Symphonic music was, and still is, bounded only by the limits of the imagination. |
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Displacing natural foods with engineered foods limits your intake of the health-protective nutrients in whole foods. |
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The idea that term limits are necessary to unseat jaded officials and rouse lazy voters could not be more inapplicable in New York City now. |
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Women's groups draw on voluntarism and self-financing to manage a social relationship with inherent demands and limits. |
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What's more, as well as interest on approved overdrafts, banks usually levy ongoing arrangement and review fees for larger overdraft limits. |
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He felt guilty for pushing her to her limits and sarcastically making his snide remarks. |
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The number of pupils needed to be taught for one more pupil to know the correct time limits was six for boys and five for girls. |
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In effect, it is a highly disciplined architecture, structured and animated by voids and contained within the limits of an urban block. |
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Without this law, the entire purpose of campaign funding limits on parties would be null and void. |
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Exposure to predators may be one factor that limits the foraging activities of small nectarivorous birds at this site. |
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Using the suggested limits of normality may result in an unnecessarily large number of false negatives. |
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It might feel a little odd at first, but vocalizing encouragement will help each of you push your limits in every session. |
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Equally important, the culture as a whole must socialize people into accepting self-imposed limits on their self-interested behavior. |
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European countries understand much better the limits, in scope and duration, of power than the US neocons do. |
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As a luminary and law minister, he cannot be expected to overstep his jurisdiction and transgress his limits beyond his domain. |
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The name Pat Cash still conjures images of a fighter nonpareil and of an untiring athlete overreaching physical limits to reach his target. |
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His idea of campaign finance reform is to ban soft money outright while removing all limits for personal contributions. |
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However, uranium is a heavy metal and the safety limits are based on its toxicity as a metal. |
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Ballina Town Council has drawn up new by-laws to amend speed limits on urban roads in the town. |
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Electronic knowledge and microminiaturization have progressed so much that the limits appear biological rather than technological. |
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The results of routine blood tests and urinalysis were within normal limits. |
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The National Roads Authority 1999 Survey of Free Speeds quantifies widespread non-observance of speed limits by all classes of traffic. |
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Smoking is a definite no-no, while alcohol consumption should be kept at sensible limits. |
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There are limits to what education can achieve when its effects are neutralized by other obstacles to development. |
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Despite the never-ending cups of tea, one female passenger limits her beverage intake. |
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As I said then, it is a virtue of a court system that the court constantly checks its will against a proper view of its limits. |
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The technology of virtual education can revise or remake the limits, which are given us by our histories and by nature. |
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Man is a homeotherm, meaning that body temperature is kept within narrow limits by complex control mechanisms. |
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And unlike the anti-marketing Masters Tournament, which limits ads, the USGA doesn't shackle the networks. |
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My intervention came in the nick of time, and tested the very limits of his fistfight brinkmanship. |
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When the composition limits restrict the use of scrap, the product is designated as primary or virgin casting alloy ingot. |
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Just such propositions take us beyond the limits of empirical particularity. |
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This limits our ability to make broadscale predictions about the relative importance of local ecological processes. |
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Cameras are there to protect everyone, drivers and non-drivers alike, by encouraging motorists to check their speed and keep within the limits. |
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The whole built-up area of the town will be judged, generally speaking the area within the speed limits. |
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Therefore, combustion in the superadiabatic regime significantly extends conventional flammability limits well into the ultra-lean zone. |
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The survey found that a lack of variety and poor nutritional quality of foods limits shoppers' ability to eat healthfully. |
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Such a narrow window of opportunity in which to use or lose the sperm poses difficult time limits for farmers. |
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Still, she just couldn't shake the feeling that her loyalty will soon be tested to its limits. |
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He wrestled middleweight in the junior worlds because of different weight limits. |
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Around the city and the suburbs, where 30 mph and 40 mph speed limits rule, it is delightfully nippy and full of character. |
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The shallow depths where fertilizer is placed are dry under drought situations, which limits nutrient uptake. |
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The study mapped where common heather was contaminated by nitrogen in excess of safety limits. |
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Nor would they be able to gasp enough oxygen through their tracheae, the breathing system that limits most insects to the half-inch scale. |
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When it comes to brutish tactics and mercilessness, Stefan knows no limits. |
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The war is verboten, out of bounds, off limits, bad form, we've moved on from all that. |
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Such threats aim to define the limits of the public sphere by setting limits on the speakable. |
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There are speed limits that are adhered to, and heavy fines, as well as points deducted for non-compliance. |
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When the limits of the substrate have been reached, a Hydractinia colony will bud reproductive polyps called gonozooids from the stolonal mat. |
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A stretch mark results when the skin tears after being expanded beyond its limits. |
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To these speed merchants the current debate about what the new limits should be on various grades of roads is immaterial. |
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And despite limits to the model, analysts continue to use the model because it is intuitive and tractable. |
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But if limits of the right sort persist, I see no reason that explanatory theories invoking the concept of agent causality should not be adopted. |
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The usual speed limits apply, but I did not see one speed camera in all of the miles I covered. |
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Where site-sensitive design reaches its limits, high-performance materials take over. |
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Drinkers in Bradford are more aware of recommended limits on how much they should drink than fellow tipplers across the rest of the country. |
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It's clear his uncertain status limits what Philadelphia can demand in a trade. |
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This is evidence that the present warming of the climate does not go beyond the limits of natural changeability. |
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But even within these limits there are misunderstandings and traducements to be avoided. |
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Members heard there was not enough money in the budget to provide a zebra crossing, traffic calming and speed limits. |
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That's because until seedlings reach green-up, regulations keep adjacent cut blocks of marketable timber off limits to loggers. |
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The more we lower posted speed limits and hide our military police in bushes and behind Dumpsters, the safer we are. |
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As Beckett dramatizes, the ultimate reality of the subjective mind is beyond the spatio-temporal limits of logical meaning. |
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There are so many areas where you can challenge yourself and test your own limits. |
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My personal opinion on the speed limits of this country is that they are too high for residential areas. |
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You have to ask what the limits are of a feminist politics that places all women as sisters. |
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The legal limits are 35 milligrams of alcohol per 100 millilitres of breath or 80 milligrams of alcohol per 100 millilitres of blood. |
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We transcend these limits to find a love that is magical and created by a force greater than us, just for us. |
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Ultimately, he is strangely apolitical, incapable of transcending the limits of the entertainment industry. |
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We can therefore form a conception of reality that transcends these limits and so separate reality from what we believe about reality. |
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It's certainly not as if the movie's interpretation transcended the limits of romance. |
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Technical limits relate to the extent to which services are separable from the core activities of the firm in question. |
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He defines limits of positive variable quantities using ideas that he had used in looking at limits of series. |
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The fourteen essays gathered here embrace a range of issues which perhaps transcend the limits suggested by the subtitle. |
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His white blood cell count, blood chemistries, and transaminase levels were within normal limits. |
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Serum lead, transferrin, haptoglobin, and ceruloplasmin levels were all found to be within normal limits. |
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In some ways, however, it was the court's majority that was in danger of overstepping the limits of its power. |
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Their opposition is driven by a pessimistic sense that agbio is the latest example of how modern society has transgressed natural limits. |
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The desire to transgress the limits and limitations of human existence is a driving force behind all art. |
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Is it not in its nature to transgress the limits of knowledge, thus revealing dimensions of life beyond the reach of other disciplines? |
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Fifteen strange stories, from about 1560 to 1650, push at the limits of unusual and transgressive human cultural behaviour. |
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Extended range diving involves making dives beyond the limits of a single cylinder and no decompression time limits. |
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You cannot enter into the world of the spirit unless you go beyond your physical limits. |
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Also, when we know that our land and water resources are stretched beyond limits due to our burgeoning population. |
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God is infinite, and trying to prove whether God is or isn't, or what or who God is, lies beyond the limits of science and reason. |
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There are also limits on other food items, including fish, shellfish, honey, eggs and some fruit and vegetables. |
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She. turns her head away from the light and the sight it bears as if subject to grief beyond the limits of depiction. |
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He gives orders for other human beings to be blown away and he is a serial adulterer, but his power has unexpected limits. |
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The middle sections include essays considering the hermeneutic significance, force, and limits of God-language. |
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Each is at once elitist and popular, adept at serio-comically pressing the limits of the Spanish language's expressivity. |
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A total of 161 developers failed in the tenders because their bids exceeded the upper limits. |
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But the defence still wants some of the items disqualified, claiming that investigators overstepped the limits of the search warrant. |
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Yet it's clear he was steeped in political minutiae and imposed few limits on what he was willing to do to get the job done. |
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The book probes the limits of forensic osteology and examines both successes and failures. |
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There is a strong relationship between the limits and the identity of any alliance. |
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While there's full access to the museum, the wilder reaches of Pollok Park are firmly off limits to dog walkers and Sunday strollers. |
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What are Europe's limits of tolerance and willingness to accommodate diversity? |
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Chelsea rules are stringent, although regulars do try to test them to the limits. |
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Considered the toughest event, the obstacle course is a test to the cadet's stamina and ability to stretch him beyond his limits. |
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For some, but not all, of these thermally sensitive traits acclimatization leads to adaptive shifts in thermal optima and limits. |
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The electroencephalogram and computed tomographic scan were within normal limits. |
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Sometimes, first tries and the limits of low budgets make better films, never mind the special effects improvements. |
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France, which lands the majority of deep sea fish, is proposing the introduction of the first ever limits on deep-sea catches. |
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This will execute or abandon the trade automatically within price and time limits set by the user. |
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The OEPA limits application of biosolids to crop land with a pH of 5.5 or greater. |
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They do not understand the limits to efficiency presented by the physical properties of heat engines. |
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At times, additional limits may be placed on carry-on baggage based on the main cabin stowage capacity of specific aircraft. |
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Pregnant women can alleviate heartburn by keeping their weight increase within the recommended limits and eating sensibly. |
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They've got stopwatches to make sure we don't exceed time limits, and it's much more athletic than it was. |
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We had a headline in the newspaper stating that one-third of the foreshore was off limits. |
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Former hayfields are now either used as pastures, which limits flowering, or are abandoned, leading to habitat closure. |
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Judges and Magistrates have discretion and accept mitigating circumstances and the limits of the law. |
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The speed limits have been set with the benefit of knowledge of road conditions and minimum stopping distances. |
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The usual explanation for birdsong is that the birds are singing to attract mates or to announce the limits of their territory. |
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Any new roads must avoid bisecting koala habitat, include mitigation measures, reduce speed limits and provide for habitat restoration. |
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The mobilization of countertendencies to the technical and social limits to accumulation have taken on a spatial and geopolitical dimension. |
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It cannot be denied that the confinement of the feet in ballet shoes results in a mobilization of the body beyond ordinary limits of speed. |
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However, these are one-offs involving special constraints requiring the most sophisticated equipment and represent very much upper cost limits. |
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We haven't reached the limits of human performance in sport or in any other field. |
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If you have one-armed bandits in every bar and restaurant, you're going to lure more people into tempting their limits. |
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The patient did not have stigmata of other autoimmune diseases, and her blood glucose level was within normal limits. |
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Knowing him he probably didn't stick to the normal paths and ignored the limits of his mobility scooter. |
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He said signs showing the various speed limits will be set up across the island, if the speed limit becomes effective. |
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So far, there has been little interest in setting finer limits because the procedure is awkward and expensive to manage. |
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What happens when improving people's quality of life runs slap bang into environmental limits? |
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Surveyors, trudging barefoot through the mud, stuck flags into the soggy earth marking the city limits. |
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By 1914, Europe had perhaps reached the limits of modernism, which was characterized, above all, by disorder in the mind. |
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Liver function test results were within normal limits, and no other stigmata of alcoholic liver disease were present. |
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Speed limits must be set according to the road hierarchy, and people must understand why it has to be so. |
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So the International Whaling Commission was formed in order to place limits on the number of whales which could be harvested each year. |
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This new decision replaces the 2001 Bird Protection Act, which set limits on when the birds can be harvested. |
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Credit must go to all the players from both sides for a competitive game that never boiled over the limits. |
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It also saves cardholders from exposing their credit limits or account balances to potential cyber criminals lurking in the anonymity of the web. |
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A borescope inspection was accomplished, and two fan blades were found to be damaged beyond limits. |
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Average speeds in terms of upper and lower limits were set for applying a penalty system. |
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The sound is in stereo, but we're not talking about anything that will push your system to its limits. |
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In this position Saturn, which sets limits and restrictions, often creates health issues, particularly as Saturn rules your body. |
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The sun is just starting to illuminate the horizon of a cloud-laden sky and the dragons are behind a bluff of trees right on the city limits. |
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Does this means that it's twice as safe to drive in areas with higher speed limits? |
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The numbers are further reduced by tight limits on how often they can be called up. |
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It's a body of thinking and writing whose limits are exceedingly hard to define. |
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The two-sided tragedy of liberalism is that it doesn't know its own limits, and neither does it know its own strength. |
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The sad irony of it all is that God's infinite mercifulness extends to the nether limits where our present breed of politicians abound. |
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Now university chiefs are keeping a check on air quality to make sure levels of gases are below limits set by the Health and Safety Executive. |
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First, it subjects the process of earning to certain divine injunctions, which clearly define the limits of halal and haram. |
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The second mechanism by which ethnic pluralism theoretically limits democracy is by tyranny of the majority. |
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While the sprites that run the weather here are capricious, their temperaments are contained within some very strict limits. |
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Their advocacy of limits on how long elected officials can serve shifts political power to the lobbyists who prowl the halls of state capitols. |
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This ultraconservative attack protects Carr, but it limits Houston's potential to hang with any team with a decent offense. |
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While not the same as rigid price caps, bid caps place limits on the prices that energy suppliers can offer to municipalities and companies. |
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With conventional high heels, the length from ball to heel of a woman's foot limits the shoes' height, but there is no limit with platforms. |
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Settlers, ultranationalists, and religious fundamentalists will respect neither legal nor moral limits on their political action. |
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Her higher functions, cranial nerve examination, and motor and sensory examinations were all within normal limits. |
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The scheme aims to make it harder for motorcyclists to break speed limits, in order to reduce casualties. |
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The Motorcycle Safety Foundation said they encourage and expect all motorcyclists to ride within their limits. |
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This drain on financial resources limits the region's ability to continue to grow and create wealth. |
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The Left believe in NO inborn limits on what human arrangements will work whereas Mark sees limits on every hand. |
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It is not going beyond the limits of prudent statement to say that at any rate it will take a long time to starve us out. |
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As Wakefield learned firsthand, the Sioux's patience was not without limits. |
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Acknowledging that there were limits to human knowledge, he had declared it unattainable. |
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Drinking is commonplace in our culture, so you shouldn't find it hard to camouflage the limits of your infatuation. |
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The inadequate troop size also limits the ability to control any movement across the border. |
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Stanchioned cattle are very restless because their restraint limits their ability to lick or scratch. |
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Apparently, the filmic horizons are as infinite as the limits of the sky for these amazing moviemakers and their crazy creations. |
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His boat is a small skiff with a 25 hp engine, which seriously limits how many people he can take out. |
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And in line with already-announced changes, road signs displaying limits in miles-per-hour will go metric nationwide within the next 12 months. |
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This focuses attention on what in my view is the single important difference between judicial review and civil suit, the differing time limits. |
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The companies also called for more transparency and for limits on surveillance. |
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Cape sugarbirds Promerops cafer and proteas, particularly along their range limits, are an example of this. |
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Her complete blood count and urinalysis were within normal limits, and a urine pregnancy test was negative. |
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It doses the water with a chemical called orthophosphate which lines the pipes and limits the amount of lead dissolved into the water. |
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The market naturally puts limits on the size of a firm or company because there are limits of calculability in a market. |
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The collection of such large bodies of data limits the social and biological variables that can be recorded. |
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What they don't understand is that being boring limits their power and undermines their effectiveness. |
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Your chances of attracting a guy can reach sky-high limits, and the only work involved is getting involved. |
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Surfers with experience pre-dating bodyboards are starting to re-investigate the limits of flex with custom surfmats. |
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No war lord is prone to acknowledge any limits other than those imposed on him by a superior armed force. |
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In principle, the steady drone of flat, slack sentences reproduces the demoralised world they depict, not the limits of the writer's talent. |
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The council wants to scrap limits on the number of hackney cabs being allowed to operate on the streets of Sheffield. |
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A third of British men and a fifth of women now habitually drank more than the Government's safe limits for alcohol. |
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Many philosophers will boldly tell us that we have strayed well beyond the limits of meaningful discourse. |
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And there are no territorial limits to the reach of habeas corpus articulated in the text. |
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Paternal credulity in Terence generally limits itself to mistaking undutiful sons for obedient and honest sons. |
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Within certain loading limits, it behaves as a homogenous elastic material and these limits are wider than for normal concrete. |
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Second, unexposed to outside influences and with plenty of time on his hands to think, his mind has no limits. |
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It hasn't been updated in a while, but it's worth a look for those unfamiliar with recently introduced speed limits. |
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But was it really necessary for him to push his body to such unfeasible limits before the general public would put their hands in their pockets? |
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Even then, we pressed the outer limits of what in fact could be bound without falling apart, or even what students could carry. |
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He also objects to the conceptual limits society places on writers or that writers place on themselves. |
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In 1997 the Irish punt rose in the slipstream of the British pound to its upper limits against all other currencies. |
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Auto industry officials are expecting voluntary limits on the number of times a driver can push touchscreen buttons while a vehicle is moving. |
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But we are concerned about the strict time limits which we believe apply in this case. |
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This process currently slows down and limits the amount of data that can be transmitted along fibre-optic networks. |
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Universities were chartered to award their own degrees and could within limits lay on whatever courses they liked. |
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Portlanders drink better beer than most, too, with 23 microbreweries within city limits. |
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Travel and study abroad have also taught the young that borders should not be limits to opportunities. |
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But any phenomenon in nature, however grand, great, shocking, dark, and terrifying, would have limits and borders. |
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I've learned that there are no borders and no limits to this ocean of love I feel for them. |
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They experience pain, transgress borders and limits, and come into existence in situations that are stimulated by pain. |
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It's not in our interest to have a regime in place that unnaturally limits competition. |
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The spotted owl case of 1990, which put federal forests in the Pacific Northwest off limits for logging, is one of the most notable. |
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Catches are mostly inside safe biological limits, but some stocks are overfished. |
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They do not discard it, nor do they flounder in ever-increasing extremist experiments on the outer limits of narrativity. |
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The mother, of course, is ditzy, frazzled and superficial because there can be no real happiness beyond the city limits. |
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This pushes my experimental colleagues beyond their already strained limits of patience, for it is both wrong and completely below the belt. |
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Every time I use the road I see the bus lane and the speed limits flaunted. |
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That history would then only be relegated to the books, off limits to non-readers. |
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Most everyone besides committed totalitarians believe such limits are appropriate and they differ mainly on what the limits should be. |
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The limits of your imagination are bounded only by your budgets, so think creative. |
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The only legitimate and productive political action must be bounded by the limits of the status quo and the Democrats who protect it. |
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It is bounded exclusively by our belief and the limits we place on ourselves. |
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This could be a pointer to many new writers who are bound by geographical limits. |
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Secondary categories are not strictly bounded, and their limits are constantly redefined through practice. |
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His painterly interpretations of place and moment are bolstered by an alert formalism and a chromatic appetite that often induce him to take color harmonics to their limits. |
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This application sends an e-mail alert when specified limits are exceeded. |
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A legal test case has defined the limits within which doctors in the Netherlands, especially general practitioners, can agree to a patient's request for mercy killing. |
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Many ex-members I spoke with felt like financial matters were off limits from the laity. |
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Add in additional demand, as with a surgical procedure, and the body is pushed to its very limits. |
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Douglas in particular had a penchant for extending the limits of his instrument, using toots, whistles and breathing noises in some of his improvisational work. |
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This also limits his ability to make downfield blocks on linebackers. |
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Similarly, there are residential areas where only the elders dwell, and which are strictly off limits to the young, everyone from mewling infant to energetic teenager. |
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As such, the limitless nature of comic book fantasy is used, by and large, to keep limits in place. |
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The sound anthropological position is that certain sex-linked behaviors are biologically based, although subject to cultural modifications within limits. |
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I realized, a bit too late, that certain words I had always known were now loaded, and therefore off limits. |
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He adds that liberty-as-means must observe limits, including a right to exit any locality. |
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In order to get outside of these limits, counsel for the plaintiff had to establish vicarious liability upon the owner and driver of the tractor trailer. |
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Democrats want to tighten disclosure laws but have blocked raising contribution limits. |
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It holds out the prospect of transcending the limits of privatised existence, of being known to the general public and of becoming part of society's collective experience. |
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Love is what engages and transcends mundane limits toward accomplishment. |
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By transcending the limits of space, time and situation, this technology makes it more likely that any person, of any status, in any place, can learn anything, at any time. |
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And this temple was set up largely to commemorate the victory over the Persians who had by definition transgressed the divine limits in their attempt to conquer the Greeks. |
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Swiss experts recently revealed that well over half of all mineral oils used in the production of chicken feed exceed Swiss safety limits between 10 and 100 times. |
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Some limits will be mandatory, with traffic calming measures such as road humps and mini-roundabouts or traffic islands to force down traffic speeds. |
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If space limits you to only three herbs, plant mint, parsley, and thyme. |
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To be bold, to be a maverick, to stretch beyond established limits, is the stuff of inspiration. |
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Maintaining the biochemical oxygen demand, nitrogen and organic matter content of wastewater outside the limits that are favourable for mosquito breeding is very helpful. |
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When bioenergetic limits for growth are studied, only periods with growth not limited by tissue maturation or reproductive allocation should be taken into account. |
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Set in an elite girls' school, the film has a group of mixed-up girls testing the limits of teen behaviour while finding their various ways in life. |
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Both Bush and Carter succeeded only in underlining the limits of American power. |
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In any case, this limits a composer's ability to modulate on the piano, where players can't adjust intonation, except crudely and awkwardly, while they perform. |
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The refrigerator should be equipped with an electronic monitor and an alarm to alert staff members when temperatures are outside acceptable limits. |
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From just past the city limits came Ernest Hemingway to purify the American language and create another heroic legend. |
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Second, the dominance of broadcasting monoliths limits local programming, as the airwaves become saturated with national programs and syndicated fare. |
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With upstairs off limits, I left the comfort of my bed, decamping to the narrow living room couch. |
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For example, they state that elements of a distance education program can be contracted out to unaccredited entities, but they don't specify limits for outsourcing. |
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Conversely, anything that limits that freedom is unpatriotic. |
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To add a personal note to this review, ethnography's limits are reached at the boundaries of specific and discreet social worlds, whether they be boardrooms or bar rooms. |
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In these polarized times, there are even stricter limits to what any one party can get done on its own. |
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It used to be that personal computers were rather underpowered and memory-poor, enough so that they placed artificial limits on a hacker's learning process. |
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If you slice the ball, you should establish more generous limits. |
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New sensors for these microelectrodes are being produced which offer lower detection limits and the opportunity to measure other previously unmeasured ions. |
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Neither was old enough to be outdoors with a loaded gun within the city limits. |
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The limits of these sections can best be illustrated by examining a specific case, the US export ban on unprocessed logs from federal and state lands. |
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Placing limits on the filibuster is the wisest course for any senator who cares about the institution's future. |
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He has argued that unreasonably low catch limits have hurt the fishermen. |
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My only limits are the bounds of good taste, what I consider good taste. |
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When introduced, the limits will only apply to recreational mariners when their vessel is under way and then only to those who are navigating the vessel. |
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So, having been caught using sock puppets to circumvent the spending limits, the right has relegalised using sock puppets to circumvent election spending limits. |
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All the lunar ecliptic limits are substantially lower than the solar values, and that is why solar eclipses outnumber lunar eclipses by about three to two. |
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The truth is, I feel more than a bit guilty trying to squeeze this endless work into the limits of a single Daily pic. |
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On the sophomoric Fear Factor, players push their limits by eating worms and beetles, letting rats crawl over them, or rappelling off 12-story buildings. |
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One key argument made by the plaintiff was that current limits on contributions represent an absurd limitation on speech. |
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The sow's milk production limits the growth of pigs prior to weaning. |
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In stalls, the sow can move within the limits of the bars or fences. |
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For example, Great Britain has banned veal crates and limits to fifteen hours the amount of time animals can go without food and water during transport. |
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They will find themselves swiftly and bruisingly brought up against the limits of their own conditions, whatever those limits and conditions may be. |
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Though this might seem to represent a trend toward a more benign way of reconciling the budworm and the forest ecosystem, the approach has obvious limits. |
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Ezra Pound's virulent anti-Semitism, his radio broadcasts and tracts in support of Mussolini, stand as potent reminders of the limits and dangers of the human imagination. |
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Pittsburgh will not leave its city limits for a nonleague road game. |
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With term limits, you get only one chance to vote someone out of office. |
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The top floor was kept strictly off limits, purportedly for technical equipment. |
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The most commonly grown mushrooms are the button mushrooms and the first crop may be ready in about nine weeks if temperatures are within the required limits. |
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And so while the modern conception may not justify aggregate limits, the original conception just might. |
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Mercury occurred in concentrations above acceptable limits in rainbow trout and northern squawfish from Okanagan Lake and in northern squawfish from Skaha and Osoyoos Lakes. |
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Their repertoire apparently knows no limits, nor does their energy onstage. |
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The observance of conventions, traditions, and institutional norms permits purposeful choice and action within a frame work that sets limits to possible outcomes. |
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Enwezor's search for this inclusive discourse confronted the ethics and limits of occidental power, and its impact on contemporary discourses of globalization. |
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The cameras ensure responsible behaviour among students and prompt them to be in their limits, besides coming in handy to produce evidence against the erring. |
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As far as age limits are concerned, there are no hard and fast rules. |
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The film limits its potential for critical analysis in this way, but it does so without reinforcing unequal power structures or stereotyping its characters. |
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In the Cuban view, freedom is the participation in power by the people rather than people trying to carve out limits on the exercise of power by oligarchs. |
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It's a true hot hatch in the sense that the simple base chassis is pushed to its limits by the raw power, so it's nervous and constantly bucking in your hands. |
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The deal is open-ended, with no limits in terms of duration or cost. |
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Throughout the United States governmental agencies regulate hunting in regard to methods used to hunt these birds, the open season, and bag limits. |
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There are physical limits on how quickly orange groves can be developed. |
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City governments passed tongue-in-cheek ordinances prohibiting Skylab from entering the municipal limits, or inviting it into the town, depending on the mood they were in. |
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Uncertainty about the level of herd immunity generated by vaccination programmes limits modelling of the potential benefits of booster vaccination. |
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People are reminded that the new signs will show kilometres per hour instead of miles and some limits may be different to those which applied heretofore. |
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It is the somatosensory system that provides the most compelling evidence for plasticity, with cortical and subcortical reorganisation, with limits to the latter. |
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The Budget Committee never interacts directly with deans, and it limits its contact with administrators to the chancellor and his or her senior deputies. |
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Men may earn a hobnail liver by the constant, steady use of alcoholic drink taken systematically, so as always to keep within the limits of intoxication. |
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As it is, we are not persuaded that the questioning of the appellant overstepped the proper limits, even if it exploited those limits to the full. |
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Moreover, if he is overstepping the limits of his office, it is in part because the insurance commissioners of New York and other states are not doing their jobs. |
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This conclusion is independent of whether the organ or official has contravened provisions of internal law or overstepped the limits of his authority. |
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The law also includes a mandated benefit for treatment for chemical dependency, including alcoholism, up to insurer-specified dollar or visit limits. |
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Speed limits, stoplights and safety belts are part of being a good driver on the road. |
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The government need not subsidize filmmaking, or even place limits on American film imports. |
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Consequently, many new crabbers have been severely bitten, learning their limits. |
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Designs pushing performance limits can now reduce pessimism by precise selection of instance voltages. |
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The twenty-second Amendment introduced term limits for the presidency. |
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