The hagiocracy, which alone remained at this period, developed itself completely. |
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The role of the geosphere itself as a chemical containment barrier is relatively difficult to evaluate. |
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The geosphere is the Earth itself, the rocks, minerals, and landforms of the surface as well as its interior. |
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Community leaders hope that the new government will devolve more power to the community itself. |
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The company overreached itself and ran out of money after one year. |
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Why is the organization choosing to dissociate itself from its founder? |
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Her acrimony for her neighbors manifests itself with shouting and stomping. |
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The big homecoming game, however, was canceled when the, uh, president got shot, as was the date itself when I didn't behave aggrievedly enough. |
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If good is done, then there is the spirit of God and not the spirit of evil, for a house divided against itself cannot stand. |
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Mont Blanc, the supreme and magnificent Mont Blanc, raised itself from the surrounding aiguilles, and its tremendous dome overlooked the valley. |
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The Grainger Market itself, was opened in 1835 and was Newcastle's first indoor market. |
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Has conduct worth in and for itself, or only as its consequences are felicific as regards the social welfare? |
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Yet this government never of itself furthered any enterprise, but by the alacrity with which it got out of its way. |
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The Latin accent attaches itself to the long paenultimate or antepaenultimate syllable of a word. |
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The anti-ministerialists received aid, moreover, from an unlikely source, namely the government itself. |
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In other words, the harsh child rearing to obtain unconditional obedience did not of itself antisocialize many Germans. |
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The disco sequence itself is a kind of hallucinatory antivideo played to dance music that seems to arise out of machine-gun fire. |
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The oil, by degrees, gets covered with a curdy mass, which after some time settles to the bottom, while itself becomes limpid and colorless. |
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The company has established itself as a leader in the industry. |
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The topic is complex but the book itself is very approachable. |
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Their group does not affiliate itself with any political party. |
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Finding the extra time to develop a workable sustainability and transformation plan is itself problematic. |
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Functions are vested in the council itself, and then exercised usually by committees or subcommittees of the council. |
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The chair of the council itself is an honorary position with no real power. |
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Britain itself was now just one part of the NATO military alliance in which the Commonwealth had no role apart from Canada. |
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The name Plantagenet itself was unknown as a family name per se until Richard of York adopted it as his family name in the 15th century. |
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The Church was virtually a law unto itself in this period as it had its own system of religious law courts. |
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The term itself came into use during the early 13th century, deriving from the Latin and French words for discussion and speaking. |
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With the building itself taking shape, it was time to think about its internal adornments. |
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The success of the Conservative Party in reorganising itself was validated by its victory in the 1951 election. |
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Ideologically, One Nation Conservatism identifies itself with a broad liberal conservative stance. |
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The Botha regime was attempting to make itself look less horrible, but I don't regard it as having been of the faintest political consequence. |
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It was initially formed as a means for the trade union movement to establish political representation for itself at Westminster. |
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The 1980s saw the SNP further define itself as a party of the political left, such as campaigning against the poll tax. |
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Influenced by Thatcherism and classical liberalism, it describes itself as economically libertarian and promotes liberal economic policies. |
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In 2004, UKIP reorganised itself nationally as a private company limited by guarantee. |
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On economic issues, there was a divide between UKIP voters and the party itself. |
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In the 2013 local elections, UKIP won 147 seats and established itself as the largest opposition party in six English county councils. |
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Consequently, the value of the koha itself received in this context is not income in an economic sense. |
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Northern Ireland itself forms a single constituency for elections to the European Parliament. |
|
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The Scottish Parliament is not able to pass laws on these issues itself, as they were not devolved. |
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Its decisions are binding on all courts, including itself, apart from the Supreme Court. |
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When a court binds itself, this application of the doctrine of precedent is sometimes called horizontal stare decisis. |
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As the number of petitions increased, the Committee gained the power to reject petitions itself. |
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The medieval period is itself subdivided into the Early, High, and Late Middle Ages. |
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In the early 10th century, the Ottonian dynasty had established itself in Germany, and was engaged in driving back the Magyars. |
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London most often denotes the sprawling London metropolis, or the 32 London boroughs, in addition to the City of London itself. |
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Eastern Wandsworth was to form a borough in itself, with western Wandsworth being paired with Battersea. |
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The cities of Cardiff and Newport adjoin the Severn estuary, but lie upstream of the Bristol Channel itself. |
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In the 2005 film adaptation of the novel, Chatsworth House itself represents Pemberley. |
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The north east is drained by tributaries of the River Don, itself a tributary of the Yorkshire Ouse. |
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Although Barnsley Metropolitan Borough also borders Sheffield to the north, the town itself is a few miles further away. |
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There are many cycle routes going along country paths in the woods surrounding the city, though very few cycle lanes in the city itself. |
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Ambulances are provided by the Yorkshire Ambulance Service, which itself is an NHS trust. |
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The city council itself has 15 members, all of whom are currently independents. |
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Friedrich Hayek argued in The Pure Theory of Capital that the goal is the preservation of the unique information contained in the price itself. |
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It often suggests the presence of the profit motive, although neither a profit motive or profit itself are necessary for a free market. |
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There is usually no obligation for stock to be issued via the stock exchange itself, nor must stock be subsequently traded on the exchange. |
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The belief in a romantic chaos lends itself to pessimism, but it also lends itself to absolute self-assertion. |
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Its relief scene includes 11 cupids harvesting and stomping on grapes to make wine in a lenos, a long trough similar to the sarcophagus itself. |
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One struggled manfully by with a dead spider five times as big as itself in its arms. |
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However, the series itself betrays its own lesbiphobia through the discriminatory treatment of the characters' sexual life. |
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In the centre itself, a combination of high rents and rising rates have made things difficult for smaller traders. |
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Most things in life, including life itself, seemed to have articulated sections, discrete and separate and straightforward. |
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Years later, he sought to abolish the Tripos system, as he felt that it was becoming more an end in itself than a means to an end. |
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The engine itself is simple, with only a boiler, a cylinder and piston and operating valves. |
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Charles Creighton believed that uncontaminated vaccine itself was a cause of syphilis. |
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It uses this map to clean the floor methodically, even if it requires the robot to return to its base multiple times to recharge itself. |
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As each coil is energized in turn, the rotor aligns itself with the magnetic field produced by the energized field winding. |
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Sometimes the waste heat is useful itself, and in those cases very high overall efficiency can be obtained. |
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If they were any larger, the volume of escaping steam would itself endanger the crew. |
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Otherwise, the improvements to the engine itself were more mechanical in nature. |
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Unlike their smaller cousins, delineators are tall enough to impact not only a vehicle's tires but the vehicle body itself. |
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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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Many of these goods were also traded within the Viking world itself, as well as goods such as soapstone and whetstone. |
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Like other parts of the great Lone Star State, this section of Texas was a world in itself. |
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The Irish have also come to be as much of a staple of Merseyside in general, as of Liverpool itself. |
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Bangladesh asserted itself in regards to many international issues, including those affecting decolonized and developing countries. |
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Creative tourism has existed as a form of cultural tourism, since the early beginnings of tourism itself. |
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In Telford itself is the Thomas Telford School, ranked as one of the best comprehensive schools in England. |
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The main verb may appear in first position to put stress on the action itself. |
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The neighborhood appealed to me, particularly at night when the full squalor and lugubriousness of it made itself felt. |
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Owing to interaction with other languages, Urdu has become localized wherever it is spoken, including in Pakistan itself. |
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It holds in itself a repository of the cultural and social heritage of the country. |
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The first arose in the English Reformation, when the Church of England declared itself separate from papal authority. |
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Thus, the idea of a Fourth Great Awakening itself has not been generally accepted. |
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When Thomas Becket was murdered and subsequently enshrined at Canterbury, York found itself with a rival major draw for pilgrims. |
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The new choir formed a church unto itself with its own transepts and a semicircular ambulatory opening into three chapels. |
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He then argues that goodness is itself very good and, further, is good through itself. |
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The Theravada tradition regards insight into the four truths as liberating in itself. |
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This corpus includes the ancient Sutras organized into Nikayas, itself the part of three basket of texts called the Tripitakas. |
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The fox of Japanese folklore is a powerful trickster in and of itself, imbued with powers of shape changing, possession, and illusion. |
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The third British group to call itself Druidic was English rather than Welsh, and was known as the Ancient Order of Druids. |
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This Act has been a large debate for numerous groups, the senate itself, institutions, and families. |
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Hardy, disliked the system, feeling that people were too interested in accumulating marks in exams and not interested in the subject itself. |
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The university itself is responsible for conducting examinations and conferring degrees. |
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This is due not solely, or even majorly, to the fact the above type of analysis concerns itself primarily with what will happen in the long run. |
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The FT was launched as the London Financial Guide on 10 January 1888, renaming itself the Financial Times on 13 February the same year. |
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In Rome itself each householder was legally responsible for the repairs to that portion of the street which passed his own house. |
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Before the list itself, a discussion of its scope includes lengthy lists of buildings excluded from the main lists for various reasons. |
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The Norman Conquest of London manifested itself not only with a new ruling class, but in the way the city was structured. |
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The western Lady Chapel known as the Galilee Chapel is a unique Norman building different in style to the cathedral itself. |
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In many regions this building method has itself been overtaken by drywall construction using plasterboard sheets. |
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The interior was purely functional and spare, a large open space of steel, glass and concrete where the only decoration was the structure itself. |
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In the Norse Eddas, the radiant beauty of Baldr is the light of the daylight itself. |
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This socket forms the starting point of the piercing operation, enabling the mandrel to center itself on the work. |
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The Historia itself begins with the Trojan Aeneas, who according to Roman legend settled in Italy after the Trojan War. |
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In the Ethiopian Highlands, the Solomonic dynasty established itself in the 13th century. |
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The bacon itself may afterwards be discarded or served to eat, like cracklings. |
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Normally spicy, spice level varies greatly depending on the household itself. |
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But subsequent technology has made it possible to date the paintings by sampling the pigment itself and the torch marks on the walls. |
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Tudor drama, in particular, modeled itself after classical ideals and divided works into Tragedy and Comedy. |
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The material lent itself to the depiction of tonal variations and texture, so facilitating the observation of nature in great detail. |
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This exhaustive analysis is in itself sufficient to prove that Beowulf was composed orally. |
|
It also lends itself to elaboration, because its tight syntax holds even the longest and most complex sentence together as a logical unit. |
|
His writing of the story seems focused primarily on the stories being told, and not on the pilgrimage itself. |
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Most of what is known about the poet must be reconstructed from Piers Plowman itself. |
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One particular incident that lent itself to the superstition was the Astor Place Riot. |
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Patriarchy itself is also challenged and transformed, as the men offer their women a loving equality, one founded on respect and trust. |
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In the early 1580s, he argued unsuccessfully for an assault on Spain itself. |
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However, by itself materialism says nothing about how material substance should be characterized. |
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But since there no experiment now known which can test this hypothesis, science itself can have little to say about the possibility. |
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That is a destination as far, or near, as the truth itself to you or me or the given finite community. |
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The problem is that parts of the theory itself need to be assumed in order to select and report the experimental conditions. |
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The history of scientific method considers changes in the methodology of scientific inquiry, as distinct from the history of science itself. |
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The learning and mastery of a tongue, being unpleasant in itself, should not be cumbered with other difficulties. |
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Love doth seldom suffer itself to be confined by other matches than those of its own making. |
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In the beginning God gave authority to Adam, who had complete control over his descendants, even over life and death itself. |
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His complete infatuation with Eve, while pure in and of itself, eventually contributes to his joining her in disobedience to God. |
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As soon as the previous Puritan regime's ban on public stage representations was lifted, the drama recreated itself quickly and abundantly. |
|
Bentham writes about this principle as it manifests itself within the legislation of a society. |
|
Feminist critics often focus on how authorship itself, particularly female authorship, is represented in and through Shelley's novels. |
|
Consistency in maintaining what he believed to be true was itself one of his leading principles. |
|
So, according to this Mawworm, it is not the play itself but its being acted publicly that is so pernicious. |
|
Huxley had deeply felt apprehensions about the future the developed world might make for itself. |
|
When I recall something, the memory does not present itself to me as a vividly seen event or object. |
|
A transformation occurs when a mecha character, vehicle, or weapon unfolds and reassembles itself in a totally new form. |
|
The text is a translation of the traditional antiphon, Unxerunt Salomonem, itself derived from the biblical account of the anointing of Solomon. |
|
Their style, consisting of two duelling guitarists often playing leads in harmony, proved itself to be a large influence on later bands. |
|
From its roots in the UK, the style has established itself around the world. |
|
|
Darkcore, a direct influence on drum and bass, was combined with influences of drum and bass itself leading to the creation of darkstep. |
|
Production in a studio environment seems to lend itself to more experimentation. |
|
Indeed, Emily Eavis suggested that the festival itself might have been called off, such was the severity of the weather. |
|
The power generated is enough to power the city of Bath and the Pyramid Stage is powered by 4 generators itself. |
|
While the actress garnered strong reviews for her portrayal, the film itself was largely panned by critics. |
|
The idea of combining motion pictures with recorded sound is nearly as old as the concept of cinema itself. |
|
It is heretical, because it touches on dogma and the interpretation of belief, rather than belief itself. |
|
For the original British and Australian releases, a spoof travelogue narrated by John Cleese, Away From It All, was shown before the film itself. |
|
She then notices a White Rabbit wearing a waistcoat and pocket watch, talking to itself as it runs past. |
|
Dr Gillmeister believes that not only the name but the sport itself is of Flemish origin. |
|
Organized cricket lends itself to statistics to a greater degree than many other sports. |
|
In 1999, FIRA agreed to place itself under the auspices of the IRB, transforming itself into a strictly European organising body. |
|
A player can send the jack anywhere on the green in this game and the green itself is more akin to a golf green, with lots of undulation. |
|
They argue that the chase itself causes fear and distress and that the fox is not always killed instantly as is claimed. |
|
Scotland has always participated by itself in most of the major tournaments, such as the FIFA World Cup and the UEFA European Championship. |
|
The Africans felt that winning their zone was enough in itself to merit qualification for the finals. |
|
As well as sponsorship for the league itself, the Premier League has a number of official partners and suppliers. |
|
The badge itself adorns the left sleeve of the team's shirt during Champions League games. |
|
The owl came from the city crest, which itself was based on the crest of Sir John Saville, the first alderman of Leeds. |
|
Because the urn itself is so delicate, it has been allowed to travel to Australia only twice. |
|
|
The next host nation then also briefly introduces itself with artistic displays of dance and theatre representative of its culture. |
|
The next host nation then also briefly introduces itself with artistic displays of dance and theater representative of its culture. |
|
This is done by fans from all over the world and, although considered vagrancy, is part of the Wimbledon experience in itself. |
|
The following day the team applied for an Administration Order to protect itself from creditors. |
|
The vehicle itself does not emit any pollutants and its only by products are heat and water. |
|
In the race itself Ricciardo finished second while Vettel retired after just three laps due to a power unit failure. |
|
In return the WDC dropped its claim to being the sport's governing body and renamed itself the Professional Darts Corporation. |
|
The WDC dropped its claim to be a world governing body and renamed itself the Professional Darts Corporation. |
|
In June 2004 the first performances for about 70 years took place in the theatre, first in its foyer then in July in the theatre itself. |
|
The 2002 Baton itself was designed by a company called IDEO, and was constructed of machined aluminium with the handle plated for conductivity. |
|
The Queen's message itself was held in an aluminium capsule inserted into the top of the Baton. |
|
Alternatively, independence can be lost completely when sovereignty itself becomes the subject of dispute. |
|
Another complicated sovereignty scenario can arise when regime itself is the subject of dispute. |
|
Case distinctions, at least in the masculine gender, were marked on both the definite article and on the noun itself. |
|
In recent years the Black Country has seen the adoption of symbols and emblems with which to represent itself. |
|
The county of Essex by itself forms a NUTS 2 statistical unit in the East of England region. |
|
Louis built itself upon the vast fur trade in the West before its settlement. |
|
In Irish nationality law, birth in Northern Ireland grants an entitlement similar to birth within the Republic itself. |
|
The stadium itself would be used for both football and rugby union, with Glentoran and Ulster Rugby intended as tenants. |
|
Criticism was focused on the institution of the monarchy itself and the Queen's wider family rather than her own behaviour and actions. |
|
|
Thus, a reign usually lasts until the monarch dies, unless the monarchy itself is abolished or the monarch abdicates or is deposed. |
|
Notably, each country with a permanent seat on the UNSC also finds itself in the top ten military and economic powers. |
|
On polling day itself two polling stations in Kingston upon Thames were flooded by rain and had to be relocated. |
|
The Council of Europe is not to be confused with the European Union itself. |
|
The name Reynolds is an Anglicization of the Gaelic Mac Raghnaill, itself originating from the Norse names Randal or Reginald. |
|
This meaning was then applied to land itself, in which land was used to pay for fealty, such as to a vassal. |
|
With the Scottish Reformation, Scotland was declared Protestant, and allied itself with Protestant England instead. |
|
In 846, the Narentines broke through to Venice itself and raided its lagoon city of Caorle. |
|
Every ship over 300 tons carries a transponder supplying both information about the ship itself and its movements. |
|
All artificial florists are not good feather dressers. Feather dressing is an art by itself and has to be learned by apprenticeship. |
|
My Sif, Even the wide plains, Even Middle Garth's broad reaches, Even Ase's Garth itself Cannot hold our love enclosed. |
|
He watched the auntly lady twist the ends of the diaper so that the whole assemblage seemed to wrap itself around his boy like magic. |
|
Then another misfortune avalanched itself upon me, before even I had fully taken in the extent of the first. |
|
We waited for something to happen, for anything to happen, we were avid for some event to unfold itself out of the burning nothing to save us. |
|
One speaks of a babbitt habit, a babbitt era. Nothing is more true. America recognized itself in Babbitt, it demurred, but it also admired. |
|
Perhaps, finally, the Netherlands will shed itself of the backhanded compliment of being the best team never to win a world championship. |
|
Once again, the industry got itself in trouble and government had to bail it out. |
|
Intercalation is an energetically favourable process, and thus relates to the dynamic base-pair breathing properties of DNA itself. |
|
The system throttled itself to batches of 50 requests at a time to keep the thread count under control. |
|
The first infernal batsqueak of insanity was making itself heard in a new generation. |
|
|
By this the whole matter had presented itself to them as an entertainment more diverting than bullfight or bearbaiting. |
|
In some incidental way he beheard him of the poor widow's difficulty, and at once the manhood in him asserted itself. |
|
Many will want to know how this Home at Gait beshapes itself, and would be amused in seeing my varied occupations of the past week. |
|
Others hatch their eggs and tend the birth till it is able to shift for itself. |
|
I had a brain-cramp there for a minute, the smile said, but now sanity has reasserted itself. |
|
This is a society at war with itself and heightens the impression of broken Britain. |
|
It doubles itself in the middle of his life, reflects itself in another, repeats itself, protasis, epitasis, catastasis, catastrophe. |
|
This extreme cautiousness, which was, indeed, the most remarkable feature in his character, still made itself prominent after his elevation. |
|
Regardless of the particulars of such a pedagogy, however, it may be an important strategy for reaching the territory of censorability itself. |
|
The fact is the school system has spent itself into debt, at least partly by exhibiting a champagne taste on a beer budget. |
|
Validation of a chicken bit can be challenging, because disabling a feature is often as intrusive in the code as the feature itself. |
|
A rat scampered across the tin cans and burst sandbags, and trench atmosphere reasserted itself in a smell of chloride of lime. |
|
The CLSC will not carry out its mission by resigning itself to satisfying the requests it receives for care and assistance. |
|
Comestibles of all sorts came to view, and a smell of cooking spread itself among the trees. |
|
London's Kings Place, now one year old, established itself as a venue for imaginative programming, a complement to the evergreen Wigmore Hall. |
|
Water, being divided, maketh many circles, till it restore itself to the natural consistence. |
|
Being itself inferior and consorting with an inferior faculty it begets inferior offspring. |
|
I always start a book by reading the dustjacket and the contents before I really dig in to the content itself. |
|
Extensive documentation on the history of copyparties and demoparties has been lovingly preserved by the demoscene itself. |
|
The pigeon rocked itself backwards and forwards on the bough, swelling out its breast feathers and laying its coralline beak upon them. |
|
|
Time measures itself out in a series of diminishing peristaltic ticks, countdowning slowly towards the miracle of Ignition. |
|
Or perhaps something unusual occurred in the current period that you can't count on to repeat itself. |
|
Behind a cowyard of shattered stone pavement and cracked mud stood the farm itself, and around it extended the fields belonging thereto. |
|
A raft of twigs stayed upon a stone, suddenly detached itself, and floated towards the culvert. |
|
But deep water was not secured until 1926, when Corpus Christi dug itself out 21 miles to the sea. |
|
The modification itself originates from the quest of finding a mechanism which is able to degravitate the vacuum energy on cosmological scales. |
|
Demonomagy manifests itself in various forms. Its exact recognition seems possible only to the initiated. |
|
Nan was very much delighted in her demure way, and that delight showed itself in her face and in her clear bright eyes. |
|
To prove that the Americans ought not to be free, we are obliged to depreciate the value of freedom itself. |
|
After the scandal, the political party disassociated itself from the questionable candidate. |
|
Where a trustee refuses either to assent or dissent, the Court will itself exercise his authority. |
|
The radical group voted to divorce itself from the main faction and start an independent movement. |
|
For us, let our doveship approve itself in meekness of suffering, not in actions of cruelty. |
|
Also since the circle of inversion cuts both excircles orthogonally, each excircle inverts into itself. |
|
Tube color diluted with acrylic medium lends itself especially well to drybrush painting. |
|
The conclusion itself turned into the kind of dunkfest for bench players usually reserved for rec league blowouts. |
|
Gold will be sometimes so eager, as artists call it, that it will as little endure the hammer as glass itself. |
|
They are characterized by a unique cephalic sucking disc by which the echeneid attaches itself externally to its host. |
|
The Heath itself when they came to it was a white wilderness within the embracement of black rocks and mountains. |
|
Equity had been gradually shaping itself into a refined science which no human faculties could master without long and intense application. |
|
|
An evolutionarily stable strategy is a strategy that does well against copies of itself. |
|
The animal soul sooner evolves itself to its full orb and extent than the human soul. |
|
The soldiers seen at various stations belong to the corps of the Greek army that proved itself most effective in the recent war, the Evzonoi. |
|
On the other hand a young owl, which had as yet only been fed by hand, began of itself to eat by devouring a fauvette which was lodged with it. |
|
Sometimes the odor of the armpit may even become a kind of fetich which is craved for its own sake and in itself suffices to give pleasure. |
|
True enough, Spain has become a filmset to me, the whole of it barely more real than Fort Bravo itself. |
|
The English have not only gained upon the Venetians in the Levant, but have their cloth in Venice itself. |
|
Alas this transformation by itself increases traversal length of the circuit because these new glider guns are much larger. |
|
The ancients represented this fundamental duality mythologically as God and Goddess. When Mystery looks at itself, God looks at Goddess. |
|
The Internet continues to go from strength to strength as it matures, finding new ways to better itself. |
|
Their naked poles shone with that lovely goldbronze color that is itself like the material distillation of a magic light. |
|
Unlike most moons of the solar system, ours has the heft, the gravitational gravitas, to pull itself into a sphere. |
|
Greater New York includes nearby parts of three states as well as the City itself. |
|
Did not cotton spin itself, beef grow, and groceries and spiceries come in from the East and the West, quite comfortably by the side of shams? |
|
The curious misogyny which chequered Maupassant's gynomania seems to have tried hard to express itself in her portrait. |
|
It is considered a global city and has a population larger than other countries in the United Kingdom besides England itself. |
|
The indisposition which has long hung upon me, is at last grown to such a head, that it must quickly make an end of me or of itself. |
|
The device itself can dissipate a peak power of 78 W when properly heatsinked and has a 65 W steady dissipation. |
|
However, a lot of wildlife also depends on the cliffs, salt marshes and sand dunes of the adjoining shores, the seabed and the open sea itself. |
|
The dike slope reduces the energy of the incoming sea, so that the dike itself does not receive the full impact. |
|
|
It was not until the continent itself was explored that Spain found the wealth it had sought. |
|
It was a revolution that transformed not only the country, but the world itself. |
|
Their friability generally leads to mountains with relatively smooth slopes such as Skiddaw itself. |
|
Ann Lee from Manchester started the USA Shakers movement, founded out of the Quakers, which itself has strong links to Pendle Hill in Lancashire. |
|
However, while Sheffield's heavy industry has declined, the region has reinvented itself as a centre for specialist engineering. |
|
The Parliament of Ireland passed the Acts of Union 1800 by which it abolished itself and the Kingdom. |
|
The Oath itself came from a combination of three sources, and was largely the work of Michael Collins in the Treaty negotiations. |
|
The room itself was no larger than an ordinary living room, but it appeared to be a Home Depot of modern weaponry. |
|
As the knowledge of Greek declined, the Latin West found itself cut off from some of its Greek philosophical and scientific roots. |
|
The bay itself hosted the sailing events for the 1936 Summer Olympics mainly held in Berlin. |
|
The Baltic sea drainage basin is roughly four times the surface area of the sea itself. |
|
The Convention covers the whole of the Baltic Sea area, including inland waters and the water of the sea itself, as well as the seabed. |
|
He mentions that he studied from a text of Jerome's Vulgate, which itself was from the Hebrew text. |
|
Later, around 5600 BC, Great Britain itself became separated from continental Europe. |
|
Nevertheless, southern Germany shows some independent developments of itself. |
|
For other hull shapes than Wigley, the hull splash itself may overturn and merge with a breaking wave. |
|
Tin was much less common than lead and is only marginally harder, and had even less impact by itself. |
|
Hydronium is not a way of stabilizing an acid, because the structure itself is so quickly transient that it can be considered as not existing. |
|
The populares party took full advantage of this opportunity by allying itself with Marius. |
|
Most Roman towns and cities had a forum and temples, as did the city of Rome itself. |
|
|
Moreover, all this ruin was brought upon the Romans by a woman, a fact which in itself caused them the greatest shame. |
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The scaenae was originally not part of the building itself, constructed only to provide sufficient background for the actors. |
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Woman itself has as other hyponyms, sculptress and waitress, but is itself a hyponym of adult. |
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Since the AND logical operator is commutative, associative, and idempotent, then it distributes with respect to itself. |
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The bell itself is simple in design, hammered into shape with a small handle fixed to the top with rivets. |
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One of Bede's sources was the Life of Wilfrid itself, but he also had access to people who knew participants in the synod. |
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However, later generations have ascribed a variety of devices to the rulers of Mercia or to the land itself. |
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A nation, to be great, ought to be compressed in its increment by nations more civilized than itself. |
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The power cable itself has enough inductance to disrupt the digital signal of the video output cable, due to poor shielding. |
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The ingestion of white powder, whatever the regrets, pathos and even the wit of the ingester, is not of itself a fictionally involving action. |
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This caused great consternation among the aristocracy, who insisted that long use in itself constituted licence. |
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The water easily insinuates itself into, and placidly distends, the vessels of vegetables. |
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It was there that on Sunday I had seen the populace disport itself, and it was full of life then, gay and insouciant. |
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If children were early instituted, knowledge would insensibly insinuate itself. |
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Margaret's army was moving south, supporting itself by looting as it passed through the prosperous south of England. |
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So the science of phonetic metamorphology concerns itself quite largely with interchangings among the sounds of speech. |
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Her memory was also revived during the Napoleonic Wars, when the nation again found itself on the brink of invasion. |
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Repeatedly, throughout Anglican history, this principle has reasserted itself in movements of social justice. |
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The Schmalkaldic League had allied itself to the French, and efforts in Germany to undermine the League had been rebuffed. |
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Spain had invested itself in the religious warfare in France after Henry II's death. |
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