After swinging the banjo for eight hours, I sit down to write a few lines on what I think to be right. |
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By practicing some simple Zen philosophies, you'll be able to let go of little things that don't matter so you can focus on what really does. |
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The questionnaire, on one side of A4 paper, asks people to express their opinions on what matters to them about the village. |
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I make this prediction based on what we know about biology, which is that natures abhors uniformity. |
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Instead, the flow was smooth in places, then abrupt, depending on what was most effective for that part of the show. |
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You should focus your efforts on what makes a time abuser anxious instead of teaching him how to organize his day. |
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He said he hoped his views would be taken into account when a decision was made on what disciplinary action would be taken against the officer. |
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That has to be a question of opinion rather than fact, so it depends on what you make of the evidence. |
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Before looking at the results, let's do a quick recap on what happens in the formation of an embryo. |
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Her eyelids open even more as she struggles to focus on what I'm waving under her nose. |
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Today was our first time back with the race car, so we're trying to find the right balance and setup based on what we ran on the other car. |
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I can't quite put my finger on what it is, and I start looking around the room for moldy food or drink cups or small, dead animals. |
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Perhaps I should stop journaling so that he doesn't eavesdrop on what I've written. |
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With no fires raging, Williams had some time to share his lessons on the art of understanding fires and on what it takes to put them out. |
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The next day the Widgery Tribunal was announced, making meaningful reporting on what had happened sub judice. |
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Base your decision on pace depending on what will happen to the ball after the hole. |
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As a result, the castmembers themselves seem to have ad-libbed most of the week, based on what I imagine was a rough sketch of a few plot points. |
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Speakers will give their views on what the trust is doing well and where there is room for improvement. |
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She sees everything and communicates to the staff her clear views on what should be happening. |
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He flies down to Cataluna and tries to locate her based on what little information he has about her. |
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Much of the debate centred on what money and powers the Government would give assemblies. |
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This is a great film that may leave you reflecting on what luck you've been dealt in life. |
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I should have known better than to comment on what a lovely morning it was this morning. |
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So basing any decision on what is most likely to be a random share price pattern is in reality like pouring money down the drain. |
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Importantly, the site also offers advice on what to do should your debt have run out of control. |
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Opinion is divided on what can be done to keep the roads open when it snows. |
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Turnbull is the only one of the 50 subjects so far to blow the whistle on what he now believes is a scandal. |
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But she blew the whistle on what she believed was misconduct in the military, and in 2000, she was dismissed on medical grounds. |
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But on what basis does a government excuse its meddling into the private financial affairs of its citizens? |
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Whether it is ever opened depends largely on what happens in the coming weeks. |
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We watched for about twenty minutes trying to get a read on what the skies were doing. |
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If we had inspectors in the country we could keep at least a limited read on what sort of progress he was making. |
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This iteration builds on what was achieved in its predecessor, without making wholesale changes that could alienate fans of the original. |
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The ban on what opponents call partial birth abortion is likely to pass by a wide margin when it comes up for a vote scheduled in the Senate. |
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However it failed to reach a decision on what to recommend on marriages involving in-laws. |
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He knows he's not supposed to dwell on what was or agonize about what might be. |
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This meeting was to discuss the views of patients and professionals on what to do in a crisis and to negotiate agreed solutions. |
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He will also present his views on what has been achieved so far and what is yet to come. |
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Even if you end up rejecting their feedback, get a second opinion on what ails you. |
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Every centre deals with common ailments and can give you advice on what to do about non-urgent conditions. |
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More than 100 people aired their views on what should happen to a two kilometre stretch of land along the River Wharfe. |
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It's most effective used as a road map of the recent past, or more trivially, a window on what happened the year you were born. |
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They feed two to three bales a day, depending on what other feeds are available. |
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This, to me, gives a truer sense of the Universe as it is, and has totally recolored my views on what life is all about. |
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But within that period, the price of a gilt may move up and down depending on what else is happening to interest rates. |
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The two witnesses were not challenged on what they had said to those police witnesses on cross-examination. |
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I didn't explain myself very well in one paragraph, so I expanded on what I meant. |
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Mr Haslam said he could not comment on what would happen to the hotel if the application was turned down. |
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It is relevant to reflect for a moment on what, exactly, diplomatic immunity is. |
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It is relevant to reflect just for a moment on what our history of law reporting in New Zealand has been. |
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This section is intended to give a brief refresher on what really happens when one applies a data transformation. |
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There are also individual coaching decisions on what crews race at which international regattas. |
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She joined a gym and restarted the programme with an exercise regime based on what she had done for rehabilitation. |
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As we were getting changed, I noticed some of my new team-mates were putting on what looked like cricket boxes. |
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It must be a matter for the defence to decide on what is relevant to the case it has to meet. |
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When my mother much later remarked on what fun I seemed to have with my own children it went to my heart. |
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The multiplier of the hazard rate is the independent multiplicative effect of a variable on what a rate would have been otherwise. |
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Next morning we had time for a quick dip in the ocean after breakfast before setting out on what was really the last lap of the journey. |
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I don't expect any breakthroughs but slight amendments that improve on what already exists. |
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It was hoped, Witbooi added, that this would sensitise the youth on what was wrong and right in society. |
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Like members of the public at large, the judge does not instruct jurors in a criminal case on what to think. |
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The thing about winning in life is you've got to concentrate on what is necessary to reach the top. |
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There is nothing worse than relying on what can all too often turn out to be non-existent rentals to pay off a large mortgage. |
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The foregoing simulation simply assumes that the trials replicate themselves based on what works. |
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The spectator observes a certain space and has the capacity to report on what their eyes see. |
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Climbing up the lattice made Cerri dizzy, so as she climbed, she focused her thoughts on what she'd say to Alia to convince her to stay. |
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Depending on what you serve with your tomato dish, try drinking a Chardonnay, a Fume Blanc, a Chenin Blanc, a Zinfandel or a Syrah. |
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We built a little palace in our garden, on what used to be the croquet lawn. |
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It might help us get a new angle on what we have here in Saltaire as well as finding out more about the other World Heritage sites. |
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But even if successful in all respects, who will benefit, and on what genetic disorders will the therapy be practiced? |
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Based on what I have learned from past experiences, here are some pointers to make the most of your camp's video or photography shoot. |
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The Leader of the House is saying that the Minister did not have enough time to discover on what date he learnt a piece of information. |
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What appears in paragraph 19 is not probative on what it says beyond the document annexed to it. |
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But this is a situation with no easy answers, and there are real limits on what even a country as powerful as the United States can do about it. |
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The type of lemon tree you choose to plant depends on what your needs are, where you live, and how much space you've got. |
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We live in an age of exploding information, but we act less and less on what we hear. |
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Fine weather in the village on Sunday was the icing on the cake on what was a great day at the Ballyroan Vintage Rally. |
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Fungal skin infections are divided into groups depending on what type of organism is involved. |
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In simple additions, the carbonyl compounds can behave as both Lewis acids and Lewis bases depending on what reagents are present. |
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This work relied on what would now be called a dynamic shear rheometer which was built at ARRB by Peter Witt. |
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Historical lexicographers, like myself, even look down on what is regarded as the Golden Age of Language. |
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They get asked a zillion questions at these press conferences, and mostly they keep a lid on what they've been saying. |
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But now there will be no putting a lid on what will be a huge clamour for a windfall from customers who have every right to it. |
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Ligand field theory, like crystal field theory, concentrates on what happens when ligands split the central metal atom's inner orbitals. |
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Police said they wanted to speak to a man seen in the area who might be able to shed light on what happened. |
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It is believed the documents shed light on what ministers were told about the case during its long history. |
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Would a little less pseudo-science and a little more right-brain reflection on what real people feel and do give us some more valid insights? |
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We hope he has a good accountant and focuses mainly on what he is good at, in order not to confuse people any further. |
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They argue that more international attention is needed on what amounts to hidden apartheid. |
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Will felt like he was missing something but couldn't put his finger on what it was. |
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There have been attempts at various times in history to try to place certain limitations on what is permitted in war. |
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It focuses on what we intend to give, rather than what we would like to receive, and in this respect it appeals to me a great deal. |
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What fascinated me though was in Wallace's communist football Utopia he was crook on what some clubs were able to pay their assistant coaches. |
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The bus station is set to be built on what is currently Osborne Street, and link with the proposed Vineyard Gate shopping development. |
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Because the buildings are all listed, however, there are strict constraints on what alterations can be made. |
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There are literally thousands of techniques you can use, and it all depends on what rings true for you. |
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Wales march on, but for poor tired Italy, the long flight home will be a chance to reflect on what might have been. |
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We get paid for making records and we get a royalty on what is sold of course, but we're self-financing. |
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I'm sure he looks in every once in a while to check up on what we've all been saying. |
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He just gave us a diatribe on what there is now, as opposed to what there was in the past. |
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Marcus assisted Vandal in putting on what he called the lorica segmentata, the main part of amour that protected the torso. |
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Ian Patrick, meanwhile, was ruminating on what he'd overheard the secretary say. |
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In all these works, the artist brings a novelist's sweep to his ruminations on what was once optimistically named the Century of Progress. |
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Other lawyers said he was crazy to gamble millions of his firm's hours and resources on what looked like lost causes. |
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Clearly, the assiduousness with which this step should be undertaken will depend on what informs it. |
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She focuses on what is useful to a painter today in the historical traditions through which she lovingly browses. |
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The meeting was very informal and the girls were able to bombard Claudie with questions on what life is like as an astronaut. |
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It relied on what the French or Russians did and the actions of one would provoke a German response and not the other way round. |
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A good attention-grabbing opener will get the person you're talking to more focused on what you have to say. |
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A governing body kept tabs on what the public was watching, and there was constant dialogue with the producers of the shows. |
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And, exactly for this reason, he had been keeping a tab on what is happening on the board of his immediate challenger. |
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Too many training methods place too much emphasis on what kind of tack or equipment to use with the trainer conveniently selling that equipment. |
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On the threat level, our considerations depend on what the outcome of the authentication is. |
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He relied on what volumes he could get and the notes he had taken on the books he had read. |
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Don't take anything that Gibson wrote about as gospel on what Voudoun is about. |
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A modern version of the same book will have a different take on what we should know. |
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Should he take the governor up on what is apparently a serious suggestion that the two of them debate? |
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We asked experts at Sotheby's for advice on what to do with them, because they were costing a lot of money in insurance and cleaning bills. |
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He also gives regular talks to schoolchildren on what dog-ownership involves. |
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Stephen could place his own sardonic stamp on what were in some cases widely shared late Victorian literary tastes. |
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Revelation is an inspired perspective on what the world looks like after God perfects it according to God s divine and judging will. |
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We know blogging has hit the mainstream for sure when companies are trying to make a profit on what started as a grass-roots effort. |
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The play tears a strip off beauty pageants, satirizing their supermodel-thin take on what qualifies as beauty. |
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Judgements on what is tasteful and what is not in a burial ground are not easy. |
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I hadn't had time to ponder on what my taster of a Bird Experience Day at Leighton Hall's falconry would involve. |
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It depends on what kind of deliberation we expect out of the candidates over the coming weeks and the decisions they make after they're elected. |
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He's turned his back on what his duty was, to serve the public, not his buddies in government. |
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Accept this, and be not afraid to turn your back on what you were in order to become something else. |
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He then turned his back on what he had always known and walked into a new life. |
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The water of the seas was its true color blue or even a shade of teal, depending on what light it was under. |
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As such, a department in the suitor's role often finds itself expending time, energy and self-esteem on what turns out to be an elaborate tease. |
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Even so, while at SPOT, it's hard to get a handle on what Danish music might be, its particular Scandi flavour. |
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We kept the ball very well on what was a difficult pitch, and I thought our back four were outstanding. |
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The party was counting the cost yesterday of several humiliating losses in West Yorkshire on what proved a difficult night at Thursday's council elections. |
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Though the network often used freelancers, I'd never worked with Bill before so I was trying to get a line on what he was seeing through his lens. |
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In other words, we have money, but no plan on what to do with it, or more important, how to achieve our goals so we don't look like welchers on the world stage. |
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Lessons are well planned and build well on what pupils have learnt before. |
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Other stories tell of his close calls and the controversial landing he made on what was supposed to be a dry lake bed in Nevada. |
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The problem is, even child labor officials aren't quite up to speed on what it means to protect kids from commodification. |
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Japan-Korea ties will hinge on what Tokyo expects and can ultimately get out of Pyongyang, especially in security assurances versus war reparations. |
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John Kael Weston, who spent years in both, reflects on what another war would mean after the folly of the last two. |
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Army vet Jacob Siegel on what unites a congresswoman, businessman, med student, and martial artist. |
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Much will hinge on what happens in 2014, in the coming crisis negotiations and then in the elections. |
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Create a living smorgasbord that includes plants with berries, foliage, fruit, nectar, nuts, pollen, sap, and seeds, so critters can dine on what they like. |
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Vox has a helpful listicle up on what insurance can and cannot do. |
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Depending on what potentiality he develops, he may become a plant, an animal, a celestial being, an angel, or he may even be unified with God himself. |
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World number one Lleyton Hewitt stormed past Michael Chang at the Japan Open, on what may prove to be the Chinese-American's last tournament appearance in Asia. |
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One way to lose friends but perhaps gain wider influence is to blow the whistle on what your conscience tells you is sharp practice, by government or employer. |
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Michelle Cottle on what the freak-out reveals about the GOP's splintered base. |
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Longtime press baron and Murdoch frenemy Conrad Black on what Michael Wolff got wrong in his new biography of the media titan. |
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We have no information yet on what other flights were in the air then, and what they encountered. |
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With his quiet but affecting meditations on what constitutes the self, Sakuma makes us aware of our relation to others and of our existence and its inevitable end. |
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They scratched a living from shrimp and whelk, operating one or two lobster pots and surviving on what the trawlermen chucked back into the waters. |
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It is easy to believe that the devil has a lock on what is popular. |
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You can turn it over 17 times in your head and not really get a clear bead on what all that craziness means. |
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Unseen and unknown, he lived in secret, creeping into homes in the dead of night and surviving on what he could steal. |
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That they are being granted the opportunity to don their kendo masks and armour and arm themselves on what amounts to home turf makes them a little more excited. |
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As these centres became politically agglomerated in the 16th century, variations on what soon became virtually an artistic canon became more solely individual than regional. |
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It ups the ante on what popular history can, and should, do. |
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In this short-lived microrepublic, all the men were members of the legislative General Assembly and had a vote on what was law. |
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Hollywood has developed a habit of relying on what worked best in the past, and 300 was hugely successful. |
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Then throw in insurance costs, an excise tax depending on what state you live in, and increasingly expensive tolls. |
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It is just that their school places an emphasis on what it holds to be important subjects, hires good teachers and instils the necessary ambition in pupils. |
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Our city editors are seasoned food editors who handpick every restaurant based on what we love. |
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People are open and receptive to timely suggestions on what to drink. |
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Councils must start giving the public clear information on what to do if they find a needle and offer staff training on how to safely remove sharps. |
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The Italians and the Albanians had very firm ideas on what was right. |
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There have been radical changes in the regulation of air travel, from a newly federalized security system to tighter restrictions on what items can be brought onto a plane. |
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Neither dayan nor the people she interviewed elaborated on what P-plus meant. |
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A format war has broken out among online music vendors, with competing compression and anti-piracy software determining what songs play on what devices. |
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We always want to focus on what we can do to help, to find that glimmer of optimism. |
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Well, there are so many different polls that we've looked at trying to get a handle on what are the issues that are really going to drive the election. |
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Does this mean Bad Gal Ri-Ri's now defunct account on the social media site may have an effect on what people are buying? |
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Depending on what parts of the brain are impacted, the person can develop forms of dementia and personality changes. |
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Attacks are underreported and surveys often depend on what questions were asked and who responded. |
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People come to The Ball with many different goals in mind, depending on what they are looking for that evening. |
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When Columbus landed on what is now Puerto Rico, he saw Taino natives slow-roasting meat on a grid over a pit filled with smoldering, burned down wood. |
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My generation was raised on a diet of stultifyingly tedious, but worthy accounts of embryology, typically very badly printed on what appeared to be rice paper. |
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Stephen T. Asma, the author of Against Fairness, on what favoritism is good for. |
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It certainly doesn't reflect well on what we are trying to achieve. |
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The chapter focuses on what operations management and management accounting say about the sources of performance, and then looks at interorganizational control. |
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The Elliott camp argues, however, that he still might have decided to stay, depending on what Sherwood had to say. |
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The reaction on the doorstep has been very positive and the Green Party is hopeful it will pick up on what it says is a backlash against the Government parties. |
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From frosted tips to the samurai pony, Sujay Kumar on what Federer's hair says about his game. |
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My mom started teaching me to read at age three, and I never lacked for books and magazines and there were no restrictions on what I was allowed to read. |
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Eventually they were dispersed between Rome, Civitavecchia, and Savona, and await word on what to do next. |
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John would know exactly the parameters on what would be allowable. |
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Football, where swearing once held sway, is feeling the pinch as all-seater stadia, a greater gender mix and club regulations all have an effect on what can safely be said. |
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She also commented on what might be her most distinguishing feature, her pierced nose. |
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It frequently comments on what it sees as the 'lightness of sentencing', the perversity of jury decisions and the hedonistic life led by prisoners. |
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Taking on affirmative action is, in some ways, taking on what Sotomayor believes to be a key to her own success. |
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If America is fortunate, the economy will continue to improve, while the 2016 campaign will focus on what ails the country. |
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Can the anatomy of violence shed light on what made the Boston bombers tick? |
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The fliers, ancona explained, are meant to educate people on what rights they legally have to use lethal force in self-defense. |
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His absence is the latest sign of the balancing act the Republican must perform on what remains an unsettled political landscape. |
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Listening to Drs. Kim, Berwick, and Jarman reflect on what ought to be done gave me hope. |
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Finally, may I end with an observation on what makes David so attractive to the bien-pensant crowd? |
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Critics of the bigot should begin placing a bit less emphasis on what he says or feels than what he actually does. |
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Samuel P. Jacobs on what would be lost, and the possible death of the big-tent party. |
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Members of Congress have been briefed on it and on what the administration has been doing under its terms. |
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After all, there will always be a bureaucrat, politician, or judge eager to set the limits on what is unacceptably offensive. |
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Adam Mickiewicz waged a war for Polish independence on what were essentially Byronic principles. |
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The two SUWU shorties opened fire on what they mistook for rival shorties in a park, huddled under a canopy during a rainstorm. |
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Although many, busy in their commitments to the operation, were unable to attend, a modest crowd took the time to reflect on what Remembrance Day means to them. |
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Nobody would be in a position to give other than a personal view on what might happen if you engaged, for example, in amalgamations of these various bodies. |
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Ms Kelly said it was time to redraw the line on what was acceptable behaviour, and called for an end to backchat, lateness and ignoring uniform rules. |
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I suppose it all depends on what sort of harm you want to ward off. |
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The sardonic humour was wasted on him, and he begged me to give him the inside track on what drugs to take to win gold without the eternal shame of a life ban. |
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This also placed severe limitations on what could be explored. |
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Promoters, in their efforts to accumulate huge profits, are planning larger and larger events and it is time to put some serious controls on what is going on. |
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As the interview wound down, Bentivolio reflected on what may have motivated him to dress as Santa. |
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They were found on what was once the Thames foreshore, and would have been stored underwater in a wattle enclosure to stop the wood drying out and splitting. |
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If they were to initiate a genuine dialogue on what constitutes Canadian foreign policy, we believe that non-traditional departments should be brought into the discussion. |
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But as with Bagwell, many baseball writers will now vote against Clemens based on what they think they know. |
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The poll quizzed south-east Londoners on what they treasure most and least about the UK, in an attempt to find out what the UK's national treasure is. |
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Kaneb offers his thoughts on what sets Hood apart from the pack. |
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But if, what I call the true theory, should continue to agree with practice, the practitioner need not care on what it is founded. |
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When people put a lot on what their folks used to do, it always means they haven't got gimp enough left to do anything themselves. |
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At least with roll-ups you can keep tabs on what you put in, so I don't have to have a big fat cigarette every time. |
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Similarly, instructions on what to do if the fleet was instructed to take evasive action against torpedoes were amended. |
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Instruction was held in a new schoolhouse adjoining Trinity Church, located on what is now lower Broadway in Manhattan. |
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Also I think the councillor is wearing rose-tinted glasses with his comments on what students bring to the city. |
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Xmarks helps users discover the best sites on the Web based on what millions of people are bookmarking. |
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Club question Last week, Thelma Baker asked for ideas on what to use in runner bean trenches. |
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These examples prove that local topography can have a pronounced effect on temperature and thus on what is possible to grow in a specific region. |
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Rajab, who said that Libya's assets remained safe, did not elaborate on what he meant by reassessing the currency. |
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Slot Limits vary from lake to lake depending on what local officials believe would produce the best outcome for managing fish populations. |
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Here, members of the United States women's soccer team and their coach offer their thoughts on what makes a great teammate. |
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This transformation centers on what the author describes as the end of Kemalism as the Turkish guiding ideology. |
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A poignant retelling of this event based on what Goethe had personally witnessed can be found in his long poem Hermann and Dorothea. |
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They have no fields but simply live on what they get from the Slav's lands. |
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One study concludes that portolans originated from earlier charts drawn on what is now called the Mercator projection. |
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The English subsequently established a whaling station in Trinity Harbor, on what is now called Gravneset. |
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While abolitionists agreed on the evils of slavery, there were differing opinions on what should happen after African Americans were freed. |
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Neil deGrasse Tyson weighed in on what the epic film got wrong and right. |
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While still cautious, Selborne's bill was far more structured than Hatherley's, and contained more detail on what was to be done. |
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They embarked on what appears to have been a happy and successful marriage, though money was often short. |
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Depending on what practice the practitioner wishes to undertake, it can be done at a temple or at home. |
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And that's because just the timing worked on what was sort of gearing up. |
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Kir, forgive me for saying this, you cannot impose your unjust opinions on others, on what they should or should not support. |
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He contributed a number of papers in mathematics to the Royal Society, including one on what is now known as the Pollock's conjecture. |
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The term can have different meanings, depending on what law is being applied and what country it is used in and what context it is used in. |
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This initially proved difficult, and the King's speech opening Parliament was vague on what was to be done to neutralise the Lords' veto. |
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Alma Lurry, a resident of Ladera Heights and a retired LAUSD teacher, said Los Angeles needed to hear and act on what Villaraigosa had to say. |
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Your local pharmacy or the NHS Direct website provide great advice on what to have in your medicine cabinet to treat them. |
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Hansard Editors follow strict rules on what changes they can make to the words MPs use in the debating chamber. |
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This analysis was based on what Marx and Engels saw as the exceptional characteristics of the Russian village commune or obshchina. |
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Management had more authority on what went on during the show because they could see. |
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It just depends on what the story is and what the episode is in terms of the broadness of it or the subtly of it or how we're going to play it. |
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Nevertheless, there are variations on what is patentable subject matter from country to country, even among WTO member states. |
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Insects and reptiles make up a small proportion of the diet, which varies greatly depending on what prey is available. |
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Work on what was to become Wyre Dock began in 1869 but was suspended for financial reasons. |
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They are up in your business because you invited them in by spilling the tea on what you and your man earn. |
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These packs can be holding or driving devices, depending on what they are splined to. |
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He imposed a three line whip on what started out as a backbench debate on European Union membership. |
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Depending on what is appropriate, Pfaltzgraff's manufacturing methods include slip casting, jiggering and powder pressing. |
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So it depends on what side of the track you want to come from. |
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Apparently, this is the sekret cow code that will either allow you to point the cow or transgenderize it, depending on what you're after. |
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So if superstardom is not an option, how does your average school-leaver get a handle on what careers they might enjoy? |
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In their zigzaggingly argumentative way, the New Yorkers were taking their stand on what modern art was about. |
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Unfortunately the government went back on what was decided in Rajya Sabha and we could not discuss this issue of serious importance. |
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Newlyweds Stella and Stanley have a baby on the way and a rackety sort of life style on what we might call a work-style working class estate. |
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The frequency of revisitation depends on what your industry cycle time looks like, whether it's monthly or quarterly or yearly. |
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Our studies on qualitative and quantitative research has really helped me focus in on what type of research do I want to complete in my study. |
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Witnesses said a young man on what is believed to be a scrambler bike lay injured on the floor before being picked up by another bike. |
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It may not look much on paper but how effectively it immediately suggests melancholy, regret, and a pensive look back on what might-have-been. |
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Saatchi, with all his cash could have chosen to swallow the alleged fraud and kept the lid on what went on behind closed doors. |
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Modern palmistry differs from the ancient methods in concentrating on what is called chirognomy at the expense of chiromancy. |
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When she asks for guidance on what to do when she herself inevitably achieves corpsehood, the cadavers just sit there, mute and rotting. |
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Depending on what you print, one color usually depletes faster than the others. |
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The name America is placed on what is now called South America on the main map. |
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Bartlett elaborated on what had happened at the warehouse, saying he thought Chandar was supposed to have advised, not hosed him. |
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The crowd may generally have been ill-disposed toward arena performers, but that could change depending on what was going on at any given time. |
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It was a vote, Woodfoot thought, tasting the pleasant bitterness of the kinnekinnic, a vote on what happened to the Indian. |
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The government reserved the right to instruct the Bank on what rate to set in times of emergency. |
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The last three chapters are a digression on what God's goodness might entail. |
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It encompasses much of Lincoln's Inn Fields and lies adjacent to the Royal Courts of Justice and Kingsway on what used to be Clare Market. |
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It respects the play, but it doesn't provide any new material for arcane debates on what it all means. |
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His views on what he saw as oppression and restriction of rightful freedom extended to the Church. |
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When he was three, he went to England with his mother and brother on what was intended to be a lengthy family visit. |
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The film featured fan footage from throughout the world on what musician Bruce Springsteen meant to them and how he impacted their lives. |
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Mendes married British actress Kate Winslet in May 2003 on what they characterised as a whim while on holiday in Anguilla. |
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I would never do an impression of anybody else or try and improve on what they did. |
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The trainer and assistant typically give advice to the boxer on what he is doing wrong as well as encouraging him if he is losing. |
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Disraeli kept himself informed on foreign affairs, and on what was going on in cabinet, thanks to a source within it. |
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The service also gives advice on what to do before, during and after a flood. |
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Williams began working on what would be his fifth studio album, spending a year in the recording studio. |
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The essay was one of the first on what would become known as pop art, though Factor did not use the term. |
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The first Asians to set foot on what would be the United States occurred in 1587, when Filipino sailors arrived in Spanish ships at Morro Bay. |
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He then introduced the practice of following the lecture with a viva voce examination on what had been delivered. |
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Suzy is escorted to a smallish study carrel, where she sits down on what may or may not be a noncreaky chair and faces the computer. |
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The sequence of threads, known as the sett, starts at an edge and either repeats or reverses on what are called pivot points. |
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Historian Don Farr wrote that Haig's entries are at odds with the facts and that he relied heavily on what Horne had told him. |
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When founded in 1833, fewer than 200 people had settled on what was then the American frontier. |
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However, just as the critics are not of one mind in their criticism, so they are far from united on what to do. |
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Depending on what a nuclear reactor is fueled with, the actinide composition in the SNF will be different. |
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The notion of overfishing hinges on what is meant by an acceptable level of fishing. |
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Whether or not a norm is of such a quality depends on what we call the doctrine of justiciability. |
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Depending on what is available it will eat small crabs, fish, crayfish, grasshoppers and other large insects, lizards and amphibians. |
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Each night, The Showstoppers create a musical from scratch based on what the audience comes up with. |
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