line to Hawes was closed in 1964 the alternative name for Garsdale Head was Hawes Junction, a name which remains in common use. |
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We in southern Colorado have little in common with our northern statemates. Nobody who hasn't been there can appreciate Kansas. |
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An undivided interest means that the tenant in common has a share in the whole and not ownership of a separate portion. |
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What all these have in common is that they run on dry cell batteries, as opposed to wet cells, like those for cars. |
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What do the American alligator and the bald eagle have in common with the Oregon chub? |
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Astronomers have long suspected that most radio galaxies, though varying widely in appearance, have more in common than meets the eye. |
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I pretty much wholly associate the area with Boro as I feel it's what we all have in common. |
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Most Assistance Dogs have one universal skill in common that outshines and far exceeds all of their physical capabilities. |
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What do Charlie Sheen, Marion Cotillard, and Mos def have in common? |
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This sensibility has nothing in common with the fascist take on Lebensraum, which is about making the world empty for one's own life. |
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Wilmington Housing Authority that the state's public housing tenants have the right to bear arms for self-defense even in common areas. |
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Metabolic fate of dietary terpenes from Eucalyptus radiata in common ringtail possum. |
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What do hoki, orange roughies, oreo dories, ling and southern blue whiting have in common? |
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What do Sewin sea trout, Norfolk black turkeys and Ayrshire cattle have in common? |
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It's more a metrosexual thing, and in that way I think we have something in common with gay guys. |
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This tendency is especially interesting because in other respects Russian, Ukrainian and Byelorussian folklore has much in common. |
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Introgression in common bean x tepary bean interspecific congruity-backcross lines as measured by AFLP markers. |
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What do Lebanon's Byblos Castle, Egypt's Luxor Temple, India's Charminar monument, and the New York Stock Exchange building have in common? |
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Three girls, completely unalike with seemingly nothing in common, come to be friends thanks to the common bond of being nannies. |
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Taking an interest in mechanics and doing up an old banger for stockcar racing is the first thing he's had in common with his dad. |
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Firstly, love is a basic emotion of the concupiscible appetite, which is a sensitive appetite that man has in common with non-rational animals. |
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These series are directly summable because they are expressed in common base-year units, that is, 1990 Geary-Khamis dollars. |
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Each co-owner must hold title to the property, directly or through a disregarded entity, as a tenant in common under local law. |
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What do red grapes, white onions, green and black teas and blackeye cowpeas all have in common? |
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One thing that this diverse pantheon of culture heroes has in common is that they are all dead. |
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The software outperforms the open source VFAT implementation and tops even Android's default ext4 file system in common benchmarks. |
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Temperature experienced during vitellogenesis influences ovarian maturation and the timing of ovulation in common wolffish. |
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Finally Civitarese takes on the postmodernists and deconstructionists, showing that Derrida and Freud have more in common than one might suspect. |
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Development of digestive enzymes in common dentex Dentex dentex during early ontogeny. |
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It shows that terms such as crabbit and blether are used daily, while glaikit, for someone stupid, remains in common usage. |
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They have more in common genetically with a group of African mammals that includes elephants, aardvarks, and golden moles. |
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Determine interests that you have in common, and develop pinboards that are related to those interests and your brand. |
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