So are most of the people whose names languish on social housing waiting lists around Nunavut. |
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The lettering above each portal on this road was a deep black, the letters forming last names of the families that owned those modules. |
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You might also hear the names Aunt Mary, skunk, boom, gangster, kif or ganja. |
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There's a list of around 300 names in a display case at the foot of the outside stairs. |
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They cut their names with penknives on the walls of the building and stamped around on the mosaic floors in heavy boots. |
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For some reason, middle or last names are not important, but I couldn't resist looking mine up anyway. |
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Although feeling-of-knowing studies involve questions about proper names, none make this distinction between proper names and common names. |
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He knows the names of the specimen trees and woods which cover just under half the estate. |
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Their names have not been disclosed because they are afraid for their lives. |
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Because of the privacy thing, when looking at students' papers, we white out all the names that are in the paper. |
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Our birth names were kept as our middle names because our new names were not only our creation, but part of our history, too. |
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Private banks also open accounts under code names and will, when asked, refer to clients by code names or encode account transactions. |
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False names and addresses were used to hide the real identity of the account holders, who tried to keep their accounts a secret from the taxman. |
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Their names and contact information must be included in the mailing list for the September magazine. |
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The manufacturer who distributed hot dogs and delicatessen meats under 11 different brand names has voluntarily recalled the causative products. |
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His search for such connections between forms and names has led him, by degrees, to the sculpture-installation. |
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The author ushers in the names of the conspirators and their plot to kidnap Lincoln. |
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Bea is suggesting made-up names that sound like they could have been invented by a brand manager at an advertising agency. |
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Do they manage to translate the names of the Endless into other languages alliteratively? |
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The most highly valued attire is American brand names popular among African Americans. |
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Thousands of pages are marked by redactions, blacked out information like the names of people who attended meetings. |
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Almost everywhere one can see the names and other writings which the visitors inscribe on the stones and marbles. |
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Another 1,300 names were placed in an inactive file after letters came back with notations that forwarding addresses had expired. |
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We had long since decided that he was picking middle names that went with the first names we picked out. |
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Well, it sounds like it, or at least the particularly rarified form of it practiced by the kind of names mentioned above. |
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Yet the mass of details, informative and rich as they are, tend to mire the book in a swamp of names and dates. |
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All product names are either registered trademarks of the respective companies or fictional entities, work it out yourself! |
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It will encourage nosy parkers, and in the longer term it will discourage able people from putting their names forward to stand for Parliament. |
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I'm not advising anybody to break the law, or to violate trademarks or service marks or proprietary names or anything like that. |
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Ground rules for stories included not publishing last names or mission specifics. |
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Would it be normal or standard for most prospective tenants, when they put their names forward to be checked? |
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They are known by their first names and are as familiar to their neighbours as postmen and milkmen are in Britain. |
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Everyone has one or two names and is referred to as the son or daughter of his or her father. |
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Why do people still travel to New York to write musicals despite the comparatively few new author names on Broadway marquees? |
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There is extensive use of place names without accompanying maps throughout the book, and many of the maps provided lack keys and scales. |
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Two of the biggest names in rock and rap have joined forces to create reinterpreted amalgamations of their hits. |
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We registered, writing our names and place of residence, and checked for family members. |
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If the names on voting documents don't tally with people's ID, they will not be able to vote. |
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Now that the story turns out to be a fake, do you go public with the names of the sources who misled you? |
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Their labels and names represent both villages and families, with generations of winemaking traditions. |
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Everyone had handles, club names given and cherished in the rush of the moment. |
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Sales literature posted will be sent under plain cover and will only bear names and addresses on the outside. |
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If you learn only the names of techniques and kata, then you would cling to them and lose sight of their true meaning. |
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One of the challenges involved picking out mistakes on a wine list, such as misspellings of obscure vineyards' names or incorrect vintage years. |
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It was as if each person was displaying a little of their personal information along with their names on their identification badge. |
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From what I've always been told these names come from Norse, Greek, and Egyptian mythology. |
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Common names in the English language are ladyfish, big-eyed herring, bonefish, fiddler, skipjack, springer, and tenpounder. |
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The children were asked to recollect and recite the names of other participants! |
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In calling over the list every name is repeated, although three-fourths or more of the boys, whose names are called over, are present. |
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We argued for several minutes coming up with possible first names but no middle names to go with them. |
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If domain names are property, the three judges sitting in the case ruled, then registrars are responsible for protecting them. |
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Well, nobody should call anyone by their middle names when there are perfectly good first names. |
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Do I renew those two domain names that I bought on a whim when they seemed like a good idea? |
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Besides Imari, the most famous names for porcelain are Arita, Kutani, Hirado, Kakiemon and Satsuma. |
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The French names on the streets and the quaint old houses invite exploration into the history. |
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She had to recite the names of the months in English and the numbers, one, two, three to him. |
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I've booked into hotel rooms under so many assumed names that I couldn't remember how to sign the bill. |
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To target distributors directly, simply look for their names on product labels. |
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In the past few years he has gathered 150,000 names from telephone directories and mailing lists. |
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The screen fades to green, and the names of all 336 tributaries are slowly reeled off, in apparent contrast to the vagaries of story-telling. |
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Some users are purposefully misspelling or jumbling the names of songs so they are harder to track down. |
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He was still calling the names of students whose last names started with an A though, so she still had some time. |
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Carl observed that when Preston spoke these words he did not stammer once over the names themselves. |
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I was particularly impressed with his recitation of the names of every filmmaker who gave him the opportunities that made his career. |
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Four important chemical family names of elements still widely used are the alkali metals, the alkaline earths, the halogens, and the noble gases. |
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Went though my digitised photos giving them meaningful names and dates and folders like albums. |
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This was an opportunity to put names to the faces of those involved, American and Beninese. |
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Now, I will be the first to tell anyone that there is a lot more to being an announcer than knowing the names of moves and holds. |
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Though other teachers had to fill him in on how many Hokkaido place names were Ainu names so he may not be the best source. |
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There are some cars whose names alone present a serious obstacle to the potential buyer. |
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Another larger minnow, Luciosoma bleekeri, has Lao names which allude to its being found in rice paddies. |
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We got them in that order and there names are Oscar, Lady and Jasmine respectively. |
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Anatomy brought life and liberty to the art of healing, and for three centuries the great names in medicine were those of the great anatomists. |
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Keiji was so tired of going by false names and, a lot of the times, no name at all. |
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Well, in addition to scanning for offensive strings, some names contain reserved words, or keywords goes the theory. |
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Cupola domes and widow's walks sprout from the roofs of buildings, while ornate, old apartment blocks bear names like Haus Hohenzollern. |
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Registering trustees are required to report the aggregate amount of funds under supervision and the names of the trusts. |
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He loves terms of art, slang, botanical names, the names of foodstuffs and fabrics, rare words, proper names and place names. |
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However, she said there were strong safeguards in her proposals to prevent names being placed unnecessarily on registers or lists. |
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The walkways were tiled in red brick with names of contributors to numerous local charities in a brass plate screwed into the top. |
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While redecorating the front room he discovered the names of previous occupants underneath the wallpaper and etched on to the plaster. |
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There is a tradition that these names have miraculous powers if used properly. |
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To begin with, they are now planning to unveil a memorial plate with 460 names on it. |
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Members of the Syndicate must acknowledge the work of their individual members by their personal names or by handles. |
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What are the names of the genetically identical cells produced in mitosis? Twin cells. Son cells. Daughter cells. |
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The audience included young and old, soap stars and Shakespeareans, household names and the hard to put a name to. |
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He brought big names to the theatre from the world of cinema and stage and served for 40 years before retiring. |
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He has been to Nashville where he met some of the big names from country music. |
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Why, the defamation of our good names paints us as remorseless ghouls bent on world domination! |
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They all made their debuts playing as trialists, under assumed names against Halifax at the former Thrum Hall ground. |
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I only knew their names because I heard Aunt Caren tell them to be mannerly. |
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One way to make lots of people see your weird movies is to get big names in your films. |
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In the American League this season, you'll hear names such as Gary Sheffield, Manny Ramirez and David Ortiz. |
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I'm actually really bad at condensing peoples names to just one or two characters. |
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According to the registrar of Bradley Polytechnic Institute in the founding year of 1897, names and descriptions of courses are not given. |
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I can't allow Samuel to be called all the names under the sun and have a squirt of a boy insult me. |
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It isn't an easy read, mostly because the skinny format abbreviates names to three letters, often beyond recognition. |
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With an analytical mind and a photographic memory for names and dates, Brian Lane was a First Class detective. |
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Visiting valets and lady's maids know their place and take on the names of their employers. |
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Managing mailing lists of the names of the key individuals who already were, or might become, clients was an important management process. |
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The plastic surgeon says he has done work on celebrities, but he won't name names because of patient confidentiality. |
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We opted to split the mailing list in half, sending out 200 post card mailers and leaving the other 200 names for the second strategy. |
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As such, the usefulness of trademarks in establishing brand names is their relevant aspect here. |
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Naturally, the different systems and jurisdictions for registering trademarks and domain names have given rise to immense difficulties. |
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Worshippers repeat the names of their favourite gods and goddesses, and repeat mantras. |
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There had been what seemed like numberless sentimental settings of Cummings in the 1950s by American composers whose names I can't remember. |
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Legal vigilance over brand names and trademarks is a product of our hyper-litigious society. |
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Young people with more than a normal interest in Botany might try to remember the names of rare species. |
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The authors were inconsistent in providing the binomial following common names of organisms, including crops, within the text. |
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Domitia finds the list while he sleeps, and joins others whose names are there in a conspiracy. |
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Two female students stood at the right side of the long rectangular board, where the names of the highest placing students were located. |
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Modest, common country garden perennial flowers, both of them, and I'm ashamed to say I simply cannot call their names to mind. |
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I resolved to press for the release of all the names of those who kited checks at the Bank. |
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I have seen the roles of their bloodlines, running back through scores of names and equal generations. |
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The New York Times, for example, stopped using titles like Mrs and Miss with the names of women. |
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And much of this politics and conflict has involved the replacement of European names with Aboriginal ones. |
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It is a good idea to call people by names they recognise and find acceptable. |
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The old field names of the individual townlands within the Kilmovee area are not being compiled. |
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Land surveyors used common names only, and many of these names lacked specificity or were used only by Mississippians at the time. |
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He recited fifteen names and then said there were several more whose names he could not recollect. |
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With an ever increasing demand for places, names are now being taken for the new year in September. |
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Along with some of the big names in the music industry, you also get a chance to become a millionaire. |
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He recited the names of the Nobel laureates in Physics since 1901, their country and their research. |
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The irony is that most consumers are happy to see their names included on mailing lists. |
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As each of their names was recited, a poppy was dropped from a museum balcony. |
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But people may object to respelled names for reasons of documents and sentiment. |
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The Kilkenny tea dance will take place on October 15th and those interested in attending should give their names to the secretary at the meeting. |
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The president names the prime minister following consultation with Parliament. |
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When I read these names I feel like that young man reciting the names of the stations on the Paris metro. |
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Driving toward town, we pass a row of farms, and Hanson recites the names of families who worked them back when he was a child. |
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I know now, that the place names in shipping forecasts are usually sandbanks, river estuaries, and those types of things. |
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The native names applied by ethnic groups appear to be based upon the deliriant effects produced by the plant on the nervous system. |
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Where it used to be that nicknames were used by friends and family, and proper names by everyone else, these days it's very much the opposite. |
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I think that he should name names if there is foundation in what he says, because I frankly resent being lumped in with everyone else. |
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He and apprentice Kristen Kuharik used the phone book and school yearbooks to find names and addresses. |
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Studies have shown even that alphabetical order of names can be the prime factor in winning or losing elections. |
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Knowing the names of these beings gave the magician power to act against them. |
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Up to this day many communities still hold these traditions dear and the names of certain places tell stories of the people who once lived there. |
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Almost all of the main characters have parts of their names which are anagrams of close friends of mine. |
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But the race was remarkable after he stunned the leading names in the race by taking the yellow jersey in the prologue. |
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One of the commonest African names for the xylophone, usually with calabash resonators. |
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David has been playing around with making anagrams from the names of some of his favourite blogs. |
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He leaned forward and pointed to a list of five names on the second page in the folder. |
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The council also keeps a confidential register of names and contact details of keyholders for intruder alarms. |
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The artist said the names were spelled correctly on her sketches, but she got them wrong as she was doing the piece. |
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Unfortunately, there will only be two names on the presidential ballot in my jurisdiction, with no space for a write-in. |
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Of the names shown in the box, the ones which constantly cause confusion are spring onions and scallions. |
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These clan names are all expressed in Wyandot, words so long and hard to properly pronounce that they are omitted here. |
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These include verbs formed from proper names and from names of chemical compounds. |
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He now stands as one of the most recognized names in the judo world as both an athlete and a coach. |
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To force the paradigm, Geoff Cohen was talking about a computer language where names and labels were outlawed. |
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I looked more closely and saw that there were rows across labeled with the names of all the rooms. |
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The conversation deteriorated into calling each other daft names and I moved to storm out of his office with one final remark. |
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But, as the names were going up on the leader board, it grew apparent what the day had in store. |
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George is an actor who has trod the boards with many of the big names in British theatre. |
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I recite these names in part to illustrate the wide geographic dispersal of the scholars. |
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Tangerines are actually a type of mandarin orange as are clementines, but here in the US, the names are used interchangeably. |
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Long names get worn down to three-letter nubbins like stones smoothed by a river. |
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They have a seemingly infinite amount of other style names here, but not that. |
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She suspects recipients' names and addresses have been picked randomly from an outdated telephone directory. |
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He appealed to the young voters to come out to vote and to make sure their names are on the register of electors. |
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Will they ever come to terms with what was done in their names and, for the most part, with their tacit approval? |
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With that in mind, we dug through our archives for some names that we tabbed as coaches on the rise 10 years ago. |
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On the eve of the festival of Lupercalia the names of Roman girls were written on slips of paper and placed into jars. |
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But when we got off the plane at Heathrow on our way home we heard our names being called over the tannoy. |
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Sometimes voters turned up where they had registered to vote to find their names not on the voters' list. |
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And who are the cheerful white-clad staff, calling us by our first names and acquiescing to our every whim, if not surrogate parents? |
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Other leading businesses were reconstituted and rechristened, their new names often evocative of revolutionary myths, personalities, or imagery. |
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Both presidents were assassinated in office and both assassins used their middle names for preference. |
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The names of foreign enemies and Egyptian traitors were inscribed on clay pots, tablets, or figurines of bound prisoners. |
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Mr Cavanar said that at times Mr Deman had applied for a job under two names and sometimes used a pseudonym of Phil White. |
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Robbie Williams and Melinda Messenger are among the top names who have donated items for our blind charity auction in aid of tsunami victims. |
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On Remembrance Sunday, the congregation stands, heads bowed, while the names are read out. |
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We used to have to think of the names of flowers as answers to puzzles, or to put together the pieces of a picture, like a jigsaw puzzle. |
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So can you please now cease and desist with your ever-growing trend to try and yuppify the names of dull, everyday things? |
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The originally proposed names of these elements by IUPAC were, in order, dubnium, joliotium, rutherfordium, bohrium, hahnium, and meiterium. |
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The city boasts of at least four big names in the animation training business. |
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As a reward she is allowed to choose her husband and names Bertram, who unwillingly obeys the king's order to wed her. |
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Better to try to look half way serious about this now, rather than after the names break. |
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An appropriate strategy for investors might be to identify 10 or 15 of these quality names and invest in these stocks in equal weighting. |
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When the user is building a trail, he names it, inserts the name in his code book, and taps it out on his keyboard. |
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Since 1975, all outstanding trees and shrubs have been tagged and their common and Latin names recorded. |
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The council is appealing to key workers and existing housing association tenants to put their names down on the shared ownership register. |
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In a competitive market where hundreds of brand names jostle for attention, several are emerging as the next big thing. |
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Examples of Australian names are balmainer, dingo fish, fiddler ray, flake, hardyhead, jollytail, jumping joey, mouth almighty, and snotty. |
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If you and your partner have joint cards, make sure you have a card in one of your names only. |
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Viruses and worms can even spread by sending themselves out via email to the names listed in the email address books of infected computers. |
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Other names for a dama gazelle are addra gazelle, mhorr gazelle, and red-necked gazelle. |
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They searched her bag and found the names and phone numbers of former security chiefs in her address book. |
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Somalis have Americanized their names in order to apply for jobs and housing, Mohamud said. |
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Children use their father's first name as their last name, so last names change every generation. |
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So he would go to children and try and worm these names out of them in a way which is deeply shocking to me. |
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The Senate roll call features the names of more millionaires than many country clubs. |
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But looking through the list, I come across names whose inclusion defies any reasonable justification. |
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The same occurred in the Crimea, where all Tatar city, school, and street names were changed. |
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We have charts that show the names of all the runways, taxiways, terminals, etc. |
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During the medieval era of chivalry, the names of English maidens and bachelors were put into boxes and drawn out in pairs. |
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In our notebook were pages of names and phone numbers of friends he wished to be contacted on his demise. |
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Here are some examples of Wendish names with both the Wendish spelling and the German spelling. |
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Their comments area is populated with people openly posting their first name and last names as attribution. |
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There was more resistance in the recalling of proper names than to common names. |
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While several names have been floated for her replacement, on Capitol Hill, lute and Allen have the most senior level support. |
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As part of her oral examination, she had to recite the names of all the presidents. |
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8-syllable names are rarely used baby names for boys. |
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Witnesses threatened to recant their testimony when the court released their names to the paper. |
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In the Millian view, proper names have denotation, but not connotation. |
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The court could release select portions of its orders, while redacting specific facts, including the names of individuals and organizations who are surveillance targets. |
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The problem with screen names or handles deserves some amplification. |
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Two by two the names were rattled off until only a handful were left. |
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But names such as The Devils, The Angels, or The Saints would have been accepted despite the fact that they are heavily laden with religious connections. |
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On 22 February 1990 Mr Green executed a deed of gift transferring his freehold and leasehold interests into the joint names of his wife and himself. |
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Domain names have at least two parts, separated by a dot or period. |
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I stood next to him once in a receiving line, and was amazed at his memory for names and faces. |
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The Waler, bred originally from the pastures of Hunter Valley stock-horses, first made names for themselves with the Light Horsemen at the turn of the 20th century. |
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Night after night, he correctly answered brain teasers like naming the two U.S. Presidents whose middle names are also the last names of two other Presidents. |
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The Fort Meade monthly report does not record the names of the mission's enlisted men, but it is unlikely a wagoner and cook would have been left behind on a long march. |
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All your ill-gotten gains should be returned to those you stole from, regardless of whose names they are in. |
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Under the new Act for regulating the trial of controverted elections, you will, in the discharge of your duty, call over the names in the alphabetical list of Members. |
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Some personal names have undoubtedly gone down in the world. |
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The very names negative numbers, irrational numbers, transcendental numbers, imaginary numbers, and ideal points at infinity indicate ambivalence. |
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If your company sells on the Web or even has a bare-bones Web presence, you should consider trademarking your corporate names and symbols in other countries. |
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Actually, many of the top names today offer bagless vacuums. |
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Daryl Hannah plays the mermaid who names herself after an avenue and eats the whole lobster. |
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So we can jig and reel, and strathspey, we are capable of pas de pax setting, possettes and allemande, and we even know the names of some of the people that go there. |
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And if players are unwilling to take responsibility for naming names then they can hardly complain about those who attempt to administer the laws. |
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He knew thousands of place names by heart, and he could reel them off. |
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The names of nearly 2.5 million of the fallen are inscribed here, all of whom are considered to be divine spirits worshiped under Japan's pantheistic Shinto religion. |
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First-choice half back Sean Long endured a nightmare first half at the JJB and should be relegated to the bench when coach David Waite names his side today. |
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A respected writer and academic, he drops names like confetti, judges everyone, hates to lose at anything and has an arrogance that knows no bounds. |
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It may be now legal for minors to donate to campaigns, but I believe there is a requirement that the donors' names over a minimum amount be reported, is there not? |
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Before the commencement of the festival young maidens put their names into a hat and the young men picked out the name of the girl who would be their partner for the festival. |
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In this category proper names have always been popular, and by the end of the 20th century this had become the most common way of generating new rhymes. |
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I've been critical of people or groups of people on my website, but in the case of non-public figures, I never named names or put words into their mouth. |
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As the names of the sponsoring organizations suggest, the new survey was particularly interested in the role of religion. |
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First names are not used, a classic public school affectation. |
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Earlier immigrants often discovered with surprise that immigration officials had Americanized their names on the documents that admitted them to the country. |
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Many primitive societies attach existential weight to the names of things. |
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Since our launch in November 1999, billions of pounds have been wiped off the value of our competitors, and many established names in telecoms have collapsed. |
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Think of all the miserable children of millionaires with more money than they know what to do with, washing around the gossip columns, famous for their names and nothing else. |
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All the big names have proprietary power saving programs that monitor CPU activity and respond accordingly to try to extend battery life on portables. |
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This event was hugely successful with a Race Card of fifty-one races and over seventy generous sponsors whose names were listed on the official programme. |
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As customary they will both get their names on the monthly medal board and be eligible for the Gold final, but Terry won the plate on a count back. |
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The names of the three girls were entered into the appropriate databases, and their passports were flagged. |
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Many of the names belong to people of Arabic, African or Asian descent. |
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One former employee of the New Voter Project has told me that many staffers simply took names out of the telephone book to fill out their daily quotas. |
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He lists the names of dyers, weavers, and embroiderers where possible. |
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Those whose names survive are shipwrights who were likely to have overseen the construction of a model much as they did the building of an actual ship. |
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Knots of dealers and speculators crowd the observation gallery, gossiping and watching the tote board, a huge black panel with company names and prices in glowing red. |
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All of my life I've been called names but never white trash. |
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Audiences, heads aswim with new names and dates, might note with surprise how little light the 12-hour day has shed on Stoppard's political views. |
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His clients include some of the biggest names in the industry, like Dana DeArmond and belladonna. |
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Forget attention deficit disorder, childhood depression and all the other neo-medical names used to explain why children can be unhappy or anxious. |
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The ancient cities, the dreamy harbors, the sonorous street names that no longer existed. |
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Some tapes were labelled with the names of children and women and detailed information about the film, even whether the footage was light or dark. |
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Perth's suburbs and streets have English names and gardens full of pruned roses, and retirees in starched white play sedate games of lawn bowls in quiet suburbs. |
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White lines on a black floor are labeled with names of streets. |
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The Times ended up publishing some documents that did not redact the names of active intelligence officers. |
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And don't you know that proper names are usually capitalized? |
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Tosches documents the rise and fall of minstrelsy in an impressive, sometimes dizzying chronicle of long-forgotten names that made me wish the book had an audio component. |
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Indeed, whitebait is one of the numerous alternative common names which are used of this fish, others being green smelt, shiner, spearing, and sperling. |
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Shaggy cap, shaggy mane, and lawyer's wig are all names for Coprinus comatus, an edible mushroom common in Britain and generally in temperate zones. |
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Aitken recited the names and numbers of all the members of his platoon. |
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The longer he continues in practice, the fewer the names recalled, and the therapy diminishes to calamine lotion, Lassar's paste, sulphur ointment, and chrysarobin. |
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It's really an address book, but it serves very well to record the names of my plants in alphabetical order, together with where they came from and when I planted them. |
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This has the appearance of dispensing with the use of proper names and dispensing also with the recognition of what proper names typically refer to, viz. individuals. |
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She dumped her many bags at her feet, the designer labels of Gucci, Versace and Prada among many other charming store names marked clearly on the side of the bags. |
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It is possible but not demonstrable that the Scandinavians also coined primary habitative names whose referents were settlements established in valleys. |
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Just think, if the people who are now kvetching about freedom of speech simply posted their names on the website, then none of the speculation would have happened. |
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For Owen, to whom speaking English has brought success and respectability, anglicising Irish place names represents the modernisation of Ireland as a nation. |
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A Book Of Remembrance in front of the clock names those killed in action including officers, non-commissioned officers, airmen and airwomen of many units and nations. |
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Depending on whether you use a Greek, Hebrew, or English number scheme, a lot of different names add up to the devilish number. |
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The announcement names his parents, Wanda and timothy, and hers, Katharine and Charles. |
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It placed a counter in the start-up routine of the computer and after ninety reboots it initiated a process that encrypted the names of most of the files on the hard disk. |
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They didn't know how often Ray called him names or hit or sassed him. |
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The experiment then compares proper names with common names. |
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After all, the biggest names in the art world have cultivated their craft through heartbreak and emotional strife. |
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And part of the art is devising names that convey the essence of the condition and all its ramifications. |
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The names revealed can then be researched in newspapers of the time and at the National Archive, where records of wills, births and deaths will reveal further information. |
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The issue of names also illustrates that neither systems of social relatedness nor the inheritance systems that are connected to them develop and exist in isolation. |
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Their names allude to the doomed Antarctic expedition led by Captain Scott, where Oates nobly sacrificed his life in a vain attempt to save Scott and his team. |
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Yes, she grew up in Kikbirnie, heartland of the Ayrshire steelworks, where her school chums rejoiced in names like Lenin McKay and Joseph Stalin McGregor. |
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Artists would use pen names and scrawl them across subway cars, walls, shops, and office buildings. |
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He could spell the names of all his classmates, and he loved building with Lincoln Logs and tinker Toys. |
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I responded rather half-heartedly with a fairly tame story from my past, and chucked her the names of a few people who I thought might be better suited. |
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They went back and cleaned up the data in their individual databases, recoding parts information so that everyone was working with the same names and numbers for each part. |
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As she nods off at night, Arya Stark mutters the names of every scoundrel she plans to kill someday. |
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Town Clerk Helen Dowling said the council had drawn up a list of derelict buildings and would be sending out notices to owners whose names appeared on the register. |
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Once the home of John Grey, one of the great names in Irish yachting, this Victorian mid-terrace property is now owned by the artist Desmond McCarthy. |
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She explained that Nunavut's new election law forbids the posting of voters' lists containing the names and addresses of voters, for reasons of confidentiality and security. |
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Like in the movies, big names guarantee a big audience on Broadway. |
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Some prejudices have names such as racism, sexism, or ageism. |
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Some almanac information, such as names of current heads of state, has been relegated to supporting Web sites that will presumably provide updates. |
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The calls come after the malvertising attacks, in which fake ads are placed on well-known sites, reaching millions of people through names they trust. |
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Some English place names still contain elements derived from Common Brittonic. |
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They show that the majority of names used were derived from Common Brittonic. |
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It featured aircraft with names such as the Flying Banana, Autogiro and Sky Crane. |
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But the magnificent striped, mottled, and hemlined skirts, and the martial names the tulip hybrids used to have, are long gone. |
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Ipe, which is also known as iron-wood, is one of many commercial names used for the Lapacho group of trees from various species of Tabebuia. |
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Six new names were proposed by the Minister in October 1963 for boroughs unable to decide upon a name. |
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A few more extensive notes clarify Biblical names and units of measurement or currency. |
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