A climograph combines a line graph of mean monthly temperature with a bar graph of total monthly precipitation. |
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And if so, does that mean that you then have to take out the armaments in Damascus and are you prepared then to bomb Damascus? |
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So sayeth Mike Tyson, the menacing and troubled warrior from the mean streets of Bedford Stuyvesant, Brooklyn. |
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If the noble experiment of American democracy is to mean anything, it is fidelity to the principle of freedom. |
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And if the effect of acceleration was stronger in some patches than others, that would mean less or more clumping up of galaxies. |
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If this were accurate, it would mean that the Wilson stopped Brown over a minor offense, not a felony. |
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I mean my background weighed heavily, because I was brought up in this orthodox way. |
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That does not mean it is practical, advisable, tenable, moral or that it should be perpetual. |
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Strong currents and winds, however, mean any debris could be drifting up to 31 miles a day eastward, away from the impact zone. |
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The fact that some prescriptive rules are valuable does not mean that every grammatical injunction should be obeyed. |
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So, does that mean because the Libyan rebels lost, that the Bahraini people will cease their pursuit of parliamentary democracy? |
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You gotta have acne scars and a mean dad in your past, not a portfolio and European runway memories. |
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In Dublin, land of a thousand Joyce walking tours, bloomsday has come to mean payday. |
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Of course it does mean the governor is having to backtrack on yet another pledge he made. |
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However, just because a vaccine is replication-defective does not mean that you won't have an adverse event. |
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Which will, in turn, mean they retire with less wealth, and bequeath less wealth to their children. |
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That miscalculation could mean serious trouble in terms of actuarial soundness. |
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What they actually mean by that is, you know, he actually knows some people that are poor. |
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They make a mean iced Americano and both healthy eaters and indulgers will be sated. |
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I mean it's profiling, but then I've got kicked out of three bars for being an American Indian. |
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Difficulties in calculating the potential energy of the tsunami mean that this scale is rarely used. |
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The term geoid is used above to mean mean sea level, and makes a good frame of reference. |
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The easiest way this may be calculated is by selecting a location and calculating the mean sea level at that point and use it as a datum. |
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Sorry not sorry, but a PhD doesn't mean that someone is truly qualified to teach. |
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Such commercial extinction does not mean that the species is extinct, merely that it can no longer sustain a fishery. |
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The PEM modules are placed in a row from the dune to the mean low waterline. |
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White Ladies did not mean snowdrops, by their pretty old English name, ghosts in white cere-clothes, or belles in white tarlatan. |
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Does this mean Middlesbrough get the short end of the stick, with what will surely be the most ramshackle show of the tour? |
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Some household slaves were baptised in the hope this would mean their freedom in England. |
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Therefore, a bear may need to be weighed in both spring and fall to get an idea of its mean annual weight. |
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However, a red colour does not necessarily mean the rock formed in a continental environment or arid climate. |
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The studies found that precipitation and mean diurnal temperature range were the most influential variables. |
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More precisely, the geoid is the surface of gravitational equipotential at mean sea level. |
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Nor did she mean to voice her wishes before a shopful of people who might consider them ambiguous. |
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It is important to note who receives the omens and what these omens mean to the characters and to the epic as a whole. |
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Six weeks later, France, in the mean time attacked by Italy as well, surrendered to Germany, which then tried unsuccessfully to conquer Britain. |
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The third captures the mean squared wealth and the lower semimean squared wealth. |
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The new propeller which was installed in 1982 was a screwback type with a diameter of 5,500 mm. and a mean pitch of 4,290 mm. |
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This could be due to an inhibition in the underlying mechanism, or it could just mean that some shorter polarity intervals have been missed. |
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Longstanding maritime traditions and extensive coastlines mean that seafood also plays a major role in Scandi cuisine, and in my baking. |
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There is thus a relatively simple relationship between the supercontinent cycle and the mean age of the seafloor. |
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If the latter, that would mean that the Portuguese had at least some hint that a land existed to the west. |
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Because pirates were outlaw sailors, that does not mean they did not have their own form of government aboard their ships. |
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In 1861, Lincoln expressed the fear that premature attempts at emancipation would mean the loss of the border states. |
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The Middle Stone Age would not change its name, but it would not mean Mesolithic. |
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Age, determined by scalimetry, was used as variable of adjustment for mean size comparisons. |
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It does not mean that the vehicle is roadworthy for the life of the certificate. |
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Alternatively it may mean that a perfunctory search is enough to ensure that a purchase is acceptable, so less search is carried out. |
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In the 16th century, people began using pepper to also mean the unrelated New World chili pepper. |
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Mountain ranges average 2,305 meters and flat areas lie at around 1,725 meters above mean sea level. |
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I do not mean osseous sarcoma, but the ordinary sarcomatic condition found in an abnormal growth of the tissues. |
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This may mean that the shift began in Italy, or that it spread southwards as well as northwards. |
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The term glossopoeia is also used to mean language construction, particularly construction of artistic languages. |
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Partial voicing can mean light but continuous voicing, discontinuous voicing, or discontinuities in the degree of voicing. |
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He cannot marry her because he is dead but her refusal would mean his damnation. |
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On average, July is the driest month, but summer thunderstorms can occasionally deposit more than the month's mean rainfall in one day. |
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A few words are unique only to this area, such as the older word cabinet to mean milkshake. |
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This sparked controversy as it would mean that it would not be possible to use Woodhead 3, the newer tunnel for railway traffic in future. |
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The improvements that have taken place mean that the Trent can be used for public water consumption. |
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Zwingli interpreted this to mean that preaching should be permitted, but the Five States suppressed any attempts to reform. |
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The Constitutional Act of 1791 was promulgated, and interpreted to mean that the Church was the established Church in the Canadas. |
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This would mean that most of the information about the character centers around one main quality or viewpoint. |
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Murray maintains that Aristotle did not mean that complicated plot should hold the highest place in a tragedy play. |
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Rubric can also mean the red ink or paint used to make rubrics, or the pigment used to make it. |
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However, what the Articles truly mean has been a matter of debate in the Church since before they were issued. |
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Ad hoc can also mean makeshift solutions, shifting contexts to create new meanings, inadequate planning, or improvised events. |
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In a legal context, this is understood to mean that courts should generally abide by precedent and not disturb settled matters. |
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Where two clients are of the same age, experience and suffer the same injury, it does not necessarily mean that they will be affected the same. |
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A search can mean everything from a frisking by a police officer or to a demand for a blood test to a search of an individual's home or car. |
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And by alcoholic I mean a man whose chemistry craves alcohol and drives him resistlessly to it. |
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The norms on limiting freedom of expression mean that public debate may not be completely suppressed even in times of emergency. |
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These two low cols mean that Red Screes is seen as an independent fell when viewed from the south of the Lake District. |
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Yet, Hund contends that the fact that rules might sometimes be arrived at in the more ad hoc way, does not mean that this defines the system. |
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Just because a path is not shown on that map does not mean that it is not a public path, as the rights may not have been recorded. |
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In the Thirteen Colonies, there were instances of Coke's statement being interpreted to mean that the common law was superior to statute. |
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This does not mean that it is claimed that they are true in some absolute sense. |
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Delaware is on a level plain, with the lowest mean elevation of any state in the nation. |
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However, adds Trautmann, this does not mean that Kautilya was advocating a capitalistic free market economy. |
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But that does not mean that I swear by every verse that is printed in the book described as Manusmriti. |
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However this does not necessarily mean that Parliament is not legally sovereign. |
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But that does not mean that it is beyond the power of Parliament to do such things. |
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His longest discussion of his theory of justice occurs in Nicomachean Ethics and begins by asking what sort of mean a just act is. |
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He got bad, he got ratty, he would take it out on people around him. He was mean when it turned against him. |
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In the 17th century, the word could also mean a scheme or plot, a meaning now expressed by the derived machination. |
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Securities with an active secondary market mean that there are many buyers and sellers at a given point in time. |
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Within a national military force, the word army may also mean a field army. |
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Over time, however, the term has come to mean one opposed to industrialisation, automation, computerisation or new technologies in general. |
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Would that mean she was a vampire? Weren't vampires reflectionless? Mirrors appeared blank when confronted with a vampire. |
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At present, diversions of water mean that the lakes are often largely dry land. |
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Such sanitary sewer overflow can mean streets becoming flooded with a mixture of water and sewage, causing a health risk. |
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Arkwright's patents were laid aside, and this judgement was later interpreted to mean as he was not the inventor, then Highs must have been. |
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In this situation, they are expected to take less than a minute, with the mean ideal being ten to thirty seconds, to correct a break. |
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Deflated prices mean that farmers are getting less for their products. |
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Well BtVS certainly is 90210ish now. I mean at one point during season 4 I thought I was watching a Soap Opera. |
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Stone sidewalks, little more than a ledge in width, ran along the base of the mean and monotonous adobe houses. |
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This can also mean maintaining a closed flock, and quarantining new sheep for a month. |
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Unless it is otherwise expressed or implied, the Name Canada shall be taken to mean Canada as constituted under this Act. |
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Being a beta male in a species with alphas doesn't mean you have to sit out the mating game. |
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By logical errors I mean such simple things as Equivocation, Amphiboly, and Begging the Question. |
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The analemma also records the difference between local solar time and local mean time for each day of the year. |
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The word 'Parliament' shall mean the Legislature or Parliament of the Kingdom of Canada. |
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The antivibration systems now mean that hand-held close-up photos can be taken at very slow speeds without blurring. |
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Harlem comes through as an urban hothouse mean with exotic hustle and violence, a tangible asphalt jungle with its own abrasive laws of motion. |
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The mean population center of Maine is located in Kennebec County, just east of Augusta. |
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Men are such clots, dates don't mean much to them, and if he does start counting, you can always bribe the doctor to tell him it's a prem. |
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And when your honors mean to solemnize The bargain of your faith, I do beseech you Even at that time I may be married too. |
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In addition, mean placental levels of Cd have been shown to be higher in preeclamptics versus normotensive women. |
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These factors mean that small states have strong incentives to support international cooperation. |
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Big data has the potential to revolutionise the global healthcare system, but barriers to its adoption mean progress is slow. |
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The icon of the blue ribbon on her site should not be taken to mean she opposes parental filtration programs. |
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To break upon the score of danger or expense is to be mean and narrow-spirited. |
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An inspection of Table IV shows that the catatonics have the lowest mean reversal score of all the groups. |
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You mean you can't fly after you've had a few beers? You can drive, can't cha? |
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It soon became clear that Portuguese control of Malacca did not also mean they controlled Asian trade centred there. |
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By chemophobia I mean an exaggerated fear of toxicity brought about by the widespread use of chemicals in food production and processing. |
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Depending on context, the term may be understood to mean specifically co-sibling-in-law, or co-parent-in-law. |
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For many of the satellites, it is assumed that the rotation rate is equal to the mean orbital period. |
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To the beginning computerist, the printout of memory errors won't mean much. But it does indicate a problem in one of the memory modules. |
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We mean a porch, or cloister, or the like, of one contignation, and not in storied buildings. |
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The curtain twitcher who saw the incident exclaimed in detail what had happened and it was pretty obvious that Burnett did not mean to kill him. |
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I have no great faith in political arithmetic, and I mean not to warrant the exactness of either of these computations. |
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I mean I'd banked on getting that permission, I'd as near as dammit been promised I'd get it. Can you wonder I was fed up to my back teeth? |
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The de minimis rules on import duty mean that alcohol for personal consumption is exempt from any charge. |
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Just because an element or attribute is deprecated doesn't mean that it can't be used on a webpage. |
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In the mean while, as our apartment was a corner one, and looked both east and north, I ran to the easter casement to look after Drummond. |
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As of 2008, Margaret had the most eccentric orbit of any moon in the solar system, though Nereid's mean eccentricity is greater. |
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What do you mean you didn't come home last night? Would you care to elaborate? |
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Globophobia has been used to refer to the fear of globalization, though it can also mean the fear of balloons. |
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In Roman Historiography the facts and an impression of what the facts mean are presented. |
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However, most of the time they seem to mean northern dwellers with a mobile life style. |
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It was not until about 1171 that the word Finni was employed to mean the Finns. |
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During the late Middle Ages, after the fall of the northern part of the Kingdom to Charlemagne, the term shifted to mean Northern Italy. |
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These high standards mean that aviation fuel costs much more than fuel used for road vehicles. |
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It was called a regnum in contemporary sources, though this does not necessarily mean that it was a kingdom or subkingdom. |
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This would offer an explanation for some of the free-roaming planets that have been found and it could mean that more exist across the Milky Way. |
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This place is a dump. I mean your bathrooms are from hunger. Where's the Jacuzzi? Where's the 'his and her' sinks? Where's the towel warmer? |
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Healthy lunch selections mean you would have no need for things such as fryolators that take up space and cost a lot to run. |
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However, the mean number of days with precipitation per year is one of the lowest in Europe. |
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The volume and mean cross-sectional area of nasopharynx, velopharynx and glossopharynx region showed significant difference. |
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I mean it's certainly less polemical than having some Greenpeace types confront these hunters with Zodiacs and boycotts and insults in the media. |
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Still, I see you mean well enough, and are merely suffering from the debilitating cheerfulness of youth. You will soon grow out of that. |
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That would mean that, when he was in the city, he might not be the constitutional magistrate with the most authority. |
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This term is also used in the context of potential Scottish independence to mean the UK without Scotland. |
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In complex cases, this can mean that there are closer blood relatives to the deceased monarch than the next in line according to primogeniture. |
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Bernard Jenkin, the Conservative spokesman for the regions, said the vote would mean the end of plans for a North East Assembly. |
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Everybody knows that Glasgow is hoatching with film companies shooting movies on its mean streets. |
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The American Plains bison is no longer listed as endangered, but this does not mean the species is secure. |
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This would mean that Tartessian is the earliest attested trace of Celtic by a margin of more than a century. |
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In monatomic perfect gases and, approximately, in most gases, temperature is a measure of the mean particle kinetic energy. |
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His advisers calmed him, and argued that outright denial of Constantine's claims would mean certain war. |
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In English, the word vowel is commonly used to mean both vowel sounds and the written symbols that represent them. |
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Even though they took the military oath and were among the lower ranks it did not mean they would be fighting among the masses. |
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The distance in time to the event it describes may mean that it was embellished to add a dramatic touch. |
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Now Henry refused to give Anjou to his brother because it would mean splitting his land in two. |
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Members are elected annually via a postal ballot, and current standing orders mean that at least ten seats must change hands each year. |
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A high SNR margin will mean a reduced maximum throughput, but greater reliability and stability of the connection. |
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The changes will mean a reduction in the number of the company's Lunn Poly high street travel agency shops. |
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Don's over-the-top Italian-American accent, wifebeater outfit, and attitudes towards women mean he's a character riddled with lazy stereotypes. |
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The prison estate certainly needs an overhaul, but reducing demand would mean closing prisons, not opening them. |
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That could mean facing one of the world's leading centres, Dean Whare, at Hull on Sunday. |
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Despite having pretty mean teeth, it lacks the laughing gear of the pike and thus smaller baits tend to be used. |
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November to March have the highest mean wind speeds, with June to August having the lightest winds. |
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By talking about what animals mean to him, he joins a growing community of animal welfarists. |
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The speed of peak gusts and mean wind speed follow a similar pattern throughout the year. |
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This height differs from the height above the geoid or a reference height such as that above mean sea level at a specified location. |
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It can also mean strong private property rights, contract enforcement, and overall ease of doing business as well as low barriers to free trade. |
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Therefore, in steady conditions, a mean wave set-up is established on the leeside of the structure. |
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However, this does not mean that potential oil production has surpassed oil demand. |
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This would mean that moving a larger ship would take proportionately less fuel than a smaller ship. |
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For others, it can mean that time spent indulging an unusual interest can result in a deluge of further targeted marketing that may be unwelcome. |
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As transmittance of HIV does not necessarily mean HIV infection, the latter could still occur at an even lower rate. |
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Should you go out with a boy just in order to leave the house and be seen in other places? This seemed mean and low-minded. |
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Four wash-outs from six matches mean that Lancashire are still an unknown quantity in the 40-over format. |
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For example, linguist Eric Lenneberg used second language to mean a language consciously acquired or used by its speaker after puberty. |
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Initially, Protestant became a general term to mean any adherent to the Reformation movement in Germany and was taken up by Lutherans. |
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However, it is often misused to mean any church outside the Roman and Eastern Orthodox communions. |
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Although some historians consider this to mean south Lancashire was then part of Cheshire, it is by no means certain. |
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Due to the new law, the waitlist can mean the difference between freedom and imprisonment for a pregnant woman. |
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But as the papers there are less heavily cited, this can also mean fewer citations per paper for the universities that publish in them. |
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November to March have the highest mean wind speeds, and June to August have the lightest winds. |
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The word guy thus came in the 19th century to mean an oddly dressed person, and hence in the 20th and 21st centuries to mean any male person. |
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Beckham was asked what it would mean for the Olympics to be held in his old neighbourhood. |
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The words cookie or cracker became the words of choice to mean a hard, baked product. |
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At times the same word will mean entirely different things between classes. |
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Furthermore, failure of an experiment does not necessarily mean the hypothesis is false. |
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But a charge of political inconsistency applied to this life appears a mean and petty thing. |
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A story by Cobbett in 1807 led to the use of the term 'red herring' to mean a distraction from the important issue. |
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As for spending money to achieve that end, either I'm too mean or those would-be beardies are plain daft. |
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Then will not this constitution be a kind of mean between aristocracy and oligarchy? |
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What does this mean when one considers on a general scale the modern banalities that populate the Western world? |
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In non axisymmetric arrangements there is also an azimuthal dependence of the mean flow variables. |
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In what follows, we will use the mean value theorem, another one of Lagrange's many contributions to numerical analysis. |
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I don't mean that you are to Grecianize their dress, any more than medievalize it. |
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The area covered by the designation comprises the land between the mean low water mark and the top of the cliffs or the back of the beach. |
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Regular changes to the pitch mean that it never matches the quality of its surroundings, or of the pitch of the old Wembley in its later years. |
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As in other cup competitions tie is used in the Davis Cup to mean an elimination round. |
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The result also showed that microfilaridermia and mean intensity decreased as the number of treatment taken increased. |
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When one grasps the implications of this, the nature of what I mean by nationalism becomes a good deal clearer. |
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It doesn't mean you're a worrywart, a nervous wreck or in need of heavy medication. |
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The decline of a dynasty or culture could also mean the extinction of its capital city, as occurred at Babylon and Cahokia. |
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This might mean deciding the political resolution of various geographical and nationalist claims following a major conflict, or other contexts. |
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Similarly, a formal alliance does not necessarily mean that one country lies within another's sphere of influence. |
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I should have thought that we would have stopped all such woggish activities by now. I mean dancing and things. |
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I didn't mean to convey any discourtesy and I apologise if I did. |
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In January 1917, Germany resumed unrestricted submarine warfare, realizing it would mean American entry. |
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An increase in radio activity on 5 June was correctly interpreted by German intelligence to mean that an invasion was imminent or underway. |
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The oft misused word didn't mean what he thought it meant, but everyone else misunderstood it too. |
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Several datums were in use around the world, all using different spheroids, because mean sea level undulates by as much as 100 metres worldwide. |
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An alternative explanation is that the name derives from the Norse name 'Sweyn' and 'ey', which can mean inlet. |
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In vain it is to wash a goblet, if you mean to put it nothing but the dead lees and vap of wine. |
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The marine ecosystem is thought to be vulnerable because its low temperatures mean that it can repair itself only very slowly. |
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Agreement among the realms does not, however, mean the succession laws cannot diverge. |
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The five years named in the Resolution will in almost every case mean a four years' Parliament. |
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However, the SDLP has always been clear that this should not mean that anybody should have a veto on change or equality. |
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This would mean that the presumption of innocence until sufficient proof of guilt is established would be weakened. |
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Both these factors mean that official statistics relating to the Creative Industries should be treated with caution. |
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A decrease in poverty would mean a more active economy because more people would have the ability to purchase more consumer goods than before. |
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Now, sobriety does not mean unsmilingness. A man can be just as sober when he smiles as when he does not. |
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Subsequent redefinitions of the metre and kilogram mean that this relationship is no longer exact. |
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Further, longer periods of time spent getting higher education often mean women have children later in life. |
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Many others still use the term race, but use it to mean a population, clade, or haplogroup. |
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The rights to a plot of land in Ireland could mean the difference between life and death in the early 19th century. |
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Lord Clarendon, alarmed that this might mean rebellion, asked for special powers. |
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The Common Fisheries Policy would mean giving away fishing quotas in their waters. |
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But what does it mean to question the question of the principle of reason? Here, it seems to me, we may risk introducing the concept of unpower. |
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Conquest and defeat did not necessarily mean the extirpation of one culture and its replacement by another. |
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If a Welsh writer chooses to write in English, this does not mean that they are unable to speak Welsh as well. |
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I hadn't in 1910 made a language, I don't mean a language to use, but even a language to think in. |
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But towards the end, as only lovers can, she became quite mean and cruel to me. |
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All unemployments, seasonal, frictional, cyclical, classical, whatever, mean that you're out of work. |
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The payment methods mean that the licence fee is paid for either completely or partially in advance. |
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Oh, yeah, I remember, you mean about me not trying to sell from under the counter? |
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The utility now wants the network to be undergrounded in the urban areas, which would mean substations with 33 kV distribution swtichgear. |
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This would mean the loss of the special status of the Home Nations, established under FIFA's constitution. |
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Going naptural does not mean that you have to cut all of the chemicals out of your hair immediately. |
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The length of these prostitutes' working careers was estimated at a mean of 5 years. |
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In common parlance and legal usage, it is often used imprecisely to mean illicit drugs, irrespective of their pharmacology. |
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This information was displayed graphically with the mean bias on the ordinate and laboratory lipid values displayed on the abscissa. |
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That mean I don't get so much as another uckfay from you and the unexpected baloney pony? |
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A decline in the trade would mean over capacity in shipping and a fall in owner's profit. |
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As a translation of Alba, Scotia could mean both the whole kingdom belonging to the King of Scots, or just Scotland north of the Forth. |
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Jean Le Bel also stated that in 1327 the king was a victim of 'la grosse maladie', which is usually taken to mean leprosy. |
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The ugly part is the quote marks on two adjacent lines that mean a newline character. |
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Temperature coordinates are given in the form of a deviation from today's annual mean temperature, taken as zero. |
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I mean what kind of a name for a band is Tralse, anyway? True and false at the same time? I can't believe I used to think that was clever. |
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And what do you mean to do with your time this winter? You must remember that time is money. |
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This will mean talking turkey about the timing of steps for each side to take, and verification measures. |
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You may be a supergirl on the go, but that doesn't mean you can't figure out ways to maximize your morning minutes with some simple nutrition. |
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But notice that nonbeautiful does not mean the same as ugly. It is not true that every item in the universe is either beautiful or ugly. |
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However, this does not necessarily mean that the principles on which these laws are based change at the same speed. |
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This doesn't mean no affiliation for authors of other texts exists, only that scholars have not been able to find them. |
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If this number is lower, the rock is moving faster, so again low numbers mean more speed. |
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Being a bilingual does not necessarily mean that one can speak, for example, English and French. |
|
The term Wallonia can mean slightly different things in different contexts. |
|
You speak nonliterally when you say one thing and mean something else instead. |
|
Edward interpreted this to mean Segontium was the city of Maximus' dream and drew on the imperial link when building Caernarfon Castle. |
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In case of planet orbiting a star, Mtotal can be approximated to mean the mass of the central object. |
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This can mean domestic animals, semidomestic animals, or captive wild animals. |
|
Alternatively, it can mean verse which has a monotonous rhythm, easy rhyme, and cheap or trivial meaning. |
|
The low altitude of the city, and moderating influences of the harbour, mean that lying snow very rarely occurs in the city itself. |
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In present use, mythology usually refers to the collected myths of a group of people, but may also mean the study of such myths. |
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If you decide to stay the course and finish engineering school, it will mean long hours and sleepless nights. |
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Of course, this does not mean that Elonis will be acquitted. |
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Dear me, Mimsey!... you are perfectly outrageous! Do you think I'm an ogress ready to eat her up? On the contrary, I mean to be a friend to her. |
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In warmer climates, the combined effects of recovery from moulting and ovary maturation mean that spawning can become delayed. |
|
If scientists mean that something applies to all species within a genus, they use the genus name without the specific name or epithet. |
|
By this we mean each song first must be stageworthy and then must add to the picture of yourself which you are trying to paint for your audience. |
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Such a designation would mean that each new species becomes subject to separate conservation assessments. |
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In a radioactive decay process, this time constant is also the mean lifetime for decaying atoms. |
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You mean you've been up here in all this beastly mud and oomska without Wellingtons? |
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Have ad lunch. Chilli again. Hot. And I don't just mean spice-wise. It was actually served hot. |
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An isocheim is a line of equal mean winter temperature, and an isothere is a line of equal mean summer temperature. |
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Remember that refusing special ed help at this point may mean that you go through school feeling like a failure and never catch up. |
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Calvinism was the state religion in the Dutch Republic, though this does not mean that unity existed. |
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If the gauges are many and evenly distributed over an area of uniform precipitation, using the arithmetic mean method will give good results. |
|
The mean annual discharge rate of the Meuse has been relatively stable over the last few thousand years. |
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It always includes this intertidal zone and is often used to mean the same as the intertidal zone. |
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Indeed, as a result of drainage and the subsequent shrinkage of the peat fens, many parts of the Fens now lie below mean sea level. |
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True religion occupies the happy mean between miserable unfaith, on the one hand, and timorous superstition, wild fanaticism, and pietistical zeal on the other. |
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That, of course, does not mean that a state of akarma is impossible. Every karma done for the good of the Atman, though it appears to be karma, is in reality akarma. |
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Algebra is used today by surgeons to mean bone-setting, i.e. the restoration of bones, and the idea of restoration is present in the mathematical context, too. |
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Highly coherent polities have higher mean durability scores than incoherent and anocratic polities, both for the whole sample and for each subsample. |
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Admittedly, the question whether, for example, aitia autoteles is equivalent to what the Neoplatonist would take arche autexousious to mean is nowhere answered. |
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I don't mean to bag you out, but that top is really not flattering on you. |
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You mean to say that barrel of laughs over there is my new partner? |
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Of this mighty Order I am no mean member, but already one of the Chief Commanders, and may well aspire one day to hold the batoon of Grand Master. |
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Since each branch had exclusive powers, separated powers did not mean an aggressively political process of checking and balancing of executive policy choices by Congress. |
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If such events take place, then the colocalization of two molecules may not necessarily mean mutual binding to each other and may simply suggest recruitment to the same site. |
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To this goal Alice encrypts the plaintext into a cyphertext by mean of an encryption algorithm with the help of some secret additional information, called key. |
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I believe that 'intuitionism' is usually, and rightly, taken to mean Brouwer's epistemology of mathematics, which is unrelated to the origin or content of topos theory. |
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Do you mean it is wrong, the gold-filmed skin, integument, shown ruptured? |
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By 2004 the word fisking had broken its tether from the topic of war and was being used to mean any detailed analysis of another's speech and writing. |
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Ha, try backpacking sometime mister, we drink water that has dirt in it...I mean literally there is dirt in our water bladders and we drink it no problem! |
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The quasi statistician would doubtlessly not know how to check this supposition, thus rendering the interpretation of the mean profit as floccinaucinihilipilification. |
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Even after excluding the subjects that moved most, the mean framewise displacement remained significantly greater in the group of patients than in the control participants. |
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The place had these gigundous windows and I watched from the street as he comes in and starts kissing this woman and I don't mean kissing her like she's his sister or mother. |
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The guib is of the mean dimensions, or four feet and a half in total length, and two and a half high at the shoulders, but rather higher at the croup. |
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I said some things I didn't mean in the heatedness of the debate. |
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I use reduplicate to mean redouble, though both words should mean quadruple, but English is funny that way, so hold off on the hypercorrecting gotcha! |
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On the other hand, this also could mean the payment of immense subsidies to foreign powers and opened the possibility of extortion in case military means were insufficient. |
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