But should we worry that Scottish companies might simply up sticks and move to a bigger market in England? |
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If the soil is too hard, aardvarks will move to areas where the digging is easier. |
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The move to serially connected storage devices, primarily disk drives, is irrefutable. |
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The Government's move to raise the stamp duty threshold was, let's face it, no more than tokenistic. |
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The move to establish the Pratas marine sanctuary must not be separated from the international movement to protect marine areas. |
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Soon the soil began to lift and after several attempts the soil separated and lifted and move to where she willed. |
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I live in Alaska and I'm preparing to move to Thailand on a semi-permanent basis. |
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Unless we move to build it within a reasonable time frame this money will have to be repaid to the developers. |
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I decided to make a start on tidying things in readiness for the move to a new family house. |
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When was the last time a move to amend the Constitution went the distance and actually occurred? |
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The separated raw components then move to the batching area, where they're blended with dry ingredients and batched. |
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Agents, chosen randomly, will move to a free space if the number of near neighbours of a different colour exceeds some threshold. |
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Lorne meanwhile has left to move to somewhere else to help another friend with his nightclub. |
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Now it is possible that in the first six months of next year, they move to an exchange rate that is tied to a basket of currencies. |
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And be prepared to move to higher ground, or to a place of safe shelter if threatening weather moves into your neighborhood. |
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She has stayed on longer than planned to see the club through its move to the new facilities. |
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An attendant approaches her and tell her to move to the second class as she doesn't have a ticket for the first class. |
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We conducted a night move to skirt the city and get through the Karbala Gap. |
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We will be hearing a lot more about that as we move to the Committee stage of this bill. |
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With a premium on hand woven textiles, there is a move to make the products look not just ethnic but chic too. |
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Ann told Morris she wanted to leave her husband, marry him, and move to America. |
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Then there were the morning newspaper headlines which had screamed of yet another move to entice the Old Firm south. |
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It is vital that all the broadcasting unions move to ballot for action swiftly before the mood turns to resignation, they say. |
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After losing the first egg, oystercatchers often move to a new nest scrape to lay the remaining eggs of the clutch. |
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The war was a scramble for the control of the second largest oil reserves in the world and a move to establish its imperial hegemony. |
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They reached the great doors of the palace and she threw them open before the menservants could even move to do so for her. |
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There is even a voice-sensitive camera that will move to whoever is talking during teleconferencing. |
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The destruction of nests discourages infestations by dermestid beetles and other insect scavengers which could move to other household items. |
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As we move to the future we must get used to replacing conventional hand-emplaced mines with scatterable mines. |
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The Regency area is undergoing a retail rush as developers move to build stores and restaurants north of the mall. |
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You might think, therefore, that he would welcome a move to reduce the taxes paid by those having their first child, but not a bit of it! |
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The bus is practically empty, so they move to the back as the bus lurches forwards. |
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Residents are kept up till late at night and people like my neighbour have to move to the back of their houses to get sleep. |
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I move to the back of the room, sitting against the wall and staring at the cute cow. |
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For example, Old Squaw move to sheltered lagoons along the Beaufort Sea coast. |
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It may also address whether and when China should move to a nationwide two-child policy to prevent a looming baby bust. |
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Meanwhile, the Toyota Formula 1 team is making a move to lure the highly-rated technical director away from Renault. |
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Last week the Minister made a move to try and solve the hill walking issue. |
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However dismissive the supporters are of a move to Murrayfield, it would be a tasty venue for Champions League football next season. |
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After three and a half years in the job, the well-known couple decided to move to Tassie for family reasons. |
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You saturate the market, and you have to move to another location and open another store. |
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That might cause big mailers to move to alternatives even faster, triggering a spiral of falling revenues, rising debt, and declining service. |
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He denounced my son Tim's plan to move to New York City with some very choice language. |
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Climbers sell all their gear and take up sailboarding, skiers move to Florida. |
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Isn't it also ironic that though church attendances are in decline there appears to be a move to increase the number of church schools. |
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Before mitosis, the centrosome becomes duplicated and the daughter centrosomes move to opposite sides of the nucleus and form asters. |
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I think it is a reasonable and economically responsible move to put funding aside for future public service superannuation. |
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As more farmers move to eco-tillage, there will be an increasing demand for straw choppers and spreaders on combines. |
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He said it was arrogant to suggest residents should move to a quieter area. |
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Order the lemon butter lobster under the stars and try to work out why you didn't move to Sri Lanka years ago. |
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One thousand people from a fishing village were forced to move to give room to a refinery plant which was never built. |
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The man sat down between two people, so she didn't have room to move to see his face. |
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Instead of fighting it and litigating every claim, they start with an apology and move to mediation. |
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This is a new feature and contrasts with most free-sporing plants in which sperm, rather than the whole microgametophyte, move to the archegonia. |
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Personally, I would like to see neither battery used in the long run and we move to the lithium battery, because lithium is the lightest metal. |
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The move to a full listing on the London Stock Exchange will also help to improve its international profile. |
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When my personal life hit rock bottom in New Orleans, where I was a newspaper reporter, I decided to move to San Francisco. |
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Once he has finished the readings and signings to promote his book, Buchanan wants to move to England to be near his children. |
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For such a dry subject, the move to international accounting standards generates a surprising amount of heat. |
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Kalcrest Limited, currently based at the Fieldhead Business Centre, plans to move to Eldon Place in September. |
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His move to a constitutional amendment demonstrates that when the going gets tough, he caves to the right wing of his party. |
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In a move to attract younger drivers, the T3 grade hatchbacks have dedicated 15-inch alloy wheels, side and rear skirts and front fog lamps. |
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We had just finished a course of fire and my class was preparing to move to another section of the rifle range. |
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When soil is depleted, tree farms move to new locations, displacing food crops from rich agricultural land. |
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In a move to safeguard vital oil shipments, Japan said Friday it will deploy two warships to join anti-piracy patrols in the Gulf of Aden. |
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Churchill allegedly made his move to the Liberals on the issue of free trade. |
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Later, after the move to London, the revolutionary changes in publishing technology, there was no longer any such cause. |
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The government's move to create districts exclusively for women contending for parliamentary seats has revivified rows in the political arena. |
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There has been a tendency in recent years to move to more uniformity among the various lectionaries. |
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And, we are taking a rest day today, we are not going to move to high camp. |
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He has temporarily leased offices there until a planned move to Huntington next year. |
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One is the Union government's move to create biosphere reserves in areas spread across more than one State. |
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If we had been left to the mercy of Aer Lingus and their fares we would have had to move to Brussels altogether. |
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The entrances to the formerly inhabited buildings can be blocked against repossession once the animals move to their new homes. |
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It's during this period that CAs decide to become partners, move to industry positions, or reposition themselves in non-traditional roles. |
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Now 41 years old, her weight has yo-yoed since she was 12, when her mother left her father to marry another man and move to Argentina. |
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The Americans took over from two French divisions, releasing them to move to a more active section. |
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It was there when things began to click and the move to the batter's box began to pay dividends. |
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York City will move to a new 10,000 capacity all-seater stadium in ten years time, the club's board of directors revealed today. |
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All this notwithstanding, the proposed Department is a positive move to align national form and function. |
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I don't think there was one of us that wouldn't move to the city right now given the chance. |
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When the larvae reach a length of about 80 mm they move to the deeper waters of adjacent reed beds. |
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Considered to be the most sedentary of the woodswallows, it will move to coastal areas during droughts. |
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Wiranto denied that his visit was a move to woo support from Hamengkubuwono and Golkar constituents in the province. |
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Soldiers packed tents and kits to move to new positions in readiness for the imminent assault. |
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At which point, I wondered, would it be ok to get up and move to the empty, inviting seats across the aisle? |
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He said the police initiative did not appear to be window dressing and the chamber felt it was a serious move to clamp down on crime. |
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Soon we shall have to face the choice between a bit of air conditioning or a move to somewhere cooler. |
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Now that she has settled into the British way of life the move to Bradford is one she will never regret. |
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To mitigate risk to the tank, the infantry would move to the tank's flank to prevent the enemy from mounting from the rear. |
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People can move to new places and be happy again but wild habitats and heritage site cannot be moved and once destroyed cannot be restored. |
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If the Cabinet agrees the recommendation it will mean that you and the other residents will need to move to another home. |
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For anybody who doesn't know, it seems that our move to London is a go, details and timeline to be determined. |
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The move to Askham Grange, at Askham Richard, means her aged parents, who live near the Yorkshire coast, will now find it easier to visit her. |
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But before that she worked at Frobishers, which wholesaled fine arts cards in Helmsley before the owners closed it to move to Suffolk. |
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He kept his own counsel, did not appear to let the speculation affect him in any way and, ultimately, secured his dream move to Liverpool. |
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Mr Hughes remained hopeful he may have been signalling a move to cut rates in the near term. |
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In the electronic kanban system Mathis decided to move to, the inventory database would go online. |
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I may have to move to the United States to battle these people with my rapier wit and rugged good looks. |
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For some reason he ranted on and on about the fact that they'd been promised a move to new offices, and it wouldn't happen. |
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Omar's speech was a desperate move to rally what little support he had left. |
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If things go badly, you can quickly move to rally shaken leaders and units. |
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They will then move to Te Rapa before they are railed through the Kaimai Ranges to the Port of Tauranga. |
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Onward movement is accomplished when joint forces leave the staging area and move to assigned areas of operation. |
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But today, with the night spent on action stations, the men move to their respective dining halls. |
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If the jobs go overseas or pay at overseas wages, ambitious people will move to other fields. |
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His face is waxen and his breath comes in wheezes, and as I move to pick him up his skin is hot to the touch. |
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Impala, waterbuck, kudu, bushbuck, warthog, zebra and giraffe all move to drier areas that still offer plenty of goodies to eat. |
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There must be a popular move to require transparency and accountability in all walks of life. |
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In Spain, the audiences shout 'jaleos' while the flamenco dancers' footwork and the tapping of her castanets move to the strumming of the guitar. |
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The move to Vincent Park was at an advanced stage and we went ahead, hoping that the licence would be a formality. |
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The latest move to establish regional offices has created fears of a possible return to repressive and abusive practices. |
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The move to introduce a penalty charge could be regarded as an abuse of their dominant position. |
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Rock-bottom Hyde, whose want-away star striker Simon Yeo appears set to turn down a move to Southport, face a difficult trip to Gateshead. |
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You have to study for years before you're allowed to come to that conclusion, leave your PhD program, and move to Nova Scotia to become a lobsterman. |
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We didn't move to Spain to recover some rustic, romantic, agrarian life. |
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If his avidity was an act, Brooks should immediately move to Hollywood and collect his Academy Awards. |
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His move to Miami to make a fresh start, aged 40, coincided with a sea-change in American art, as abstract expressionism gave way to the ascendancy of pop. |
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The move to quarterly reporting, in line with US financial reporting, came in recognition of the fact that US investors now control half of the share register. |
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From the salvation of the dead we move to the healing of the quick. |
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That drove a wedge between the pair that ultimately led to Dunn rejecting the offer of a new contract in the summer and deciding on a move to Birmingham. |
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It can be a move to the left, but a unifying rather than a confrontational one. |
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Although Tracey is a vastly experienced competitor in rallying, circuit racing and rallycross, his move to the ranks of the World Rally Car drivers was not anticipated. |
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The games will take place over eight days, whereafter the athletes will move to Cape Town to participate in cultural activities like choir festivals and costume parties. |
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We have to move to a standardised system so that quality companies can differentiate themselves from cheaper operators that offer lower levels of after-sales care. |
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One of the many readjustments you have to make when you move to a new area is that you have to experiment to find the better takeaways all over again! |
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When aging veterans move to new teams, they sometimes experience rebirths. |
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If Berkovic imagined his move to Ewood Park would mean an instant recall to first team duties he must indeed be blessed with a hugely inflated ego. |
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After a spring feeding, the winged aphids move to a second host plant. |
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Many Americans move to places that de-emphasize the particularities of their local community. |
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The sacking of Bo Xilai is a pre-emptive move to ensure that the liberal line prevails in China, not the statist model. |
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If you wanted work as a slave in a Roman salt mine, there was no need to move to Rome. |
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But Searle and other native Gibraltarians say the move to build the reef was about much more than the fishing population. |
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Furious York City chief Terry Dolan today lambasted reports suggesting the Minstermen are willing to let young starlet Chris Hogg move to Manchester United without a fight. |
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Not being too open, he didn't confess this to himself, but he made no move to deny it either, and he was smiling reminiscently when he opened the door. |
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In view of the time required to move to more peripheral vowel positions, tense vowels tend to be peripheral and lax vowels closer to schwa, the neutral or central vowel. |
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Horizontal and vertical viewing angles are also fairly poor, with the screen looking washed out at you move up and down and going dark as you move to the side. |
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It told people when to move to new hunting grounds, when to plant crops, when to bury the dead, anoint new rulers, slaughter animals, make babies. |
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Estrada's move to soften his stand on capital punishment followed his announcement that he has commuted death sentences to life terms for over 100 convicts. |
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One of the primary reasons organizations fail to leverage their existing data and business systems when they move to the Web is they feel it will take too much time. |
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And now the collapse of a proposed move to Blackburn Rovers has left his club career in limbo as he concentrates on the vital role of Australia's over-age captain in Greece. |
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I move to the sink, wash my hands, dry them and set the timer. |
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From the height of urban iniquity we move to the ultimate city stillness. |
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In this case, it would be logical to move to the left space. |
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Forget Los Angeles, gill and Li currently have no plans to move to London where rent is so much more expensive than in Manchester. |
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Violent and disruptive pupils could be offered psychotherapy in a controversial new move to stem the rising tide of indiscipline in Scotland's schools. |
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The announcement regarding the move to lower its debt is expected to be accompanied by confirmation that it is to make job cuts across the group to cut costs. |
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Unlike most infections, it can also move to other parts of the body without travelling through the lymphatic system, the body's network of glands. |
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The trend in the industrialised world is for people to work their guts out when young, then move to part-time working patterns or contract-based projects as life moves on. |
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The sheikh is ready to flee if the Lebanese security forces, considered to be in thrall to Hezbollah, make a move to arrest him. |
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He said he uses the quiet time at night to ponder a move to Puerto Rico or maybe Hawaii. |
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The four of them move to the boat, right it, balance the mattress across its bow and shove it towards the water. |
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A made-to-measure building solution was speedily agreed on when a promising group of scientists threatened to move to a city more sensitive to their needs. |
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He starts talking about his big move to New York when he was 21, that drive through the Holland Tunnel to the big city. |
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Two years later he tried to move to Switzerland but Swiss police quickly expelled him on the say-so, he believed, of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police. |
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If you can get upon the field, leaving all your baggage on the east bank of the river, it will be a move to our advantage and possibly save the day to us. |
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In a swift move to stanch the controversy, Governor Rockefeller demanded the piece be removed. |
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Begin with a few scratchy sketches and then move to the canvas. |
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Couple this with many equity-rich property owners in the UK and it becomes obvious why there has been such a rush to jump on the bandwagon and move to the mountains. |
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The seaboards face ever-increasing pressure as more and more Australians move to the coast, and the Great Barrier Reef already has suffered substantial damage. |
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The company, which produces stabilising ingredients for thickening food, is hoping to extend and refurbish its premises to allow for Epping employees to move to Braintree. |
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This move to pathologize and medicalize every human emotion and behavior is succeeding if one believes IMS America, which tracks the pharmaceutical companies. |
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The most interesting thing about Rice has been the kerfuffle over her move to become secretary of state. |
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Her move to regain control of the Occupy feed seems to have been due to frustration with the lackluster state of the revolution. |
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As more states move to pass legalization legislation, their role in the narrative will likely surge. |
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Griffith's move to Merthyr Tydfil saw him take over a much larger and more established parish than Aberdare. |
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But rather than lap up the sun, sea and sand Down Under, the teenager decided a move to the Arabs was better. |
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We hear of a fiendish European move to impose speed limiters on our motors in decades to come. |
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Boards then move to the wash phase, during which a saponifier in the wash tank is combined with DI water to wash the boards. |
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In 1809 Scott persuaded James Ballantyne and his brother to move to Edinburgh and to establish their printing press there. |
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Spermatozoa move to the epididymis by the flow of fluid into the lumen of the seminiferous tubules from the adluminal spaces. |
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It was a smart move to bring on a tall striker to play against the smaller defenders. |
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The Type II process was complicated by the proposition of Vickers that there should be a move to the newly developed turboprop power. |
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My first move to Washington, 18 years ago, was an introduction to schmoozing. |
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Of course, a contented mind is a perpetual feast, and many argue that it is better to live with a bad situation than move to an even worse one. |
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In recent years there have been repeated calls for reform, most arguing for a move to only two verdicts. |
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Migration policy is to move to a registration system to integrate residential and employment status. |
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Scots teachers yesterday backed a move to have unruly pupils taught in isolation units in secondary schools. |
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Wales will move to a reserved powers model once the provisions contained within the Wales Act 2017 are put into effect. |
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By then, the company's success had caused it to expand to such an extent that it had to move to new premises at Cheshunt. |
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Andretti announced he was leaving to move to Alfa Romeo at the end of the season leaving Lotus with a vacant race seat. |
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In 2015, Fontana will move to July, while Pocono will be the penultimate race of the season in August. |
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Diame's see-sawing between a move to the Emirates and remaining with West Ham for this season is likely to complicate matters for Wenger. |
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Situated, prior to their recent move to Widnes, in Eccleston and Thatto Heath, a lot of support naturally derives from that area. |
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I don't mean to imply that doctors are all going to move to galt's Gulch. |
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However, he made no immediate move to have Edward declared illegitimate and place George on the throne. |
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The move to New York after 130 years also comes as Lehigh celebrates its sesquicentennial. |
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However it is suggested that this might be related to the death of a patron of the family or the desire to move to better farmlands. |
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In 2007 the club stated they were considering options to increase stadium capacity by redevelopment of the current site or a move to a new site. |
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Eventually, Northumbria was persuaded to move to the Roman practice and the Celtic Bishop Colman of Lindisfarne returned to Iona. |
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Workers who were trained in the technique might move to another employer or might be poached. |
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The move to Wembley allowed many more fans to watch the annual music event which has previously lasted over 5 hours with more than 15 performers. |
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When you move to a new country, your first port of call is often the local police. |
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Kind of a career limiting move to leave the game running where management might find it. |
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Fluctuations in physiology and behavior move to the beat of the circadian clock. |
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That is why it would be an ill-founded move to civilianize the trial judges in our system of military justice. |
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An advertisement in The Guardian led Rowling to move to Porto, Portugal, to teach English as a foreign language. |
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Yet in Northanger Abbey she alludes to the trope, with the heroine, Catherine, anticipating a move to a remote locale. |
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At the suggestion of his doctors, he agreed to move to Italy with his friend Joseph Severn. |
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Tuberculosis took hold and he was advised by his doctors to move to a warmer climate. |
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Savage's friends tried to help him by attempting to persuade him to move to Wales, but Savage ended up in Bristol and again fell into debt. |
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It was papal policy for bishops to move to more urban seats, and John of Tours translated his own from Wells to Bath. |
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Throughout the 1990s, Poles used the freer travel restrictions to move to the UK and work, sometimes in the grey economy. |
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Ba, who has been linked with a January move to Arsenal, should have rewarded their brisk start with the opening goal in the 16th minute. |
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Coutinho has been tenuously linked with a future move to Barcelona, but Lucio believes that Anfield is the best place for him. |
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Further making Widnes advantageous for the Irish to move to was its close proximity to Liverpool. |
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The dust particles and other debris move to the outside of the vessel by centrifugal force, where they fall due to gravity. |
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In order to induce settlers to move to Florida, reports of its natural wealth were published in England. |
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The dry climate of the city made Jauja a common place for tuberculosis sufferers to move to since the dry air was good for the kidneys and lungs. |
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With or without a subsequent move to the cover of a barn, it was then stored for weeks to several months until fed to the livestock. |
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In 1793, Alexander Hamilton recruited Webster to move to New York City and become an editor for a Federalist Party newspaper. |
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They can move to other ASEAN countries to practice, but they must pass that country's licensing test. |
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Ramaswami Iyer's move to form an Independent Travancore separate from India. |
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Trends in most of the world have long been to move to less painful, or more humane, executions. |
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His coronation in Belize on January 16, 1816, in a deliberate move to secure British support, marked the end of the regency. |
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Instead, a move to weaken communist party leaders through conflict was started. |
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Massive industrialisation eventually caused young men to move to urban centres, depressing agricultural productivity. |
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However, he made no move to put away his reserve powers after he himself became President. |
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A second transformation is the move to electronic trading to replace human trading of listed securities. |
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In late 1780 the nature of the society was to change again with the move to Birmingham of Joseph Priestley. |
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Until its move to Backbarrow in 2010, the stables at Holker Hall housed the Lakeland Motor Museum. |
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As of 2008 it is based at the BBC's Oxford Road studios, but is expected to move to MediaCityUK in Salford. |
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After, he made an harlot, a ribald, come to him alone for to touch his members and his body, to move to lechery. |
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It is partially resident, but many birds migrate further south, or move to the coasts. |
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The company decided to shut up shop in this country and move to America, where corporate taxes are lower. |
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After chromosomes move to poles in anaphase, the phragmoplast mediates cell plate formation that completes cytokinesis. |
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This means that the back line of defenders must move to the midfield line to hold the whole opposing team onside in their half of the field. |
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However, contrary to popular misconceptions, the move to XHTML does not imply a removal of this legacy support. |
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Before his recent move to Eugene, he was the artistic director of the Abreact, a theater group in Detroit. |
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Adena Health System has inked a deal MedFlight, in a move to strengthen its critical care patient air transportation in the region. |
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Family ties made the move to Cruden Homes' Wester Lea development all the more special for Robin Thomson. |
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Their appearance on this list may act as an incentive to improve and move to the white list. |
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How prices have gone through the roof yada yada yada, how we might have to move to up-and-coming areas blah blah blah. |
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The move to claim the Madeiran islands was probably a response to Castile's efforts to claim the Canary Islands. |
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This halts hair growth and causes a move to resting where the hairs are then abruptly shed. |
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Ex-Super Eagles captain, Joseph Yobo, is said to be planning a sensational move to one of South Africa's top clubs in January. |
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In 1774 he was able to convince Watt to move to Birmingham, and they entered into a partnership the following year. |
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After that, population started to decline slowly as inhabitants began to move to nearby suburbs of Rome. |
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In December 2016, the organisers announced a move to The Lulworth Estate in Dorset. |
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He declares his love for her, and they are married and eventually move to Mansfield parsonage, in the circle of those they love best. |
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On 5 December 2007, the Government confirmed that Cornwall was one of five councils that would move to unitary status. |
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The government would make no move to recover post offices, and if resisted, mail delivery would end at state lines. |
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Some young birds disperse long distances, especially on coasts, and mountain birds move to lower elevations in winter. |
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But he credits coach Cavin Johnson for spotting his potential, nurturing it, and then eventually helping sort his move to Europe. |
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Elderly people may be forced to move to cities where there are doctors and hospitals that can cater for their health needs. |
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Council leader Sir Albert Bore welcomed the move to introduce formal job descriptions. |
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On 12 September, Joffre ordered an outflanking move to the west and an attack northwards by the Third Army, to cut off the German retreat. |
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The museum closed in 2011 in preparation for its move to Manchester due to funding issues. |
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The swift move to the north bank prevented the Sixth Army from crossing the Ourcq but created a gap between the 1st and 2nd armies. |
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Part of the decline in prices and economic and geopolitical power of OPEC came from the move to alternate energy sources. |
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He formally agreed to the judge's reduction this week, which sets the stage for the case to move to the appellate courts. |
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God then orders him to take his family and move to Canaan, presumably to eliminate the influence Aramaean paganism is having on them. |
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In a keynote speech, attended by over 2,000 people, Steve Jobs spent the first 10 minutes bigging up the move to Intel chips. |
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The young cod then move to the seabed and change their diet to small benthic crustaceans, such as isopods and small crabs. |
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A CANCER patient forced to move to England to access treatment has been told to reapply for the drug in Wales by First Minister Carwyn Jones. |
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The sale was part of a broader move to step away from resource expansion in Australia. |
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Instead of a promotion, I opted for a lateral move to a similar position in the marketing department. |
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Some sharks suffocate within about 15 minutes while the whale holds them still, because these sharks need to move to breathe. |
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Other species, such as the California gull, nest and feed inland on lakes, and then move to the coasts in the winter. |
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Many marine fish use salt marshes as nursery grounds for their young before they move to open waters. |
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The reason for the leniency shown to Merthyr is thought to have been connected to the club's apparent move to the professional Northern code. |
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The Louisiana Supreme Court, however, did not move to Baton Rouge but remains headquartered in New Orleans. |
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In May 2012, Newport County announced that they had agreed a deal to move to the city's rugby stadium, Rodney Parade. |
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The season was marked by increased awareness of the impact financial pressures were having on the team since the move to Cardiff City Stadium. |
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Kiwis living in Australia are gearing up to fight for social service rights by making a bold move to win a seat in the New Zealand Parliament. |
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After declaring his move to Ulster earlier in the season, Rush because of a change in personal matters wanted to stay at the Blues. |
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There was opposition by local residents to plans by the Scarlets to move to a new stadium and sell their current ground for housing development. |
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The school has two campuses however it is planned in the next few years for all pupils to move to the Corndon Crescent site, formerly Sundorne. |
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English settlers were given incentives to move to the walled garrison town, which for decades the Welsh were forbidden from entering. |
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A HORSE-loving couple from Lepton are selling their Wakeeld Road home ready for a move to begin a new life in Southern Ireland. |
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Eurasian birds move to southern Europe and southern temperate Asia, In the mildest regions, such as France, Great Britain. |
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The two men left the firm in May, following BNY Mellon s move to rejigger its fund of hedge funds business. |
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Will congressmen and women who fought off dark money move to regulate it? |
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Secretary of State meant specifically the government's move to the city of Aden located south Yemen, the source explained. |
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When the move to new quarters finally was made a few years later, in 1710, Hooke's Royal Society portrait went missing, and has yet to be found. |
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Signal control will move to the Manchester Rail Operating Centre removing five local signal boxes. |
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A TEESSIDE firm has welcomed the Government's move to freeze backdated business rates on ports as a row over the decision erupted in Parliament. |
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The present name was taken in 1882 when a move to St Leonards House was made. |
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Sound footwork is essential in allowing the blocker to move to the best position. |
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The houses of the farmers are getting empty as the inhabitants move to modern house complexes of sovkhozes and kolkhozes. |
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But unlike retroviruses, retroelements don't move to other cells or organisms. |
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The move to Enlargement directorate was a consequence of the advancement of the Stabilisation and Association process. |
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In the dry Southwestern United States, golden eagles tend to move to higher elevations once the breeding season is complete. |
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The lack of a venue in the town saw the team move to a rural location called Berrington Lough. |
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For some restaurants on the border this simply meant that the customers had to move to a table on the Belgian side. |
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Vastly in debt he is forced to move to the fictional village of Mangold Parva. |
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As a result, he consulted with his lawyer, Aaron Frosch, who suggested he move to Switzerland where the tax payment was comparatively less. |
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Many organizations start with job production and, as they develop and become larger, move to batch production and finish up with flow production. |
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Despite his reservations about the move to America, Sullivan paid all the costs and gave substantial financial support to the family. |
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Toward the end of 1920 he and Dorothy decided their time in London was over and resolved to move to Paris. |
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Reynolds said MLB Network's practice of offering live look-ins of games with studio analysts' commentary prepared him for the move to the booth. |
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Jayson, how did you move to ESPN from The Philadelphia inquirer? |
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Beckham had assisted in three of England's four total goals in those two games, and he stated his desire to continue to play for England after his move to Major League Soccer. |
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The Smash Hits music magazine, originally aimed at teenagers and published by Emap Metro, is to end very shortly as more music fans move to the Internet for music news. |
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Lee's relations with Bessie deteriorated after their move to London. |
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Real shirty reaction scuppered Robinho Manchester City's record signing, Robinho, has admitted for the first time how getting shirty cost him his big move to Chelsea. |
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And Steve Sidwell's dream move to Chelsea has he as failed to make an impact, scoring just two league goals from 18 timmediately 18 from 18 appearances so far lorem ipsum. |
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In 2004, the small Ainu community living in Kamchatka Krai wrote a letter to Vladimir Putin, urging him to reconsider any move to award the Southern Kuril islands to Japan. |
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The burden of playing this demanding part at the same time as managing the new company and planning for the move to the new theatre took its toll on Olivier. |
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Whether the move to America was Julius's idea or his son's is unknown. |
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