In most islands some small-scale farmers continued to occupy prime lands, maintaining a cash-crop culture on the margins of plantations. |
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Prime retail rents have soared over the past decade, but margins have not kept pace. |
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The increased readability that results from these design changes is further enhanced by a bigger page size and wider margins. |
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What's more, many banks sneakily use base-rate changes to increase their margins and profits. |
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Here, distribution may be limited to a small number of intermediaries who gain better margins and exclusivity. |
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Chinese demand is growing at an unprecedented rate, and refineries are near capacity with healthy margins. |
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Gilded Hawke is a variegated curly ivy with grey-green central colouring and gold margins. |
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Stronger unions responded by demanding higher margins for skill and above-award payments, which strained the court's authority. |
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Skill margins were a key issue, and the dispute was the first successful post war campaign. |
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The company's low cost base allows it to undercut competitors, offer cheaper computers, better service and still have better margins. |
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The margins are straight, with discordant injection veins, and grade into a marginal cataclasite zone adjacent to the mylonite. |
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We are able to distinguish anatomical margins when two structures of different density abut one another. |
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Ever since then, I was always doodling in the margins of my papers or in spare notebooks. |
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In high tech, the assumption is that developing proprietary software and content gives you higher margins and a long lead time over rivals. |
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In the last few years, as they did in the late '60s and '80s, comics have once again busted out of their relegated spot in the cultural margins. |
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Gross profit margins leaped in the three months to 9.8 per cent from 2.9 per cent. |
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The work force for call centers is the anglophone population of the poorer places on the outer margins of the Anglosphere. |
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The company reported strong profit margins in its fourth quarter results, although revenues were below expectations. |
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The inner and outer margins of the annulus were observed to bulge outwards but when the nucleus was removed the inner margins bulged inwards. |
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The company is also increasing its market share and working on bigger margins. |
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All I wanted was a two column template, centered, with wide margins on each side. Kind of like this. |
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Thereafter, I broke the lap record five times and still only finished fourth, so that demonstrates what small margins you are operating within. |
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The dry seed was elongated along the main axis, with an elaiosome at the former placental end and revolute margins folded under the seed. |
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There will be more pain ahead for the company and it may need to sacrifice more margins if it wants to continue to grow its market share. |
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We dealt with that complaint by changing the page margins to get the total length down to where they wanted it without removing any text. |
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The banks are green again after months of gloom and the margins are alive with life. |
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Documents with extra-wide margins are now displayed in a browser with a horizontal scroll bar. |
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The ligulate leaves and strongly revolute leaf margins are distinguishing features of Meesia uliginosa. |
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Folding down the corners of pages, scribbling in margins and breaking the spines of paperbacks are signs of a barbarian. |
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The drift of the continents had sealed off the waters of the far arctic, as the northern margins of Asia and North America crowded together. |
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The leaf margins have less of a prominent sinuate character than those of the other species. |
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Sales and gross margins at the Hopkinton company are approaching their boom-time levels. |
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Retailers are notoriously secretive about profit margins and the performance of their individual stores. |
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The most readable proposals have text running 4 inches or less across the page with graphics in the side margins or within the text. |
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Given the talent, intelligence, and skill possessed by Indians, why was their country still weak, still on the margins of international affairs? |
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Overlap of bone margins may indicate a dislocation, and a second view should confirm this. |
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Underground pits for root crops such as sweet potato were scattered around the margins. |
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He said moteliers weren't in a position to lower prices and give better deals because their margins wouldn't allow it. |
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The basalt ashlars have protruding bosses and roughly dressed margins, which give the impression of order and unity. |
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Over the centuries, the fine straight lines and margins of some of the ashlars have eroded away. |
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Painful skin ulcers with gangrenous margins may be a feature of mixed bacterial infections. |
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Instead, try short angled casts along the near bank, lengthening each cast to thoroughly search the margins. |
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Amanda is the teenage runaway, eking out a desperate existence on the margins of society, amidst the detritus of the contemporary Wasteland. |
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All life assurers are looking at their cost base at the moment, with products carrying much smaller margins. |
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A private employer is putting high profit margins above the interests of very low-paid employees. |
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Devoid of social skills and eternally depressing, Pekar's voice speaks for nerds, social inadequates and all else on the margins of society. |
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Finally, nectar collects in the saccate nectary spur formed by the fusion of the margins of the labellum and the base of the column-foot. |
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The nuclei of these mononuclear cells are round to oval with ill-defined cytoplasmic margins. |
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On the margins of the basin the Upper Balder contains a high proportion of tuffs, tuffaceous muds and tuffaceous sands. |
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Tonight there was a total lunar eclipse, and the moon was rather dark, with deep red at the margins as it rose from the eastern horizon. |
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The strategy may have been to go for turnover growth at the expense of profit margins. |
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All resection margins, blood vessels, lymphatics, and regional lymph nodes were free of tumor. |
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If truth must be an exile from the mainstream of politics, let it thrive on the margins. |
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Some of these medusoid fossils show clear impressions of tentacles around their margins. |
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This Australite tektite is an example of rare tektites which have flanges around their margins. |
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We need to keep the volumes up as the margins have been falling and we are constantly battling against obsolescence. |
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All of these books were ambitious, unorthodox, noteworthy, and yet ultimately uninfluential interventions from the margins. |
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Carmakers will not be able to cut automobile prices and will do so only at the cost of squeezing their own margins. |
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Fig.2 The anterior lid margins show erythema and moderate madarosis of the lower lashes. |
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The best scholarship applications adhere to specifications for margins, spacing, font size, and length. |
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Enlarged avicularia on zooids at row bifurcations, on branch margins, and adjacent to ovicells are generally similar to those in M. auriculatum. |
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It says the Te Tumu Pa site, river mouth and river margins should be tapu forever out of respect for the tribes which fought there. |
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Crucially, these ideas were not developed in the mainstream of political discourse but on the margins and then popularised. |
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Many retailers have only maintained sales levels by significantly reducing gross margins. |
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The margins support a range of wetland plants including brookweed, arrowhead and purple loosestrife. |
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They live on the margins, working ungodly hours on below minimum wages, almost not breathing in order to avoid detection. |
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There were in 1991 serious problems in reconciling customer margins, with many large outstanding unreconciled balances. |
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Please sign up now before their vast bloated profit margins begin to suffer. |
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The Spanish bayonet has leaves that are rigid with leaf margins that are sharply serrated. |
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Combine these closures with the mop fair in the autumn and businesses are beginning to lose margins that can never be regained. |
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The leaf blades are stiff, glaucous to gray with strongly mammillate margins. |
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Some may point to the narrowness of these losing margins and claim that luck has not been a friend. |
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The margins are long or short based upon the content of the phrase rather than some predetermined syllabic length. |
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The bed of the railway track is mainly limestone ballast, with ash on the outer margins. |
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The body of the manuscript must be double spaced, and margins should be at least one inch all around. |
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Pike spawn during March and April in the shallow weedy margins of lakes and in the tiny overgrown backwaters of rivers. |
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During the formation of pockets, schorl was the dominant early tourmaline species forming and is found along the margins of the pockets. |
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By rolling the labial margins toward the midline, the mesial end of the upper dentition can be narrowed without bringing the plates out of line. |
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However, sediment drifts mantle the western margins, and slope fans locally encroach onto the rise of the eastern margin. |
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Hangingflies usually occur in mesic habitats, including stream margins, slowly flying short distances and sometimes sipping nectar from blossoms. |
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He drove slowly across the cracked blacktop, which was covered with faded, yellow parking margins. |
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The American germander leaf is ovate in shape and has serrate leaf margins. |
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Two and a half months later, a computed tomographic scan showed multifocal nodules with ill-defined margins in both lungs. |
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Dolerite dykes that cut the peridotite show chilled margins and local metasomatic calcic alteration. |
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In the documents of the last volume, drawn from the imperial court, you can read the Emperor's notations down the margins. |
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Most lie along deserted hillsides in the uplands, just beyond the margins of modern agriculture. |
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The lateral margins of palatal foramina are visible at the lateral edges of the anterior margin of the apparently single, large palatal vacuity. |
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In businesses with high turnover and low profit margins, a miscalculation of selling prices can have a big effect on a firm's annual profits. |
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The numbers in brackets are the marks that were written in the margins of the Gersaint catalog. |
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The two political leaders conduct their argument on the margins of economic policy. |
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Common habitats include borrow pits, sloughs, city park ponds, sluggish streams and shallow margins of reservoirs and lakes. |
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The holes are far greater than the space in this book given over to noticeably wide margins and blank space. |
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How many still do, and still print the little black margins around their images to inform the viewer of their exacting practice? |
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At once I feel like I'm back at high school and I've been caught drawing margins without a ruler. |
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The land of spoilage, shrinkage, of profit margins so thin that the accountant's hands bleed with a thousand sharp cuts. |
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Amazingly the conversion was missed to leave Newbridge still ahead by the narrowest of margins at six points to five. |
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The senior hurlers have had a number of competitive performances, losing by very narrow margins. |
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In plate tectonics, a transform fault is a strike-slip fault extending throughout the lithosphere and joining any two other plate margins. |
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The bottom shelved gently down from the margins and levelled out at 10 feet depth just at the point where the reeds ended. |
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Great Britain lost the next two Tests as well, by similarly narrow margins. |
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Rather, he is ensuring that the principle of one-man-one-vote holds good, even if it comes down to the narrowest of margins. |
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The unnaturalized alien, the proverbial stranger, operated not only on the margins of society but at the mercy and discretion of others. |
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Chenault expects to sacrifice some of his margins to grasp the opportunity presented by unfettered competition. |
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Narrow margins baled us out many days, and he questioned it all players made themselves available for the senior county panel. |
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Many are forced to leave their families and lead a precarious existence living on the margins of society. |
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They grade both northward and southward into coalesced alluvial fans forming the bajada that flanks the margins of the mountains. |
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The Pesticide Residues Committee says that most of the contamination should not damage health because of the large safety margins. |
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Morris admits that the margins on shopfitting and construction are low, with health and safety issues making it a tough market to thrive in. |
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It is this key combination of actors that anoints artists, invents audiences, projects unsuspected sources of art from the margins to the centre. |
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They are now struggling in the margins of Indian society and live in appalling poverty. |
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The auricles in early ontogeny are relatively large and distinctly trigonal, with their free margins meeting the hinge line at acute angles. |
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Part of the symphony was substantially complete, but the rest consisted of shorthand scribbles and anguished remarks in the margins. |
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However, premiums have been cut to the bone, and life companies are looking to improve their margins and profits. |
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Workers are on a roll now and have been dominant over all sides despite the narrow margins involved at times. |
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Most of the residues were below the maximum levels set by the government, which had large safety margins, they pointed out. |
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They emerge from the cinders to feed and mate when the sun has warmed the rock surfaces, particularly at the margins of snow fields. |
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This is fairly easy to accomplish by defining a bounding rectangle for the text that is the same width as the space between the page margins. |
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My eventual entry into university and the to the margins of academia was much more circuitous. |
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Merchandising income also fell and unsold shirts had to be disposed of through large discounts, cutting margins dramatically. |
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It lost three seats by the narrowest of margins and under questionable circumstances. |
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Answer using no more than six letters, a hand gesture, and the doodling space in the margins. |
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Also, the leaf margins of spiny sowthistle are much more spiny or prickly than those of annual sowthistle. |
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Video system processing performance is improved by its increased output timing margins and reduced jitter. |
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Even without the threat of war, an operation of this size presses at the margins of possibility. |
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The only way to increase the margins of auditing is to send the most junior people on the job and wrap it up quick. |
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Caught in the middle of this war is the food processor, facing increasing pressure to deliver quality goods on paper thin margins. |
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That is, the cartilaginous radials extend to margins of pectoral fin, functionally and physically displacing the keratinous ceratotrichia. |
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The mid lobe is 1.6 cm wide, thick, fleshy, and its margins are undulately crisped. |
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The ability to boost prices is helping to lift margins despite rising costs. |
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It has been a big year with record profits, record sales and while a win in the ratings and a lift in profit margins. |
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The recurved ventrolateral margins of P. schrami are not evident in P. pachoecoi. |
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And employers, faced with falling demand and dwindling margins, cut back on salaries, raises, benefits, and other perks. |
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It means good margins and possibly a reputation for beer selection that will draw customers from a larger area. |
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The print blocks, with their justified margins, look like squares and are placed in the upper part of their respective pages. |
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Now poems are easily detectable on the page, because their right hand margins aren't justified. |
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The leaves are ovate to oblong, 5 to 8 centimeters long, and pointed at both ends, with subentire or undulately toothed or lobed margins. |
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It said increases in costs of raw materials has eroded its profit margins and yet it still has to stay competitive. |
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Some tenants felt Christmas would not generate big profit margins for them, but others saw a ray of hope with a late-buying binge. |
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Bad weather, skyrocketing fuel prices and fierce discount competition are reducing profit margins to razor-thin levels. |
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None of this is helped, say analysts, by the razor-thin profit margins for many suppliers. |
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But Korea, after missing a penalty stroke, scored three goals but lost by the narrowest of margins. |
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Eddie was cool and stroked the ball over to give his side sweet revenge by the narrowest of margins. |
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There could be some pleasant news with respect to operating profits as revenues continue to grow and margins increase. |
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Borrowers and savers are losing out as banks and building societies boost their margins. |
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We have always offered customers good value for money and have been content with reasonable margins. |
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The shells showed severe abrasion of the whorls, whereas their apertural margins were more resistant and were subjected to almost no abrasion. |
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Nobody has won both Iowa and New Hampshire by such wide margins and gone on to lose the nomination. |
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He also said cars are unable to pass by parked cars in the same area without being forced up on the kerbing and grass margins. |
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As housing values have soared, builders have reaped lush margins by building on the cheap land that they acquired several years earlier. |
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Competing in a contest with seventeen other girls she missed winning the overall prize by the narrowest of margins. |
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I met fuel-injection-pump rebuilders who knew the gross margins of every nozzle and pump they produced. |
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A scope is almost mandatory for an air rifle, and airgun scopes can have great profit margins. |
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Everywhere around the margins there were shoal fish, creatures almost identical to skimmer bream and roach. |
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The margins are inhabited by interesting people who have a beauty of a kind. |
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Medium-sized, alate, subequally biconvex shells with deflected anterior margins in later growth stages. |
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She filled the margins with recollections of special memories and funny phrases. |
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Women's experiences tend to be homogenized, and rarely are the voices heard of women from the margins who are multiply oppressed. |
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In any industry, oversupply leads to price reductions and pressure on profit margins. |
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Not that he's looking for excuses, just proof that his specialism works to very fine margins. |
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It just doesn't work out economically, because the restaurant business has low profit margins and is so labor intensive. |
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There are wide margins, only 29 lines to the page, and the print is, at a guess, 12 point. |
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If a line of text is too long to fit between the page margins, the text should be wrapped onto additional lines as needed. |
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Set in wide margins they provide food and cover for wildlife, while the high grass shelters partridge, tree sparrows and skylarks. |
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In the margins of the lake, I taught little Felix to hunt with an insect net. |
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At the same time, the IRA said, the firms are passing on their increased costs to consumers and increasing their own margins and profits. |
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It works, and it greatly increases your chance for success, but it limits your margins. |
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Generally thin starting margins suggest little room for manoeuvre on profits when the unexpected happens. |
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The wider the margins, the better management has reined in costs and kept business humming along. |
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Instead, hens north of the Border will carry on living out their miserable lives crammed into dark, tiny boxes to boost farmers' profit margins. |
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The words didn't fit in the box and I filled the margins so that anyone reading the form would notice what I had written. |
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The upper cut end of the bowel is brought out through this opening and the edges are stitched to the margins of the opening. |
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Permanent 6m grass margins ensure there are plenty of nesting sites and feeding areas for other birds such as whitethroats and yellowhammers. |
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Fishing close to the margins with meat, Dallton was bagging the odd nice carp until the intervention of a beast of 15-10 catapulted him to the top of the prize list. |
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The structural reinforcement of the sclerenchymatous tegmen and lignified endotesta also appears to be responsible for the unrolling of the recurved margins during imbibition. |
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Stalk borer damage in corn commonly is confined to occasional plants in the first few rows near field margins, fence rows, grass terraces and waterways. |
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It has the highest margins and the best returns in its sector. |
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She founded Kids Company in December 1995, hoping to reach not only vulnerable children in schools but also those excluded and on the margins of society. |
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It was a frustrating loss for the Eagles, who let a third quarter time lead evaporate and have now lost their opening two games by margins of less than two goals. |
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But the stewards ruled that the interference had not affected the result, arguably not an easy call given the margins at the line of just a neck and half a length. |
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Conor appeared to have won the bout but lost on the narrowest of margins. |
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So margins of safety naturally get built into task time estimates. |
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Yet the fact that he's about to shoot a new feature in colour with Bill Murray and other prominent stars also suggests he's willing to push the limits of those margins. |
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It is also just about possible, but only at the margins of plausibility, that the apostrophe inserted into Finnegans Wake is a deliberate mistake. |
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It can explore the margins and limits of the text and of classical theatre, and in the process demystify, even kill the text and the author and his authority. |
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We've been working our little cotton socks off to source our chart albums within the EU at the lowest possible price and cutting our margins even more. |
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I accept the margins in farming are tight and profits are well down but trying to balance the books at the expense of asylum seekers is not acceptable. |
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Then again, the gluttony factor is probably less to do with location than their all-new menu, stuffed to the margins with tantalising Italian scran. |
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Profit margins and markups vary, depending on whether you are talking about a hand-crafted latte at a coffee house or a 12-ounce bag of whole beans at the grocery store. |
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Sulphate-rich waters in bitter lakes produce mirabilite which alters on exposure to thenardite both along the margins of the lake and in its deeper parts. |
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Carboniferous volcanism, occurring at converging plates margins, both at the Appalachian and at the Ouachita margins, was decidedly not tholeiitic. |
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Unfortunately, it also flooded the market with lots of copies of every title at incredibly low prices, effectively killing the margins in the sell-through market. |
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Falcon retakes the lead here, though its margins of victory remain narrow. |
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Democrats have succeeded in fighting off passage of the law by the thinnest of margins. |
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Therefore, all side notes appear in the margins in their original format. |
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In the earnings report, it lowered expectations for sales growth and profits margins in the coming year. |
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The shrunken, leathery bag that is 39-year-old Lanegan's face tells you all you need to know about the price to be paid for a life lived on the margins. |
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Then our time margins were further shaved by an additional hour waiting for the new replacement part for the copilot's instrument power generator. |
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Waste management also has division of labor and is undertaken by transporters that carry waste to the heap margins and heap workers that manage the heap. |
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In the male shield fern these are located along the midrib, while in the marginal-fruited shield fern they are placed on the margins of the divisions of the fronds. |
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I began reading it in earnest last summer, underlining and making notes in the margins. |
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Affinity says that as the wholesale costs for unmetered dial-up access fall throughout the year it should give it greater room for improved margins. |
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In its first year, the Buzz Project found that in fields containing margins of natural clovers and trefoils an average 1,850 bumble bees were found per hectare. |
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We've always had at the margins, Larry, some, you know, some miscounts. |
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They are now estranged from society by living on the margins. |
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Around most fields, three and six metre margins and areas seeded with special wildflower or pollen mixes provide food for invertebrates and birds. |
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But it is still uncertain how much of the bigger tab companies will be able to pass through to consumers, and how sharply the costs will eat into profit margins. |
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Cuomo in turn was buoyed by big margins in New York City and its surrounding suburbs. |
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In these days of corporate austerity, economic gloom and wafer-thin margins, it is brave to post substantially increased profits and claim there is still more to come. |
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Portugal is all too keen to exploit the quincentennial for a glorious reassertion of its place within the European Community which has kept it at the margins for centuries. |
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A contour feather, as a typical feather, has a complex morphology consisting of a central shaft or rachis to which barbs are attached on two margins to form a vane. |
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They are suffering because their habitat, such as hedgerows, stubble fields, wet areas and weedy field margins, has been dramatically altered over recent decades. |
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In this age of thin profit margins and smaller budgets for films, I think the fictitious junketeer could have saved the studios some much earned cash. |
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However, since it is basically just wholesaling a service provided almost entirely by Comcast, it probably could not afford to sacrifice its margins by going too cheap. |
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On the margins of the creased paper, black squares represent the two tanks the unit will use to shell the base. |
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These businesses are cost intensive and the margins are very low. |
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Lacerations generally are ragged tears in the skin with abraded margins. |
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The scapegoat is invariably an outsider, existing at the margins of a community, and resisting its core values. |
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So, however, does a disinclination to live at the margins, on the edge, with the unexpected. |
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Yes, rent control does change allocative outcomes within a society, and does so in a wide variety of ways along an indefinitely large number of margins. |
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Paid sick leave, personhood, you name it, all of them went in the progressive direction, most of them by overwhelmingly margins. |
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Important lateritic nickel deposits are found in New Caledonia, Indonesia, and Cuba, all of which are associated with island arc volcanism and plate margins. |
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Clear terminology, wide margins with boxed highlights, frequent topical headings and the overall layout of the book is very user-friendly for browsers. |
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You might want to look back over some of those 2008 margins before you settle into your easy chair tonight. |
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The more marginal space of poetry, therefore, might rather be that of a dissensus, of which the pull toward margins would be a figurative representation. |
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Oxford won the 2003 Boat Race by the narrowest of margins and by all accounts it was one of the most exciting finishes of all time with BBC audience figures of 7.7 million. |
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Since then, it has served to elect Democrats who can only win if they roll up big margins among women. |
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Young male office and shop clerks occupied a precarious social and economic position on the margins of respectable middle-class Victorian society. |
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By the narrowest of margins, the Senate has decided to reverse a policy that has endured for nearly 60 years and to allow the target shooting of harmless mourning doves. |
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These pricey objects with their eye-popping profit margins were gussied up and served up like marzipan sweets. |
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This drop in variable costs has helped to lift profit margins. |
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At night, some subdominant fish can be observed in pool and riffle margins, although numbers are low relative to the number of fish active by day. |
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Workplace tensions, whether related to compensation issues, unrealistic profit margins or setting rapid growth goals, can create an environment ripe for fraud. |
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Second, the company is a high energy user and the rise in energy prices over the past year is a potentially material negative for both margins and costs. |
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Did you know the profit margins on pirate CDs are higher than cocaine? |
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Of course not everyone living on the economic margins is frequenting each of these types of businesses. |
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As I mentioned in a previous post, most grocery stores have very few artisanal breads, preferring the shelf life and profit margins of the bagged sliced breads. |
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However, the consortium neglected to invite hard drive vendors, who had no interest in reducing their margins even further to design ruggedized external drives. |
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Under the pressure of tight margins, hostile takeovers and cutthroat rivalry, air safety has been increasingly sacrificed to the requirements of profit and the markets. |
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Not surprisingly, given the gullibility of Apple devotees like myself, Apple's profit margins are the envy of Silicon Valley. |
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The auricles are small, clearly separated from the anterior and posterior margins of the shell and are found in the plane of the closing of the valves. |
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The F.W. Woolworth Company reported profit margins of 20 percent but actually lowered the wages of salesgirls in its stores, citing the need for belt tightening. |
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At the margins, that means more people are able to pay for the necessities of life with their incomes. |
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Since shareholders have a nasty habit of leaving, customers will probably have to bear the brunt of these losses and the bank may try to push profit margins even wider apart. |
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New spurs of bone often develop at the margins of the affected joints. |
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Changes made by the committees really amount to nibbling at the margins. |
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It is part and parcel of the implicit politics of snap judgment, which folds the margins of American society into its center. |
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The blithe assumption that higher charges can be painlessly met from profit margins was always suspect but is now exposed as a serious threat to recovery prospects. |
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But like many other manufacturers, hp has seen its core business suffer as competition rises and margins grow thinner. |
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In the recurved margins of the seed, the tegmen was wedge-shaped. |
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The basic economy of hunting, fishing, and food gathering, and the settlement pattern that focused on lake margins and river valley locations, remained unchanged. |
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Eudialyte occurs primarily along the margins of the leucosomes and is commonly found altered to catapleiite, baddeleyite, lavenite, paraumbite, and barytolamprophyllite. |
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Telcel business fundamentals are supported by strong demand growth and stable EBITDA margins, which result in strong cash flow generation. |
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In Roman Britain, embankments were built around the Wash's margins to protect agricultural land from flooding. |
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To get the footer acting right, you need to float it and clear it on both margins. |
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The margins of the heart-shaped, cloverlike leaflets are edged with purple on this 1' to 2' plant. |
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What's the perfect small-cap growth stock? One with good growth prospects, fat margins, limited competition, and outstanding management. |
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As plants took hold on the continental margins, oxygen levels increased and carbon dioxide dropped, although much less dramatically. |
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At any event, the far southern continental margins of Antarctica and West Gondwana became increasingly less barren. |
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A mix of Irish Sea and Lake District ice abutted against its western margins. |
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However, Blackdown geologically is not part of the South Downs but instead forms part of the Greensand Ridge on the Weald's western margins. |
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One notable aspect of the Victorians' commemoration of Guy Fawkes Night was its move away from the centres of communities, to their margins. |
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Most of the decorations around the margins are images of pure fantasy, figures of saints, and naturalistic motifs. |
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Professional mariners live on the margins of society, with much of their life spent beyond the reach of land. |
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Along its northern margins, the councils of South Ayrshire, East Ayrshire, South Lanarkshire and East Lothian extend into the region. |
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Few G votes are wasted, and G will win a large number of seats by small margins. |
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These include considerations for safety margins during landing and takeoff. |
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Shallow seas flanked the margins of several continents created during the breakup of the supercontinent Pannotia. |
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The gills are carried right behind the head, bordering the posterior margins of a series of openings from the pharynx to the exterior. |
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By the 1930s Lloyd George was on the margins of British politics, although still intermittently in the public eye and publishing his War Memoirs. |
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Bergschrunds resemble crevasses but are singular features at a glacier's margins. |
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It was coined by peasants to describe alluvial embankments and rims found near the margins of glaciers in the French Alps. |
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Here the river has incised into the margins of the Old Red Sandstone plateau to form a gorge with substantial river cliffs. |
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In the November election, both measures failed by wide margins in the citywide vote. |
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In other deserts, they occur around the margins of the sand seas, particularly near topographic barriers. |
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Active continental margins have narrow, relatively steep shelves, due to frequent earthquakes that move sediment to the deep sea. |
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In addition, the vast bodies of glacial ice affected Earth well beyond the glacier margins. |
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Winds near the glacial margins were strong and persistent because of the abundance of dense, cold air coming off the glacier fields. |
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They breed on every continent, including the margins of Antarctica, and are found in the high Arctic, as well. |
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Vattenfall states that they bid unaggressively against strong competition without sacrificing margins. |
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It may also trigger intraplate earthquakes near the ice margins of Greenland and Antarctica. |
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Examples of sag basins are the regions along passive continental margins, but sag basins can also be found in the interior of continents. |
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The leaves of most species have lobed or serrated margins and are somewhat variable in shape. |
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When the western margins of Panthalassa were reached intense western boundary currents would form the Eastern Laurasia Current. |
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The driver for seafloor spreading in plates with active margins is the weight of the cool, dense, subducting slabs that pull them along. |
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Active margins are found on the edge of a continent where subduction occurs. |
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Most of the eastern Indian Ocean and nearly all of the Pacific Ocean margin are examples of active margins. |
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Active subsidence, sedimentation, growth faulting, pore fluid formation and migration are all active processes on passive margins. |
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Although there are many kinds of passive margins, the morphologies of most passive margins are remarkably similar. |
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The main features of passive margins lie underneath the external characters. |
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Beneath passive margins the transition between the continental and oceanic crust is a broad transition known as transitional crust. |
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The lithosphere beneath passive margins is known as transitional lithosphere. |
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Volcanic passive margins they also are marked by numerous dykes and igneous intrusions within the subsided continental crust. |
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Heat flow at passive margins changes significantly over its lifespan, high at the beginning and decreasing with age. |
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This is the typical way that passive margins form, as separated continental tracts move perpendicular to the coastline. |
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They also differ from rifted passive margins in structural style and thermal evolution during continental breakup. |
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The transitional crust of volcanic margins is composed of basaltic igneous rocks, including lava flows, sills, dykes, and gabbro. |
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Passive margins of this type show a simple progression through the transitional crust, from normal continental to normal oceanic crusts. |
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A fourth way to classify passive margins is according to the nature of sedimentation of the mature passive margin. |
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Productive fields are found in passive margins around the globe, including the Gulf of Mexico, western Scandinavia, and Western Australia. |
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International discussions about who controls the resources of passive margins are the focus of Law of the Sea negotiations. |
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