He is very cautious around Richard Parker, but he quickly asserts himself as the alpha male and marks his territory on the boat. |
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This year marks the centenary of the building's construction. |
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The building project marks a new phase in the town's development. |
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Striking richness of vegetation which follows in the windings of the Rhine, marks its banks, islands, and aits. |
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Richard II had a coat, valued at thirty thousand marks, which was covered with balas rubies. |
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Those marks have less to do with adumbrating a contour than with digging their way into your unconscious. |
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Lithic technology marks some of the oldest and continuously used technologies. |
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The windwheel of Hero of Alexandria marks one of the first recorded instances of wind powering a machine in history. |
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In England, Cotton's studies of the manuscripts in his collection marks the beginnings of work on Old English language. |
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The present continental slope in the Norwegian Sea marks the border between Norway and Greenland as it stood approximately 250 million years ago. |
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A geological deposit in East Anglia marks the old preglacial northward course of the Rhine. |
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From here, it moves to the intertidal region between the high and low water marks, and then out as far as the edge of the continental shelf. |
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A lightship marks the entrance to the Lynn Channel, the one safe channel from the North Sea to the south coast of the Wash. |
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Another monument in the Parc Richelieu, erected on 23 April 1994, marks the approximate site of Emma, Lady Hamilton's last resting place. |
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The obelisks are leading marks which, when aligned, indicate the safe channel over the bar. |
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Five million marks annually was allocated to run the navy, with a total budget of 408 million marks for shipbuilding. |
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By the outbreak of World War I, one billion marks had been added to Germany's national debt because of naval expenditures. |
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In 1911 experiments took place with Albatros seaplanes and in 1912 Tirpitz authorized 200,000 marks for seaplane trials. |
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At one time the memory consisted of a user making grease pencil marks on the radar screen and then calculating the speed using a slide rule. |
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On the initiative of Anders Celsius a number of marks were made in rock on different locations along the Swedish coast. |
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Sole markings, such as tool marks and flute casts, are groves dug into a sedimentary layer that are preserved. |
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Their undersides have a lengthwise pattern of blotches, lines, or arrowhead marks. |
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As a naturally growing forest tree, it marks the important border between the European deciduous forest zone and the northern pine forest zone. |
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When the leaves are shed they leave horseshoe shaped marks called leaf scars on the stem. |
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In the south, Iran marks its furthest extent, while the northern limit is the Ukraine. |
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During the Hellenistic period, mythology took on the prestige of elite knowledge that marks its possessors as belonging to a certain class. |
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A trench marks the position at which the flexed, subducting slab begins to descend beneath another lithospheric slab. |
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The inner trench wall marks the edge of the overriding plate and the outermost forearc. |
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The Grande Coupure marks a break between endemic European faunas before the break and mixed faunas with a strong Asian component afterwards. |
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North of that, the coast forms Weston Bay and Sand Bay whose northern tip, Sand Point, marks the lower limit of the Severn Estuary. |
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The marks attained in both sets of exams are converted into UCAS points, which must meet the offer made by the student's chosen university. |
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Cannibalism amongst some species of dinosaurs was confirmed by tooth marks found in Madagascar in 2003, involving the theropod Majungasaurus. |
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Although not apparent in the earlier depictions, the Tapestry today has stitch marks indicating the fallen figure once had an arrow in its eye. |
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In 1293, lying on her death bed, the countess sold the island to Edward I for 6,000 marks. |
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The video recording of the show marks the earliest known footage of Hendrix performing. |
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This model was made entirely of aluminium, previous marks being made of timber. |
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There is a unique similarity between petroglyph marks and prehistoric potteries as if all these works are done by a sole artist. |
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The fall of the Roman Empire in AD 476 traditionally marks the start of the Middle Ages. |
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Greeks, Armenians, Poles, Ukrainians, although not numerous, were present since as early as the 17th century, and had left cultural marks. |
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An inconspicuous rock mound marks the reburial site where close to 80 boxes of various sizes are buried. |
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Dated to between AD 660 and 690, it marks the end of the native Alemannic tradition of runic literacy. |
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It marks midsummer and the beginning of summer vacation, and is often celebrated by lighting bonfires the evening before. |
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This perhaps marks the point of terminal decline for the Western Roman Empire. |
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They see unity as one of the four marks that the Creed attributes to the genuine Church, and the essence of a mark is to be visible. |
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The Annuario Pontificio marks titular sees of the former class with the abbreviation Metr. |
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Last autumn a gentleman who is well acquainted with plate marks saw this plate, and informed the owner that it was spurious. |
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As such, the Code marks the transition from the Roman law to Germanic law and is one of the best surviving examples of leges barbarorum. |
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These they distinguish by so many several marks, and throw them at random and without order upon a white garment. |
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By the early '20s the project was again close to collapse as German hyperinflation drove costs of production to over 5 billion marks. |
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Unfortunately, the floor was already so pitted that I could hardly tell the punch marks from the normal pockings of age. |
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The Volga marks the approximate northern limit of moderately dense settlement. |
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Applying olive oil to the skin does not help prevent or reduce stretch marks. |
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A clearing among the dune scrub marks the site on the Fish River Sun Resort property. |
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It marks the north edge of the Drake Passage, the strait between South America and Antarctica. |
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Writing in Beyond Capricorn in 2007, Peter Trickett suggests the date McIntyre saw may be random pick marks in the stonework. |
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The border between the low country and the up country is defined by the Atlantic Seaboard fall line, which marks the limit of navigable rivers. |
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They usually represent cup and ring marks, labyrinths, deer, Bronze Age weapons, and riding and hunting scenes. |
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Millenarian rock carvings, Laxe dos carballos at Campo Lameiro, depicting a deer hit by several spears and cup and ring marks. |
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Geographically this range marks the northern part of the border between the continents of Europe and Asia. |
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Guild marks were often stamped on the rings to show their origin and craftsmanship. |
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Other tools and means of navigation were the detailed charts and sailing directions, the stars, and the pilot's marks on the familiar shores. |
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Ear tags with numbers are attached, or ear marks are applied, for ease of later identification of sheep. |
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Chinese wares were usually thinner than those of the Japanese and did not have stilt marks. |
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From about 1640 Delft potters began using personal monograms and distinctive factory marks. |
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This marks one important difference between classical and intuitionistic negation. |
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It is the practice to alternate the type of quotation marks used where there is a quotation within a quotation. |
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However, 1150 marks the inceptive period of profuse Low German writing wherein the language is patently different from Old Saxon. |
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A role that one of these languages marks by case will often be marked in English using a preposition. |
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Paucal number has also been documented in some Cushitic languages of Ethiopia, including Baiso, which marks singular, paucal, plural. |
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Diacritic marks can be combined with IPA letters to transcribe modified phonetic values or secondary articulations. |
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A stress mark typically appears before the stressed syllable, and thus marks the syllable break as well as stress. |
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In the action denotation usage it has the inverse function of quotation marks, denoting actions where unmarked text is assumed to be dialogue. |
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In Russian, diacritical marks are sometimes written for people learning the language, whether as a first or second language. |
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However, as pronunciation of letters changed over time, the diacritic marks were reduced to representing the stressed syllable. |
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The earliest alphabetic writing had no capitalization, no spaces, no vowels and few punctuation marks. |
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The marks of interrogation and admiration were introduced many years after. |
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These two styles differ mainly in the way in which they handle quotation marks, particularly in conjunction with other punctuation marks. |
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To the lex mercatoria modern English law owes the fundamental principles in the law of partnership, negotiable instruments and trade marks. |
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Viewing the original documents the next day, Fenton spotted what looked like pencil marks beneath the signature on one of them. |
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And if the marks could not be collected because of poverty, they would be collected in the hundred for deposit in the king's treasury. |
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The rule of the Chalukyas marks an important milestone in the history of South India and a golden age in the history of Karnataka. |
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As a result, the speech no longer marks the opening of a session of parliament but the start of a new parliamentary year. |
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Though demolished now, the circular pattern of the main roads surrounding the town centre marks the original position of the walls. |
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However, in practice the result always shows visible trochoidal marks following the motion of points on the cutter's end face. |
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These revolution marks give the characteristic finish of a face milled surface. |
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In a precise face milling operation, the revolution marks will only be microscopic scratches due to imperfections in the cutting edge. |
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The museum is housed in Lombe's Mill, a historic former silk mill which marks the southern end of the Derwent Valley Mills World Heritage Site. |
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The brutal suppression of the Peasants' War marks the starting point of the modern Flemish movement. |
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Neolithic cup and ring marks are found on the Langdale Boulders at Copt Howe. |
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A large tumulus marks the summit, alongside an Ordnance Survey triangulation column. |
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It marks the northern end of the main ridge of the Helvellyn range and is often walked as part of the ridge walk. |
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The ability to leave marks on paper and other objects gave graphite its name, given in 1789 by German mineralogist Abraham Gottlob Werner. |
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Pencils create marks by physical abrasion, leaving behind a trail of solid core material that adheres to a sheet of paper or other surface. |
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Most pencil cores are made of graphite mixed with a clay binder which leaves grey or black marks that can be easily erased. |
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Martineau wrote at least three books during her illness, and a historical plaque marks this house. |
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For the rest of the stage the path switches between England and Scotland, along a fence which marks the border itself. |
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All that last minute revision really paid off in the exam! I got top marks! |
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The main glacial front was at Escrick where the Escrick moraine marks its furthest extension. |
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Hawthornthwaite Fell marks the extreme western limit of the West Riding of the Historic County of York. |
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They usually have black marks on the flanks or belly and show a strong white wingbar in flight. |
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As the dog departed, he left scorch marks on the north door that remain to this day. |
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A simple mound and unwrought headstone by the roadside marks the site of a more modern grave. |
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Her parents claimed that the scratchlike marks on her skin were caused by poltergeist attacks. |
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The former problem student surpassed his instructor's expectations and scored top marks on his examination. |
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I wore these spots of shine and silver like tilaks, the marks of colour that we Hindus wear on our foreheads as symbols of the divine. |
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I got up from my web seat after an hour to uncrease the marks in my back and buttocks. |
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He would start with a stenciled acrylic underpainting and finish by making marks with the chalk and charcoal shells. |
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There are marks where the chair has rubbed against the wall. |
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What marks the consecutive is its special morphology and syntax indicating the temporal succession of actions. |
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Grill the dangos until marks appear and then lightly brush the thick sauce over it. |
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A glance at this typography will reveal great difficulties, which diacritical marks necessarily throw in the way of both printer and writer. |
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This outcome certainly marks compound 2a as possessing a strong disilanide character. |
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He stung his arms, and while he was rubbing them with a dockleaf the witness saw some tattoo marks on his left arm. |
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You pay eight marks and they plant a dunam of land for you with olives, oranges, almonds or citrons. |
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The upstart genre of the novel also marks a decisive embourgeoisement and feminization of culture. |
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The excessive use of exclamation marks devalues their effect, but is typical of concise genres such as cartoons, not reference works! |
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A true Tartarean dignity sat upon her brow, and not factitiously or with marks of constraint, for it had grown in her with years. |
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The second derivative of the forestream signal marks exactly the beginning of the upstroke of the pulse wave. |
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This therefore marks our return full circle to the optical proofs in the Diotprique with which our detective work began. |
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This episode marks the beginning of the end of the gaytastic relationship between Mr. Slave and Mr. Garrison. |
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And as Dave geckoed his way along the walls, he began seeing more and more skid marks left behind by Damien's Sewer Cruiser. |
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If all of the marks line up perfectly, then you're golden, and you can continue on with finishing up the installation. |
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The size of hefts will depend on the material requiring attention, and the annual volume is to cost about 15 marks. |
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It also marks the rise of the period of widespread adoption in Europe of colonialism and mercantilism. |
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For example, in the phrase I gave it to him, the preposition to marks the recipient, or Indirect Object of the verb to give. |
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In most sentences English only marks grammatical relations through word order. |
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The State Opening of Parliament is an annual event that marks the commencement of a session of the Parliament of the United Kingdom. |
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It forms part of the border between Germany and Denmark and marks north border of Angeln. |
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It is widely accepted by medieval historians that this marks the point at which Lothian came under Scottish control. |
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It marks the point where Great Britain most closely approaches continental Europe. |
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St Augustine's Cross, a Celtic cross erected in 1884, marks the spot in Ebbsfleet, Thanet, East Kent, where Augustine is said to have landed. |
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The day after the battle, Harold's body was identified, either by his armour or marks on his body. |
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Harold's body was identified the day after the battle, either through his armour or marks on his body. |
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While most of the marks are simple and of a universal nature, a few were later used as signs in the Indus script. |
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John was also to accept Philip as his suzerain overlord and pay Philip 20,000 marks. |
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Renaissance art marks a cultural rebirth at the close of the Middle Ages and rise of the Modern world. |
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This event is known as the Gregorian mission and is the date the Church of England generally marks as the beginning of its formal history. |
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Pilcrow marks are used to indicate the beginnings of paragraphs except after the book of Acts. |
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The exact position was not publicly disclosed, but a plaque marks the approximate location. |
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The State Opening of Parliament is an event which formally marks the beginning of a session of the Parliament of the United Kingdom. |
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That he pays not the least regard to the requirements of convention marks him out as either a superior soul or a rightdown jobbernowl. |
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Harding had seemed physically discomfited earlier as she awaited her marks in the kiss and cry corner. |
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The boundaries are marked by black bollards bearing the City's emblem, and by dragon boundary marks at major entrances, such as Holborn. |
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A more substantial monument marks the boundary at Temple Bar on Fleet Street. |
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Folkestone also marks the eastern end of the A259 South Coast Trunk Road with access to the Romney Marsh, Hastings, Eastbourne and beyond. |
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The Royal Windermere Yacht Club maintains a set of turning marks on the lake, which are also used by the Windermere Cruising Association. |
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Reference to Lagrange in calculus terms marks out the application of what are now called formal power series. |
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The nibble marks of the stone adze were still visible, though crusted over with scale lichens in most places. |
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The machine has a roller before and after the cutting cylinder which smoothes the freshly cut lawn and minimizes wheel marks. |
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This is the kind that marks the centre of the road, with one pair of cat's eyes showing in each direction. |
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Thus the end of the Viking Age for the Scandinavians also marks the start of their relatively brief Middle Ages. |
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Iron was stronger and more plentiful than bronze, and its introduction marks the beginning of the Iron Age. |
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This event of 476, usually marks the end of Classical antiquity and beginning of the Middle Ages. |
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Devised by Chris Kilkenny it marks the journey between two of the last resting places of the coffin. |
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The first of these marks the start of winter in Northern Europe, while the second marks Midwinter, and the last marks the beginning of summer. |
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In some cases this may cause the pupil to lose all marks for that particular paper, and occasionally for the entire course. |
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Hardy, disliked the system, feeling that people were too interested in accumulating marks in exams and not interested in the subject itself. |
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It is a common misconception that Hadrian's Wall marks the boundary between England and Scotland. |
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Galahad's arrival marks the start of the Grail quest as well as the end of the Arthurian era. |
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She gave Coventry a number of works in precious metal by the famous goldsmith Mannig and bequeathed a necklace valued at 100 marks of silver. |
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He had been made a royal counsellor, drawing a substantial annual salary of a hundred marks. |
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But subsequent technology has made it possible to date the paintings by sampling the pigment itself and the torch marks on the walls. |
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According to art historian Paul Ganz, the portrait of Amerbach marks an advance in his style, notably in the use of unbroken colours. |
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Renaissance art marks the transition of Europe from the medieval period to the Early Modern age. |
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Moore often refined the final full plaster shape and added surface marks before casting. |
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This marks the beginnings of English sonnet with 3 quatrains and a closing couplet. |
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Lamb argues that Paine's analysis of property rights marks a distinct contribution to political theory. |
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In this character of Americans, a love of freedom is the predominating feature which marks and distinguishes the whole. |
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In these three oratorios Handel laid the foundation for the traditional use of the chorus which marks his later oratorios. |
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Shelton Street, running parallel to the north of Long Acre, marks the London borough boundary between Camden and Westminster. |
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For example, Robert Herrick was not a courtier, but his style marks him as a Cavalier poet. |
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The importance of the popping crease to the batsman is that it marks the limit of his safe territory. |
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Referees are appointed based on previous matches, marks, performances, and fitness levels. |
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Pilico and Aztec's presence in Spanish ritual, through metagraphy, novelistic speech, and heteroglossia, marks their presence in a dialogue. |
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A blue plaque at Oldham's Tommyfield Market marks the 1860s origin of the fish and chip shop and fast food industries. |
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This event is known as the Caledonian Orogeny, and the Highland Boundary Fault marks this stitching together of continents. |
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But there are traces, hoof marks of mombies are encrusted in the dried mud. |
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Fleming's accidental discovery and isolation of penicillin in September 1928 marks the start of modern antibiotics. |
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King Henry eventually bought off Richard with 6,000 marks and peace was restored. |
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The remains of 350 men, women and children were buried in the dunes behind the beach and a small cairn and monument marks the site. |
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Each year, the organisation marks World Health Day and other observances focusing on a specific health promotion topic. |
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Wassily Kandinsky, himself a musician, was inspired by the possibility of marks and associative color resounding in the soul. |
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In Scandinavia, cairns have been used for centuries as trail and sea marks, among other purposes. |
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Coastal cairns called sea marks are also common in the northern latitudes, and are placed along shores and on islands and islets. |
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From the Bronze Age there are examples of carvings, including the first representations of objects, and cup and ring marks. |
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If a Southerner is slain or an Englishman, he shall pay four marks to the plaintiff and two marks to the king. |
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David's time as Prince of the Cumbrians and Earl marks the beginning of his life as a great territorial lord. |
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Saint Andrew's Day marks the beginning of the traditional Advent devotion of the Saint Andrew Christmas Novena. |
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In October 1357, the king was ransomed for 100,000 marks to be paid in installments over ten years. |
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The ugly part is the quote marks on two adjacent lines that mean a newline character. |
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While religion broadly marks the delineation of these divisions, the contentions were primarily political and related to access to power. |
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Its written form uses the Polish alphabet, which is the Latin alphabet with the addition of a few diacritic marks. |
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In order to identify the visible church, Reformed theologians have spoken of certain marks of the Church. |
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This marks their sixth appearance at the festival and their first headline performance on the main stage. |
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The Georgian Orthodox Church marks two feast days in honor of Saint Andrew, on 12 May and 13 December. |
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Asking if her son had any distinguishing marks, he stripped off his clothes to reveal the same marks and mother and son were thus reunited. |
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However, his offer of 15,000 marks was rejected due to wanting the castles within the lands, which Richard was not willing to give. |
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This sector, with two blind tee shots on the tenth and 11th, marks a sharp rise in difficulty from the opening holes. |
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To these scholars, it therefore also marks the beginning of a process by which imperial constitutions became the primary source of Roman law. |
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Six named men together with the crews of four ships of Bristol were rewarded with a payment of 220 marks. |
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The Second Severn Crossing marks the lower limit of the River Severn and the start of the Severn Estuary. |
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His frank acceptance of the situation marks him as either an innocent man, or else as a man of considerable self-restraint and firmness. |
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Telltale marks around the pan of yeast gave him a clew to the trouble. |
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The work contains some of the earliest modern ideas of atoms, molecules, and chemical reaction, and marks the beginning of the history of modern chemistry. |
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Even graphite pencil marks on aluminium parts may facilitate corrosion. |
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A plaque marks the approximate spot believed to be the site of the grave. |
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Trademark Owners will nevertheless try to dictate how their marks are to be represented, but dictionary publishers with spine can resist such pressure. |
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The Sheffield Halfpenny Bridge is not to be confused with the Halfpenny Bridge near Lechlade in Gloucestershire, which marks the start of the navigable River Thames. |
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A number of historic sites and other marks commemorate Bell in North America and Europe, including the first telephone companies in the United States and Canada. |
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It bears the evident marks of having originally been, what the honest and downright Doctor Douglass assures us it was, a scheme of fraudulent debtors to cheat their creditors. |
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We stood no chance against the sheer weight of such dullardry. Our leather pants, tattoos, track marks and distorted guitars were never going to make it. |
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It often marks a noun as being the possessor of another noun. |
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The accession of Basil I to the throne in 867 marks the beginning of the Macedonian dynasty, which would rule for the next two and a half centuries. |
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In 2011, the tomb was cleaned of the many lipstick marks left there by admirers and a glass barrier was installed to prevent further marks or damage. |
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Alexios offered to reunite the Byzantine church with Rome, pay the crusaders 200,000 silver marks, join the crusade and provide all the supplies they needed to get to Egypt. |
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The ridge marks the boundary between the Eurasian and North American Plates, and Iceland was created by rifting and accretion through volcanism along the ridge. |
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Spiders had woven their vague trapezes between the friable heads of dead peonies in enormous glass jars streaked with tide marks where the water had evaporated long ago. |
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This river thus marks the easternmost extent of Alexander's conquests. |
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My teacher is such a fusspot, he marks us down for handwriting! |
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Riding a horse with bruised or broken skin can cause a gall, which frequently results in the white saddle marks seen on the withers and backs of some horses. |
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The compilation of Edrisi marks an era in the history of science. |
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Jin Ping Mei, published in 1610, although incorporating earlier material, marks the trend toward independent composition and concern with psychology. |
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It marks another shift in power between the three central EU institutions. |
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The metal strip within the building of the Eurode Business Centre marks the border between the Netherlands and Germany, in Kerkrade and Herzogenrath. |
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The standardized orthography marks the long vowels with an acute accent. |
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The text marks the beginning of Old Swedish as a distinct dialect. |
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The class of determiners is used to specify the noun they precede in terms of definiteness, where the marks a definite noun and a or an an indefinite one. |
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After kicking the baboon so hard, the zebra lost his balance and tripped over a fire, and the fire sticks left scorch marks all over his white coat. |
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Near Norththorpe, north of Hornsea crop marks indicate a site interpreted as a Neolithic henge monument, thought to have been later reused as a Bronze Age ringwork. |
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English writing also includes a system of punctuation that is similar to the system of punctuation marks used in most alphabetic languages around the world. |
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The bone incisions do not look like ordinary butchery marks. |
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The interpretations of butcher marks and the geologic association of bones at the Bluefish Cave and Old Crow Flats sites have been called into question. |
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There were no visible marks of strangulation or violence on the body. |
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More unusual marks occur when a child is pushed against a patterned object, such as the imprint of a carpet or a carpet burn where the child's body skids along the carpet. |
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The Bell Beaker period marks a period of cultural contact in Atlantic and Western Europe on a scale not seen previously, nor seen again in succeeding periods. |
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The application will correctly translate accent marks, allowing true translations in French, German, and other languages that feature multiple accents. |
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In the treaty Norway recognised Scottish sovereignty over the disputed territories in return for a lump sum of 4,000 marks and an annuity of 100 marks. |
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Diacritical marks, which include accent marks, tildes, umlauts and other notations, help to distinguish one letter from another and aid in pronunciation. |
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I lost a few marks in the test for spelling words incorrectly. |
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The skull within the lead box not only bore the marks of multiple sword blows, but the features bore a remarkable resemblance to portraits made of the man in life. |
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To placate Philip, Richard had given him 10,000 marks and agreed that if he had two sons, the youngest would take Normandy, Aquitaine, or Anjou and rule it under Philip. |
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Musket shot marks that may come from Cromwell's troops during the Wars of the Three Kingdoms are clearly visible on the tower and apse of the church. |
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The ultimate determination of grade boundaries depends upon the quantity of raw marks that would demonstrate achievement of criteria laid out in course specifications. |
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It left him with five long claw marks across his left cheek. |
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In the Anglican tradition, bishops must be consecrated according to the strictures of apostolic succession, which Anglicans consider one of the marks of Catholicity. |
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The Great Dismal Swamp National Wildlife Refuge extends into North Carolina, as does the Back Bay National Wildlife Refuge, which marks the beginning of the Outer Banks. |
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In the sphere of economics, World War II marks a turning point. |
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No single play marks a change from the traditional to the freer style. |
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This marks the top of the series of landslips upon which Ventnor is built. |
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The same marks could be used in the margin to mark off quotations. |
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The 9th millennium BC marks the beginning of the Neolithic period. |
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The three marks of existence may reflect Upanishadic or other influences. |
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The only curiously remaining reminder of this site's maritime past is a stone cross which stands in the middle of the Roodee which exhibits the marks of water ripples. |
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He then continued westwards to threaten Haverfordwest where the burgesses offered hostages for their submission to his rule or the payment of a fine of 1,000 marks. |
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Bulgaria marks the beginning of Second Balkan War when it attacked them. |
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In 2002, FLO launched a new International Fairtrade Certification Mark, effectively replacing most previous Max Havelaar and TransFair certification marks. |
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It is his lesbophilia that sets Proust's narrator apart from the author, that marks the novel as a novel rather than a perverse exercise in selective autobiography. |
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The Alte Weser lighthouse marks the northernmost point of the Weser. |
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The University was one of only two universities in the UK and the only university in Wales to achieve top marks in a Stonewall checklist of priorities for LGB students. |
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Added to the panoply of other legislation designed to protect the natural and cultural heritage of the United States, this law also marks a shift in national awareness. |
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Strings are enclosed in double quotation marks, numbers are not enclosed in anything, and dates and Boolean values are enclosed between octothorpe characters. |
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Scotch Corner, in North Yorkshire, marks the point where before the M6 was built the traffic for Glasgow and the west of Scotland diverged from that for Edinburgh. |
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Its junction with the River Caldew in north Carlisle marks the point where Hadrian's Wall crosses the Eden, only five miles before both reach their end at the tidal flats. |
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Northwest of the cathedral city of St David's and jutting into the Irish Sea, St Davids Head marks the southern extremity of the large Cardigan Bay. |
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Quotation marks are particularly variable across European languages. |
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When Laurence woke whip marks had miraculously appeared on his body. |
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The orientation behaviour of the bird inside the cage is studied quantitatively using the distribution of marks that the bird leaves on the walls of the cage. |
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A stone immediately to the left of the altar marks the sealed Roper family vault beneath the Nicholas Chapel, itself to the right of the church's sanctuary or main altar. |
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This period marks the first known spread of Buddhism beyond India. |
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Competition among Greek cities and their ruling oligarchies was mainly for marks of preeminence, especially for titles bestowed by the Roman emperor. |
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Exmouth marks the western end of the Jurassic Coast World Heritage Site. |
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It marks the course of a rock avalanche which fell from Grey Crag on the summit rim of High Stile, and was channeled along the foot of the glacier some 11,000 years ago. |
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His deposition by Odoacer traditionally marks the end of the Roman Empire in the West, the fall of Ancient Rome, and the beginning of the Middle Ages in Western Europe. |
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The end of Doone Close marks the approximate site of Gomer House. |
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Even though Sami land is far away from the capital, the Norwegian Museum of Cultural History marks the Sami National Day with a series of activities and entertainment. |
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A blue plaque at Oldham's Tommyfield Market marks the first chips fried in England in 1860, and the origin of the fish and chip shop and fast food industries. |
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Many novices have mistaken humid water marks on paper for white spore prints, or discolored paper from oozing liquids on lamella edges for colored spored prints. |
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There's no such thing as a 100 percent-pure crystal, though, and diamond's impurities are in fact Marilyn Monroe beauty marks that make it attractive for physics. |
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The font wasn't able to render all the diacritical marks properly. |
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Moreover, it is to be remembered that a poor speller is a poor pronouncer. The ear does not mark the sound any more exactly than the eye marks the letters. |
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The teacher wanted to rub out the chalk marks on the blackboard. |
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His type case is estimated to have contained around 290 separate letter boxes, most of which were required for special characters, ligatures, punctuation marks, and so forth. |
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Initially it was difficult to distinguish the two coins, as they had the same design, dimensions and purity, and there were no marks of value to distinguish the denominations. |
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A brief marine incursion marks the early Oligocene in Europe. |
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The head is darker than the rest of the body, and without marks. |
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Latin lacks the rich poetic vocabulary that marks the Greek poetry. |
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Generally, other diacritical marks only occur in loanwords, though the acute accent can also be used for emphasis or to differentiate between two forms. |
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In his view, the introduction of money marks the culmination of this process, making possible the unlimited accumulation of property without causing waste through spoilage. |
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Though spelling differences occasionally differentiate written words, in most cases the minimal pairs are written alike, since written Norwegian has no explicit accent marks. |
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While the system for marking the imperfective aspect is complex and highly developed, it is unclear if Torau marks the perfective and neutral viewpoints. |
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This shortened the journey for commercial ships, but specifically united the two areas principally of concern to the German navy, at a cost of 150 million marks. |
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Costs rose to 21 million marks each, as had size to 11,500 tons. |
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After two espionage films, the plot marks a return to the murder thriller genre, and is based upon the novel Goodbye Piccadilly, Farewell Leicester Square. |
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It operates the registries of trade marks, patents and designs. |
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This finally marks the start of the public library as we know it. |
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A small cairn on the highest craggy outcrop marks the highest point. |
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A hit on the target counts as one mark, while hits in the doubles ring of the target count as two marks in one throw, and on the triples ring as three. |
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Finally in 1911, trials with aircraft began and in 1912 Tirpitz agreed to purchase the first airship for naval reconnaissance at a cost of 850,000 marks. |
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British style now prefers to punctuate according to the sense, in which punctuation marks only appear inside quotation marks if they were there in the original. |
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The 19th century marks the birth of the first beach resorts. |
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