Eventually, one of the other guys' girlfriends would intrude on them and drag her boyfriend off to dance. |
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The book includes 185 pages of text and 35 pages of endnotes, so that the notes are available for the reader, but do not intrude on the text. |
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They intrude Upper Carboniferous host rocks, but do not penetrate the Permian units. |
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As Brian grew up, his off-beat Scouse sense of humour began to intrude more and more into his drawings. |
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You feel drugged within this wondrous little world, this babymoon in which nothing, for the moment, is allowed to intrude. |
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We live in an age in which laws, rules, regulations, charters, policies and practices intrude on every aspect of our lives. |
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Objections include the claim that a house so close to the graveyard would intrude on burials and the privacy of people visiting graves. |
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As Nikolas shifted their bodies and his mouth nuzzled her neck, she didn't want anything negative to intrude on the moment. |
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For a while, time stops, and there's nothing important enough to intrude upon an old man's communion with the sun. |
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My mom was the kind of person who could always tell when something was wrong, but didn't like to intrude or ask a lot of questions. |
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And there are also concerns some of the Government's proposed changes will intrude on the independence of Australian universities. |
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He remembers his African upbringing fondly, at least up until civil disturbances began to intrude on his world. |
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And it cannot cross the line into attempts to intrude on the court's authority and punish judges for making decisions one doesn't like. |
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Isn't actual reality starting to intrude on minds that have effectively blocked it for the past couple years? |
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The last thing fans want is the already too long, too boring election campaign to intrude on their enjoyment of some very interesting contests. |
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This trend continues until in the Odiel River the mafic sills intrude the red mudrock-felsic volcaniclastic facies association. |
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They did not want the real effects of the war to intrude on the reality-TV version being broadcast to the public. |
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Yet the thick supports between panes, though architecturally interesting intrude on the view. |
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With the governor's decree, and the state of Florida's law, this is a clear case between how far the state can go to intrude itself in your life. |
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I hate to intrude with reality, but did the WWF bother to ask where all this increase in population is going on? |
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What right have these thoughtless people to intrude their noise on the whole neighbourhood? |
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Numerous undated granitic and dioritic plutons intrude the Palaeozoic rocks and form large areas of Karlik Tagh and Barkol Tagh. |
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The boot is of a reasonable size and compared to other convertibles, the roof does not intrude. |
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He slept a dreamless sleep until voices began to intrude on his subconscious. |
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In the central part of the intrusion, some small granitic aplite dykes intrude the syenitic rocks. |
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I'll smoke a Virginian, if I may, but I don't want to intrude on you. |
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This is their personal comfort zone, which you intrude upon at your peril. |
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Beauty will not intrude on proceedings when the bell sounds on Saturday for a bout between two fighters, one explosively combative, the other composed and skillful. |
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It's even stranger when you consider the great cry for separation of Church and State whenever anyone wants to intrude the merest sniff of religion into politics. |
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How long before the crackers intrude upon this cosy intimacy? |
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At least two Eocene feldspar porphyry dykes or sills intrude Tsa da Glisza, and appear to have followed the same planes of weakness as the aplite dykes. |
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A partition whose contour corresponds approximately to that of the inclined seat back may intrude into this space. |
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Each of these has also generated commercial spinoffs that enhance the ability of the private sector to intrude into our daily lives. |
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So, the question arises, what are the boundaries of regulatory policy, and when does regulatory policy intrude into political policy? |
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Roads intrude into natural habitats, separating ecosystems and permanently altering the landscape. |
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Thus, the federal government is using its role of negotiator at the international level to intrude into provincial jurisdictions. |
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But the London painted here, the Britain painted here, is a gilded, desirable place, magnificent yet homely, where rumours of empire intrude only as exotic hints. |
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He belittles the idea of doing something effective about it, even when symptoms clamorously intrude on the pattern of his daily business. |
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What you have to be careful of is appearing, as author, to intrude upon your narrative. |
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There are legitimate processes that Parliament can intrude upon, including court proceedings. |
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I was elected in 2004, and not a week goes by in this House when some attempt is not made to intrude upon Quebec's fields of jurisdiction. |
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If foreign proceedings intrude upon local security interests, the value of those security interests may be seriously impaired. |
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No major renovation work, such as roof repairs, is likely to intrude upon your peace and quiet. |
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He is placing his reader under an obligation to spend time reading the letter, and to waste that time is to intrude upon his life plan. |
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Something is bound to go wrong once in a while, but even if a speck of hardship should intrude upon a holiday it can be taken with calmness. |
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Interpretive media will trigger the imagination as to what happened at these sites but will not intrude upon the historic sense of place. |
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This government will not support provisions that will intrude on provincial jurisdiction. |
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I am quite sure that the sponsor of the bill and his colleagues would not want to intrude on a matter of provincial jurisdiction. |
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The laws as to what degree does a camera intrude on to private property must be investigated. |
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This will be omitted only if the athlete's access to and receiving copies of certain data would intrude on the privacy of another party. |
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Do not let non-related, unimportant thoughts intrude on your mental focus on achieving your goal. |
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So far, these actors have shown limited interest, probably thinking that particpation would intrude on their autonomy. |
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Believe me, I too have had to intrude on several internal security zones to arrive at this common consensus. |
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But it can also be used in ways that intrude on our dignity and sense of self. |
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I do not wish to intrude on what appears to be an interparliamentary debate now on the relative merits of Brussels and Strasbourg. |
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It can riffle along feeling very calm, but if you press on the odd random gearchange can intrude and it does get a little bit rushed. |
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It would also unnecessarily intrude government into the affairs of the private sector and co-opt the private sector as an arm of the state. |
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In most cases the basanites intrude Triassic cherts and carbonates. |
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The space underneath the car was also freed up for other mechanicals such as exhaust systems which can otherwise intrude into luggage or passenger areas. |
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Few people would expect a TV to intrude on our privacy, yet this is increasingly becoming the case. |
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If we accept the Ashram as it is, and do not allow the mind to intrude, we can and do derive immense benefit from our stay. |
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All go beyond national limitations, intrude less on national laws and open up new opportunities for market actors in cross-border trade. |
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Many of these laws contain extensive powers to intrude and should be examined as well. |
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If science is mixed with business, politics is going to intrude whether you like it or not. |
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You, Commissioner Frattini, say that it is the responsibility of individual Member States and you do not want to intrude in their affairs. |
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In the variegated pupfish, the entrance of a female into a male's territory will stimulate neighbors to intrude and disrupt the courtship of the territorial male. |
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While the federal government has made a few devolutionary concessions, it has retained federal spending power as a tool to intrude in provincial jurisdiction. |
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The outside world is about to rudely intrude on his quiet existence. |
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Christmas is a season of marvelous and mystical experiences, and maybe it seems churlish to let science and history intrude. |
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This requires considering the 'four part test' used by courts and legal advisors to ascertain whether a law or program can justifiably supersede or intrude upon rights like privacy. |
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In her view, it was not appropriate to intrude upon the privacy of all employees, regardless of their level of productivity, their attitudes or their behaviour, because a few employees posed problems for management. |
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The captain swear again, polyglot, and the thin man make him bow, and thank him, and say that he will so far intrude on his kindness as to come aboard before the sailing. |
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Art can intrude on reality, ride roughshod over relationships. |
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Care must be taken to ensure that no people, larger animals, plants, opening doors or any objects intrude into this area and that no parts of the detector surface become covered. |
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Otherwise, we might as well throw in the towel in trying to defend this fundamental human right, because we know that technology will continue to provide new and more efficient means to intrude. |
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Can we intrude on one's mental space as well as their physical space? |
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These investigations intrude on that process. |
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Political tensions intrude on social gatherings. |
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The authorities can intrude on the populace. |
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I mean no disrespect to him and his fellow politicians in Northern Ireland – this is simply an observation of how things are – when I say that they rarely intrude into the consciousness of the rest of the United Kingdom. |
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Some speakers intrude an R at the end of a word even when there is no vowel following. |
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Increased use of open sources as an alternative to investigative techniques that may intrude on the privacy of Canadians has been one of our recurrent themes. |
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Although Roosevelt instructed the NWLB not to intrude on jurisdiction exercised by the NLRB, the War Labor Board refused to honor this request. |
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That being so, the legislative and judicial institutions of the EU cannot intrude upon those conditions. |
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Large boars sometimes intrude into neighbouring territories during the main mating season in early spring. |
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Once we understand the long-term implication of new security legislation and measures, we must ensure that they do not unduly intrude on the civil liberties of citizens. |
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Earlier, Stan Wawrinka had to come from a set and a break down to overcome Juan Mónaco 4-6, 6-2, 6-2 and it could be that his personal life continues to intrude on his tennis. |
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For the phenomena of suffering, evil and death intrude upon the individual and collective experience and must be legitimized in view of God's righteousness. |
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Its recognition of the propensity of states to intrude upon private life is all the more upsetting given the respect for privacy and the duties required of the business sector. |
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We believe that if this was opened-that is, if we could open it-people would come pouring out and overwhelm us for daring to intrude upon their privacy. |
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An employer should not be able to take advantage of its superior bargaining position to intrude on workers' personal time without compensating them for the intrusion. |
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We have very usable throughput performance, and they don't change the flow of how we see patients, or intrude or impersonalize medicine. |
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The authority to intrude on the privacy of Canadians in the course of protecting the government's computer systems and networks under an ITS ministerial authorization is a sensitive matter. |
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On the other hand, a feeling of frustration was created because the participants understood that the meetings could not intrude on the decision-making process. |
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In light of the fact that domestic labour is most likely to be seen as women's work, the demands of household responsibilities are more likely to intrude on women's leisure time. |
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Adware and spyware are similar in that they both intrude on the privacy of individuals by installing themselves on users' computers without users' knowledge, usually via downloads or viruses. |
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But the Court also said that expanding its role in this way would substantially intrude into the workplace and could constrain employers' efforts to make their businesses more efficient. |
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Updates patch any security gaps discovered, which is of particular importance as new malware often exploits new security gaps to intrude into a computer. |
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Fragmentation of parties weakened the political process and made space for the military and bureaucracy to intrude into the domain of politics and governance. |
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Third, the Umpire found that in obtaining the E-311 information, the Commission did not intrude into places ordinarily considered private because the information was simply transferred from one government database to another. |
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Will the Prime Minister admit that by wanting to intrude into municipal affairs, which are absolutely none of its business, the federal government is really concerned far more with visibility than efficiency? |
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The approach to regulation by service managers varies widely but a number intrude into the day-to-day business of co-ops and some try to run them as an extension of their own housing companies. |
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If one nevertheless looks for a description, one could indicate that privacy protection is frequently seen as a way of drawing the line as to how far the society can intrude into a person's affairs. |
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Politics, he said, should not intrude into university life. |
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I certainly agree that the power to intrude on privacy should not be extended to any department that does not have a demonstrably compelling need to do so. |
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He walked down the street with a jaunty swaggering step, as if daring others less perfectly satisfied to intrude upon his good mood. |
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The government will not support provisions that could criminalize business arrangements such as joint ventures or supply management, or intrude on provincial jurisdiction. |
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I would like to add that this week the Premiers of Quebec and Alberta said that they would rather add more police, RCMP and experts to go after white collar criminals than intrude into provincial jurisdiction. |
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In this area, various phases of the Early Devonian South Nepisiguit River Plutonic Suite intrude rocks of both the Miramichi and Tobique zones, obscuring the contact in many places. |
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We can imagine what the major irritant is and the whole underlying principle of this bill, that is that the government seeks to intrude into provincial jurisdictions. |
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Respect a person's legitimate right to privacy and do not intrude into private grief and distress, unless it is justified by overriding considerations of public interest. |
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For instance, magmas commonly interact with rocks they intrude, both by melting those rocks and by reacting with them. |
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When an opioid is injected intravenously, the person feels a surge of pleasure, then a state of gratification into which hunger, pain, sexual urges do not intrude. |
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The real world has given its solemn promise not to intrude. |
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Nor does Knausgaard intrude on the truth of the past with the hindsight of the present, even when it comes to the question of musical taste – a subject that is notorious for historical revisionism. |
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Thanks for letting me intrude upon you at this time. |
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Should such ugly reality intrude upon their fantastic worlds? |
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I didn't want to intrude upon his journey. |
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Pledge to never again let AV intrude upon polite conversation. |
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No shock-absorber towers intrude into the space. |
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He has suggested that the federal government wishes to intrude upon the proper business of the provinces and territories in managing and planning health care delivery. |
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Good-community citizens do not intrude upon the personal territory of others to dictate or decide in what way those persons shall pursue happiness. |
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The Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms has proven to be a powerful check on the power of government to unreasonably intrude on our rights and freedoms. |
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She will not allow the white man to intrude upon these lots. |
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They do not notably intrude into the cabin. |
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It would be argued no doubt by some before this committee that Bill C-7 does intrude upon section 35 rights such that the duty to consult that's been evolving through the courts has been violated. |
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Igneous intrusions such as batholiths, laccoliths, dikes, and sills, push upwards into the overlying rock, and crystallize as they intrude. |
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Rarely do other factors intrude and aggravate the situation. |
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There is one episode in the novel, however, where questions of racial masquerade intrude on the freewheeling genderbending of the main characters. |
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If these patches are distant and small, gene flow is reduced, habitat is altered, edge effects occur, and more opportunities for invasive species to intrude occur. |
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The youngest rocks into which the granites intrude are the Carboniferous Crackington and Bealsmill formations of Namurian to lower Westphalian age. |
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Luckily, this interpretation did not intrude upon her smooth vocalism. |
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