No sooner do I lie him flat when, whoosh, he's on all fours again and crawling off at top speed. |
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Robbed of one of their principal ball-winners and their talismanic playmaker, a tough night was always going to lie ahead. |
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His own research interests lie in traditional associative learning theory and in discrimination and perceptual learning. |
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The roots of this tradition lie with the western, heterosexual androcentric values of the 19th century prescriptive grammar movement. |
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The Jomac mine's three adits lie within the Glen Canyon National Recreation Area boundary. |
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I assume you did not propose me for this office so that I, too, should lie to you. |
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The origins of marine geology lie in the development of submarine telegraphy in the latter half of the nineteenth century. |
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The real treasures which lie beneath our oceans are the time-capsules of the past. |
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The lie was not great and the shot was slightly thinned, the ball finishing as much as 40 feet past the cup. |
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Dip a small towel or washcloth in warm water, wring it out, lie down, close your eyes, and put the cloth over your lids for 15 minutes. |
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In her youth, Aleila was a wild and rambunctious youngster who could juggle, toss, swallow, and even lie on swords. |
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The archaeological remains of Chambal lie in the range of 40 Km. from Gwalior, easily accessible by road. |
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He forced the Maritzburg goalkeeper, Ryan Gary, to lie on the ball, conceding a penalty stroke. |
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The images act as both a mapping of the session itself, and as transitional objects that lie between inner and outer reality. |
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When my parents thought I was doing homework, I would lie underneath our radiogram and listen to his music. |
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The answers lie in work opportunities in a rural agrarian economy and sparsely populated state. |
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To simulate the effects of weightlessness, women must lie in beds tipped at an angle of six degrees. |
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In Chandler's famous puff for the superiority of the private eye over the classic mystery, its virtue is said to lie in its greater realism. |
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The Italian, though, refused to lie down, breaking again for a 4-1 lead with a rapier-like crosscourt backhand. |
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I lie on the pebbles like a beached whale, listening to the laughter of my buddy. |
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The politician knows these facts but also knows his big lie will probably endure. |
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It was the kind of shot that also convinces Westwood of the bright future that may lie ahead for the youngster. |
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That there are dark undertones to everything, that bide their time and lie in wait for the unfortunate and unwary. |
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He kept Europe ahead at the ninth with a sensational bunker shot from an awkward lie in a greenside trap, followed by a successful putt. |
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Once an individual has this frame of mind the sky is the limit for opportunities and challenges that lie ahead. |
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Houses and mosques lie deep down below, and from the crater's edge they look like tiny toys or models on a child's train set. |
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I understand why he is so protective of his only girl, but sometimes it eats me up inside that I have to lie to him constantly. |
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You can drink a cup of strong coffee at the first sign of a migraine, lie down in a dark room, and it'll work like magic. |
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At home I lie gasping and read the Arabian Nights, but I may as well read the day's news. |
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Consequently, the ability of pregnant sows in stalls to get up and lie down could be improved by increasing the space allowance within the stall. |
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Being a very active person who resented my bad back and all the restrictions, I was not pleased to be encouraged to lie flat each afternoon. |
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On some beaches in America, nudists lie as naked as the day they were born. |
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We lie in dappled shade amidst cawing crows, wave sound, a sprinkler playing on the short grass. |
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These are findings that give the lie to the more excessive propaganda of the sceptic press. |
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Peculiarly shaped rocks and hillocks having striking features lie scattered all over the earth. |
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As he walked me over to the pyramid the next morning, I vowed to myself that I would not lie down until the entire town was a glow of scarlet. |
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Under nearly every square mile of the swamp lie these ducts, though water and vegetation have hidden their scars. |
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Indeed, the subject has mostly been treated tangentially by authors whose principle interests lie elsewhere. |
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Rocks that lie at an angle must have been tilted after the sediments were consolidated. |
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The fact that he recanted in time to not lie under oath should, in fact, have reflected well on him. |
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A pull-down stair leads to the rooftop deck, and stairways to the basement lie beneath their own floor panels. |
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I know, because all my basset hound wants to do is lie on the cool tile floor and chomp on the occasional ice cube. |
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He took great delight there to go to the bookbinders' shops and lie gaping on maps. |
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Some members of the administration may be in the process of discovering that, given time, the big lie turns on itself. |
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You should stop when the syllabub will lie in thick, soft folds, only just keeping its shape. |
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They enjoy a well-drained soil and will stay in leaf until about May, when they die down and lie dormant until the following autumn. |
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Off most of the main bustling thoroughfares lie tiny cobbled streets draped with vines and lined with old brick facades. |
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I'm also pretty zonked and wishing I could just lie down and sleep, but that's business as usual for me. |
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No wonder tots are frustrated, no wonder they lie on the floor kicking and hollering. |
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In order to look more analytically at such problems, it is useful to examine what legacies lie behind them. |
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Having too flat a lie angle on an iron tends to send the ball right, because the clubface points right of the target. |
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For the tech industry's transnationals, the biggest challenges lie in bridging the gaps created by time, space, and cultures. |
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The Asian wart snakes of India, south east Asia, New Guinea and Australia have scales that lie next to each other and each have a sharp ridge. |
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Those that do not explode lie on the ground like landmines, waiting for people to step on them. |
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They may, for example, scrunch up where other leaves of the same species lie flat. |
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He's just looking for true stories that lie buried in the data that, for most people, are far too intimidating to trifle with. |
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They see no sun in their limited lives, with no hay to lie on, no mud to roll in. |
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For decades the prevailing theories tell us that the roots of violence lie in deprived environments and abusive parents. |
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You lie there defeated, ragging on yourself for the failure, mad at the judges because this can't be fair. |
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They look just like the rafts of fragmented sea ice that lie off the coast of Antarctica on Earth. |
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Behind intentions and conscious aims lie complex objective processes that shape the course of history. |
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And now I'm knackered and going to lie down on the bed, squish my new do with my headset and yak to Walker until it's time for work. |
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A short wade out to sea, the bottom plates, remnants of the ship's engines and boiler lie collapsed upon themselves. |
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It amazes me how they can obfuscate or even lie and believe people won't see through them. |
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I'm a little shook up about the whole thing and I need to go lie down and recover. |
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But his big dreams land him in hot water when a great white lie turns him into an unlikely hero. |
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A few clothes lie folded on a chair, make-up spread on a table beside her computer. |
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But, as in all instances of dysfunction, miscommunication seems to lie at the root of the problem. |
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If a meteor impact causes a nuclear winter, then the ability to lie dormant would have improved your chances. |
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The Russian snipers were not prepared to hunt in the ruins and to lie in ambush for days on end. |
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I then had to lie there, for five minutes, as boys on bikes rode past and laughed at me. |
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Beside the armor, half hidden in the shadows, lie a wineskin, a lyre, books, and a mask. |
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I don't get really mad these days, even when people lie about my finances, but he gets me going like no one else can. |
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Plastic bags, crisp packets, plastic bottles and soggy newspapers lie abundantly in the verges, or caught in trees and hedges. |
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But I was quickly whisked through to a private back room, where my new friend Kelly invited me to lie down and relax. |
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Some days, it's hard to even raise my head from under the duvet as I lie in my favourite foetal position, warm and safe. |
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Later, in front of my entire unit, he told me to lie down on a box and then he whipped me twenty-five times. |
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The Castle's gardens lie in a dramatic ravine which was once a quarry, and are particularly pretty in autumn. |
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Especially when the convention itself will be nothing but a bunch of boring windbags telling lie after lie. |
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We want clean clothes, but within that simple desire lie images of crisp starching, of linen whiter than white. |
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But the humpback gives the lie to the notion that things of great bulk move only by lumbering. |
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But underneath lie a collection of catchy melodies and hooks evoking in turns the Beach Boys, Beck or early seventies avant-pop. |
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Our cows have foam mattresses to lie on and an auto cleaner that cleans the floor every two hours. |
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The boy had the audacity to lie to him, straight in his face for a second time. |
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Woodlands are also an important source of arable soils that lie beneath the tree cover. |
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I lie flat on the floor and, with my legs straight, I raise my feet about six inches. |
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Most coastal settlements by early Americans now lie deep beneath the sea, which during the Ice Age was hundreds of feet lower than now. |
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Their interests lie not in backing either of the rival armies facing each other in Kashmir, but in confronting the rulers who hold them down. |
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He tried to sit up but the aches in his body made him lie back flat on the bed. |
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What the candidate has done here is told the big lie about embryonic stem cells. |
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He scrambled to lie flat on his stomach in the car while shards of debris rained from the skies. |
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He may not be around to light the blue touchpaper at future internationals, but fireworks lie ahead. |
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Stunned by the sudden fall, and exhausted by the run, they could only lie on the smooth floor and struggle for breath. |
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The difficulties lie less in getting hold of information, but in being able to understand it and assess its relevance. |
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They sit beside every road junction, crown every hilltop, lie deep in the bottom of the island's wildest ravines. |
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No big business has interrupted the creative process, and in turn our partners lie hungry. |
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The Mauritanian stretch of the road will replace a track over the shifting sands that lie between Mauritania's two main cities. |
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His head spun and his body pained in various areas until he was forced to lie once again and sit up with a slower pace. |
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But perhaps the biggest change will be that the new mace will no longer lie on a table with its head directed at the ruling party. |
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The drawing room and dining room lie to the left of the hallway and look onto the front and rear respectively. |
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To be sure, there are subtle factors that influence decisions that lie beyond the reach of any Web site. |
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The mine's three adits lie in the Shinarump conglomerate member of the Triassic Chinle Formation. |
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Interestingly, some future antibiotics may lie in unusual places, including the saliva of Komodo dragons. |
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From a good lie in short grass, there's plenty of loft on any short iron to get this done. |
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So, whilst my friends get dragged off to work every Saturday morning, I'm free to lie in and then explore the wonders of Kiwibox. |
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He will lie here in state until early on Friday morning for the public to pay their last respects. |
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Beyond Cape Town to the west lie the winelands, one of the first areas to be settled by Europeans when they arrived in South Africa. |
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The individual cells were tiny, bare closets with no amenities, and were designed to be too short to lie down in. |
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Their centers thus lie on the trisectors of the angles adjacent to that line. |
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Some sunken Spanish galleons, still laden with gold, lie undiscovered to this day. |
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Often he would lie for hours, his elbows in the peaty soil, peering through a jungle of grass blades in search of those elusive musicians. |
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Old farmhouses lie abandoned throughout the country while thatched cottages are rare. |
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Such questions lie at the heart of all biographical work, but are seldom explicitly acknowledged, or deeply explored. |
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At its heart lie core skills in computers, numeracy and literacy, with students given flexibility to choose the rest of their timetable. |
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To suggest that I did not administer an oath to these witnesses to help them lie to members of Congress is false, inexcusable. |
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It's clear that his sympathies lie with the underdog in China's new materialist society. |
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The oldest stars, which lie inside globular clusters that orbit our galaxy, are estimated to be at least 12 billion years old. |
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Giant whale vertebrae lie beached and bleached on the shore like prehistoric, bone propellers. |
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Each paddle stroke inches you further upstream towards the Abenaki encampment that should lie perhaps a league ahead. |
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I still feel woozy, but this is the first morning since Friday that my first instinct upon getting up wasn't to go lie back down. |
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Harry is an 11-year-old boy unaware his roots lie in the magical world of witchcraft and wizardry. |
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Beyond all the wrangling, though, lie deeper-seated problems, ills that the game actually has the wherewithal to cure. |
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You can then get away with the lie by telling it with enough conviction and plausibility that your audience believes you. |
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These frightening statistics speak for themselves and behind these figures there lie terrible human tragedies and unimaginable suffering. |
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His current wardrobe is contained in a large paper sack and a duffel bag, both of which lie on the floor in his hotel room. |
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He kept up the lie for nearly two decades until his cheating ways caught up with him last August. |
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The more disturbing part of the answer may lie in the absence of a vision of a just society. |
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High self-image and low self-esteem, according to one theory, lie at the heart of the stand-up comic. |
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Hidden somewhere deep in these two gushy hours of melodrama lie the makings of a vaguely watchable film. |
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A rich and fertile land cannot be permitted to remain idle, to lie as a tenantless wilderness. |
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I think the only answers lie with changing the zeitgeist and the mindsets of the people who run these organisations. |
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Most of us lie between two extreme ends of a bell-shaped curve of sleep length and efficiency. |
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Two other monuments to conspicuous wealth that lie just across a small bridge will make you yearn for the life of the idle rich. |
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The two points of intersection of the latter with the sides of the triangle lie on a line parallel to the base. |
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One councillor has even threatened to lie down in front of bulldozers to stop the development if necessary. |
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Does beauty lie in the artist's skilful manipulation of materials, or ideas? |
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The answers lie in stiff competition in their domestic markets, in woeful mismanagement, even the collapse of some businesses. |
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To this end, a theory construes those phenomena as manifestations of entities and processes that lie behind or beneath them, as it were. |
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The World Cup is not a mattress to lie back on, it is a trampoline from which to spring to a new era. |
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If the seat reclines does it recline enough so that your newborn can lie almost flat. |
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The difficulties lie more in a plot that drags and characterizations that are rather stale. |
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I once travelled in the back of a van and the girl driving made me lie flat on the floor to prevent any passing police seeing me. |
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He took the telephone off the hook, placed cushions on the floor, locked the door, drew the blinds and asked her to lie down. |
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All property rights in the property to which the order relates lie in abeyance. |
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Alex can ride the unicycle, lie on a bed of nails, spin plates, juggle, deliver gags and is now mastering the art of puppetry. |
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At this point, the steep bluffs lie approximately 30 m above the floodplain below. |
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I knew Labour Ministers lie a bit, but accusing two ministers in one week of hypocrisy is a bit much. |
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These quantitive discrepancies probably lie in the approximate or simplified nature of the spectral simulation models. |
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The 60 mostly uninhabited islands which comprise the group lie within an area only 20 miles square. |
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The temporal lobes of the brain lie at the sides of the head above the ears. |
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And therein lie the roots of the Sikh struggle for autonomy in India today. |
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It is defiantly old-fashioned and therein lie its strengths and its limitations. |
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Let's hope his successor has the wit to fashion an intelligence agency that is fit for the struggles that lie ahead. |
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We submit further that each one of the defendants told you lie after lie after lie in order to attempt to pull the wool over your eyes. |
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Attached to the tree's skewed limbs are artificial-looking yellow blossoms, while four baby-blue petals lie on the surrounding brown dirt. |
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I thought I'd get to lie on a fainting couch and do ink blot tests and word association games. |
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I need a nice early night with my boy and hopefully a tiny bit of a lie in! |
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The last of the turkey has been demolished, the new toys lie in a corner and the Christmas tree is shedding its needles at a rate of knots. |
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On the left bank of the river, the works lie north of the present city of Samarra, which is a walled city. |
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Big Mountain sits atop a rolling tableland called Black Mesa, beneath which lie an estimated 20 billion tons of high-quality, low-sulfur coal. |
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The hammer is for hammering in the nails that lie next to it, for working the leather into shoes, and so on. |
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Look again for flooded areas, especially where long grasses and reeds lie over the water's surface. |
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Strict constructionists lie when they claim that if a right is not in the Constitution it doesn't exist. |
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Labour have been severely punished for the social and economic policies that lie at the very core of their world view. |
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She's only good at sitting up for two or three hours before she needs to lie down so I try to time these things so as not to wear her out. |
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Have him lean back in a comfortable chair or suggest he lie down in the bedroom. |
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There are ways to lie and be completely absolved of any kind of accountability. |
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An excuse is worse and more terrible than a lie, for an excuse is a lie guarded. |
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For the first six days after surgery, I had to lie flat on my back in the hospital bed. |
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The poor wretched beast was tied up on a rope that was too short to let him lie down. |
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That would require levelling with the American people about unpleasant realities and the difficult choices that lie ahead. |
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You can talk about my children all you want, but don't lie maliciously and viciously about them. |
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He may have started out by trying to expose evil and wrongdoing but you don't produce a lie to try and get at the truth. |
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As the gifts and luxuries stack up, is everything as it appears or do dangerous times lie in wait for her? |
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Rather this issue would lie at the very heart of the claim for wrongful, as opposed to unfair, dismissal. |
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They lie in particular positions that differ among organs and regions of organs. |
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If someone backed me up in a lie and then took the fall for me when it was exposed, I'd have confidence in him too. |
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The answer to your search could lie with taking part in a jobseekers course at the Portlaoise Job Club. |
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I have taken offence to the statement that a lie was told, and I ask for it to be withdrawn and apologised for. |
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We also sell memorial plaques, stand-up crucifixes and silky white or purple quilts for pets to lie on. |
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Faint remains of a Venetian fort lie crumbling on the hill above the old quarter. |
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After getting eight to 12 reps, lie on your left side to work your right medial deltoid. |
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You find out about Albert Bronzini and Matty as the novel ravels into the past, as their ends lie in their beginnings. |
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And, while a lie has been told, the teller is not yet a liar. |
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The landscape is treeless and mountainous, deeply cut with fjords and sounds along whose shores nucleated villages lie surrounded by fields and pastures. |
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She might be told to lie about her age, and she even might be shown dead, autopsied bodies at the morgue. |
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Diplomatic dispatches at the time, written by men who had no reason to lie to their own rulers, reported no hump or withered arm. |
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For most of the day, they remain in stalls at least 60-square feet, where they can turn around and lie down. |
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The fault may lie in the ambitiousness of the authors' vision. |
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Whatever the detail of the debates over incapacity benefit, there is no doubt that his sympathies do not lie with those he would consider shirkers. |
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The causes of their deaths were usually said to lie in people's wrong doings in both the recent and the remote past, and their invasion of forbidden domains. |
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I made camp and a fire and laid my soldier uniform out for her to lie on. |
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The business of a journalist is to destroy truth, to lie outright, to pervert, to vilify, fall at the feet of Mammon, and sell himself for daily bread. |
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With all the first-rate self-tanning products available, it's easy to fake it if you haven't had the chance to lie out in the sun safely slathered in high-factor sunscreen. |
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Half the world's ocean-going cargo follows shipping lanes past the islands, and rich deposits of oil and natural gas are thought to lie beneath the nearby sea. |
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I wake up at 5am and lie there, pretending I am going to go back to sleep. |
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The precise angles at which these lines lie are also difficult to measure. |
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All tyrannosaurid and hadrosaur bones lie horizontally within a 20 cm thick blocky, green claystone with occasional calcitic nodules and vertical to subvertical burrows. |
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Its origins lie in the caring, sharing Nineties when the realisation dawned that the all-out pursuit of material wealth was not in our long-term interests. |
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I refuse to just lie around and do nothing like a decrepit old hag! |
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And there will be, inevitably, and quite immorally, an attempt to obscure the historical wrongs and the injustices that lie behind the firestorms. |
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The roots of post-structuralism and its unifying basis lie in a general opposition not to the philosophical tradition tout court but specifically to the Hegelian tradition. |
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Who wants to faff around with exchanging traveller's cheques for cash when you're itching to go and lie on the beach or enjoy a leisurely lunch at the Costa Blanca cafe? |
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She literally had to lie down in between sessions in order to recover her strength. |
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But all that is about to change, as Paul must lie at the mercy of a nurse. |
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Distally, they will lie between the carotid and the internal jugular vein. |
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The midpoints of segments AM lie directly on the tangent lines. |
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Let me relieve you of that abominable burden and let you lie down. |
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The largest country in Africa had emerged within the space of fifty years from a welter of bloodshed and anarchy to lie at peace with its neighbours and itself. |
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Visitors are greeted by a looming gothic gate, the kind used to signify that important residents lie behind its spires. |
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Numerous venues lie idle, including the Helliniko Olympic complex, which was the site for baseball, basketball, kayaking, fencing, handball, hockey and softball. |
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I am not a fan of spoilers, if it were up to me, I would lie like a dog about every upcoming issue. |
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Meagan knew better than to lie, but a little white lie never hurt anybody. |
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To novelize a story of incest is to participate in the societal imperative to always lie about it, to say it's not happening, or that you made it up. |
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It includes some 300 oil lakes that still, more than a decade later, lie on the land, the result of the Iraqis having set fire to some 700 oil wells in Kuwait. |
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Heartburn sounds such an innocuous affliction until you actually experience it but stabbing sharp pains in your chest when ever you bend down or lie down is not very fun. |
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Several layers of sand, stone, concrete and a special membrane covering lie between the origins of the radon and the actual home in the miniature house. |
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These sites lie always between the mesenteric tenia and the two antimesenteric teniae, so that the diverticula form rows along the lateral surfaces of the organ. |
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Not coincidentally, all three of these folks lie somewhere in the middle of the gender spectrum. |
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Once it's safely locked up and all the lights are out you can lie flat out across the seats and sleep until the next morning, when it takes you back in to work. |
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He was in a daze but had enough sense to lie low for a bit and so he registered at a seedy hotel in that part of town, where he hoped no-one would come looking for him. |
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The puppy's coat should be black and shiny and lie flat to the body. |
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My ears ache, my legs ache, when I lie down my head fills up with liquid. |
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His actual worry will lie in maintaining harmony among such a gathering of outstanding footballers who will all understandably feel that they should start matches. |
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Added to the tremendous loading on an anchor line in high winds is the fact that in high winds boats do not tend to lie head to wind, but rather tack back and forth. |
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But sometimes the problem is thought to lie deeper, for example, in Kant's rationalism in moral theory and his ideas of teleology and race in anthropology. |
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Even today, thousands of acres of western Kabul lie in rubble, and visitors who tour it are invariably stunned by the scale, and mindlessness, of the destruction. |
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I should have know this was a lie when the new number I was given had a questionable history as well. |
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A tiny shell, acorn barnacles, and sand lie within the well of the bowl. |
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But the essential reasons for the ascendancy of English lie in the internationality of its words and the relative simplicity of its grammar and syntax. |
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She had put herself on a strict diet to fit into a new bathing suit, hadn't eaten all day, had a few drinks at a friends party, felt woozy and went to lie down. |
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At the few remaining watering holes, wolves lie in wait for wild camels. |
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As for how that future might look, Nick is more guarded than others who've recently talked enthusiastically about what possibilities lie in store. |
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The contrast must necessarily lie between such expression and that where the serene and blissful exaltation of the situation sets the predominating tone. |
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My first cat, Jimmy, loved to lie under the tree and gently bat one particular ornament back and forth between his paws to watch the glitter shimmer on its blue surface. |
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A short wade out to sea, the bottom plates, remnants of the ship's engines and boiler lie collapsed upon themselves, home to kina and the occasional crayfish. |
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The wraiths and phantoms creep under your carpets and between the warp and weft of fabric, they lurk in wardrobes and lie flat under drawer-liners. |
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Designed by a Persian architect, the twin structures along with a minareted gateway in the middle, lie above basement in an arcade, with secret passages. |
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Both the fourth external lateral saddle and the fourth internal lateral saddle generally lie beneath, but close to the alignment of adjacent saddles. |
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They lie on pavements, sheltering from the sun under scrawny trees. |
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She does not just fight, she scraps, battles and will not lie down. |
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For anyone whose political sympathies lie left of center, discovering and reading Chomsky is a rite of passage. |
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Unlike most current academic thinkers, they believe the market is neither unpredictable nor random, that patterns lie buried in the mass of data that daily gushes forth. |
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How wantonly the kids skip, and I lie still upon the ground! |
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He could lie on the bottom of the deep end of the pool, his head supported by one bent elbow. |
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The fate of the Buddhas may lie with a veteran Bavarian art restorer with a walrus moustache who has spent a lifetime in German castles and cathedrals. |
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Extremely steep slopes encircle the northwestern terminus of the ravine and conglomeratic sandstone slump boulders lie on the lower elevations of the ravine. |
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She acts as a sort of lie detector, but proceeds through elegant narrative rather than binary test. |
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In claIMing support from those who lie in their graves, though, IM Tirtzu has been outdone by Upper Nazareth Mayor ShIMon Gapso. |
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In 2005, Congress passed the Stolen Valor Act, a law making it illegal to lie about receiving a military medal or decoration. |
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Parts of the outer bailey may also lie buried under the town. |
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In the delicate efforts to stabilize Ukraine that lie ahead, shale gas will not be very important over the short term. |
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Lighting effects have been put up in trees and rafts lie alongside the banks of the lake suggesting that fireworks could be launched from the water's surface. |
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She will lie in state in Seville and will be buried in a private ceremony attended by her husband and children. |
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Michael Jackson will lie in repose over no fewer than 13 subterranean floors, each holding intriguing secrets. |
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But as anyone knows, if you lie down and have a forty minute kip in the aisle of a supermarket, the manager will think you are a mentalist and tell you to move on. |
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My doctor insisted that once I filed this piece I lie down on my bed and not get out. |
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The roots of hip hop's infatuation with expensive, outrageous and overtly customised motor vehicles lie in ghetto fabulous, the trend for conspicuous consumption. |
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Finally, Faris gets fed up and dumps Dave, proving that her allegiances lie with Eric. |
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Two mannequins lie naked in the spare bedroom staring up at the ceiling. |
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Perhaps the answer to the budget shortfall may lie in reviewing the number of higher paid managers who need to be employed, rather than axing frontline staff? |
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The possible values of energy are found to lie within a series of bands. |
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What needs to made clear at this point is some assumptions that lie behind this picture of tardy, incompetent, and detached management of the company by the shareholders. |
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Down here in the amniotic warmth of Scotland's only heated salt-water pool you can lie back, watch the sea birds soaring overhead and look deep into your own soul. |
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Would you believe that Maud has the temerity to lie about her birthday? |
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He bent the truth throughout his life to ensure that he was known as the man who had invented the lie detector test. |
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Appeals from the High Court, in criminal matters, lie only to the Supreme Court. |
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Atop the tomb chest lie detailed alabaster effigies of the King and Queen, crowned and dressed in their ceremonial robes. |
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Zygoneures lie mostly within the cerebro spinal axis, some cells of the sympathetic system offering an exception. |
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Our owners loved their new look and were happy to report that seamless slumber and long lie ins soon became all the rage. |
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We shall have to lie here weatherbound more than one twenty-four hours, with the southwest wind beginning work like this. |
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If what you write has any worth, it may lie submerged for a time, but will eventually surface when the present wankfest has passed. |
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Somebody has already said we are in the murkiest of places, we haven't seen the true dark arts that lie ahead. |
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I lie on my side, head sunk in the pillow, legs upfolded, as if for Indian burial. |
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And as to the slumber of infants, it is no guess of mine that to sleep like a baby is not always to lie quiet and unlachrymose all night. |
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But the true answer may lie in the simultaneous reassertions of independence of the French legal system and the press. |
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I was the one who convinced her you would not tup her, and that if you did you would never lie with her against her will. |
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While he consented to take a lie detector test, Farrow did not. |
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The captain made us trim the boat, and we got her to lie a little more evenly. |
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I made a little voyage round the lake, and touched on the several towns that lie on its coasts. |
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One of the oldest buildings in the municipality is Erenstein, a castle the origins of which lie in the 14th century. |
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When does the position vector of a space curve always lie in its rectifying plane? |
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Most major cities and tourist sites in Ethiopia lie at a similar elevation to Addis Ababa and have a comparable climate. |
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During the scanning process, subjects were asked to lie still with eyes open and not think initiatively. |
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If the person becomes unconscious and you need to put them in the recovery position, lie them down on their injured side. |
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Connery later recounted that he had to lie low for a while after receiving threats from men linked to Stompanato's boss, Mickey Cohen. |
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Under these slopes and gorges lie soil variations of shist, slate, and compositions of loess. |
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Long Meg and her Daughters lie on a terrace above water, immediately to the south of a ditched enclosure that runs round the present farm. |
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Let the soil lie around until it has partially dried out, then rotovate if you must. |
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So who else might lie inside the great circle of the Amphipolis tomb? |
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The system, divided by fault lines called transform faults that lie perpendicular to the ridge, circles the planet like a seam on a baseball. |
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I reckon it is a lie that has been spread by blokes with big feet and small ring fingers. |
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The origins of the Waldensian Evangelical Church lie in the medieval Waldensian movement for religious reform. |
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When you dumb-fucks repeat some right-wing loon's lie it only makes you look like a queef. |
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Pluto and Charon are sometimes described as a binary system because the barycenter of their orbits does not lie within either body. |
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They lie deeper below the skin than spider veins and are most common in the legs, but can appear elsewhere. |
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Likewise, the resurrection plant that can lie dead for 100 years waiting for rain. |
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Cattle do have a stay apparatus, but do not sleep standing up, they lie down to sleep deeply. |
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Rhetorical relations have truth conditional effects that contribute to meaning but lie outside the purview of compositional semantics. |
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Henceforth, Tsarist autocracy and despotism would lie at the heart of the Russian state. |
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