And so the intolerance that plagues this country continues unconfronted and unabated. |
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One generation saw the plagues in Egypt, the Red Sea parting, and the awesome majesty of Sinai. |
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Learn two powerful autohypnotic relaxation techniques that can help you feel in control of the stress that plagues you. |
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Track down that effeminate foreigner who plagues our women with this new disease, and fouls the whole land with licentious lechery. |
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Although for Newton the Apocalypse would be accompanied by plagues and war, it would be the storm before the calm. |
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The system is obviously working well since the litigiousness that plagues other countries is here only a patchy and sporadic affair. |
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No, the real curse here is the so-called sophomore curse that often plagues the follow-up projects of successful movies. |
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Consequently the Reformed believer does not live with the constant sense of insecurity that plagues the Arminian. |
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When people are dropping like flies in plagues and epidemics, some actually recover, while others in their midst remain unscathed. |
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In dealing with plagues, diseases, and hunger, she is rightly skeptical about plague's being bubonic in the modern sense. |
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Women are giving birth to dead babies, the crops are failing, the rain isn't falling, there are blights and there are plagues. |
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For once there wasn't even the usual amount of unending faff and delay that plagues the start of club trips. |
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Zimbabwe's beleaguered population could be forgiven for wondering how many more plagues are to be visited upon them. |
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He's been thrown into jail, endured unimaginable heat, insect plagues and a serious fall which had to be stitched without anesthetic. |
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Ecovec is a company specialized in monitoring urban plagues, especially the Aedes aegypti mosquito, vector of breakbone fever. |
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Unsolicited junk mail and intrusive sales calls are plagues on modern society. |
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But we're here to talk about mice and particularly the fact that there are plagues in the wheat belt and so on. |
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The profession that has been snickeringly compared to assorted plagues, now seems to be the target of one. |
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The physician's challenge is the curing of disease, educating the people in the laws of health, and preventing the spread of plagues and pestilences. |
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As I learned it in Hebrew School, the Pharaoh brings the plagues on himself with his hardheartedness. |
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Of course, Europe is not holding a people against its will, but we cannot simply skim over the plagues which are hitting our agriculture. |
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They have no authority to confront the Pharaoh directly, no strength to make demands of him, no power to call down plagues upon him. |
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And the rest of the men which were not killed by these plagues yet repented not of the works of their hands. |
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The recycling feature that plagues the graphics and sound also plague the gameplay, considering that most of the style moves are virtually cribbed from the original title. |
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Tacking on vibraphones to clumsy, endlessly repetitive garage rock does nothing but emphasize the complete lack of original ideas that plagues this album. |
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Called dental calculus, or tartar, this hardened plaque still plagues many, and dentists attack it with metal picks and abrasives. |
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The natural plagues and the saints' martyrdom by the Antichrist are included in the first and second woes. |
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Fear is one of the most important plagues of our society and is the cause of an ineffable amount of psychical and physical complaints. |
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Out of the opened temple come the angels who have the seven plagues which they are just about to pour out on unrepentant men. |
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These vials are the seven last plagues that will come upon those who are destroying the earth. |
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It plagues most countries of the hemisphere with a variety of ills including addiction, corruption, violence and other illicit activities. |
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Sometimes material reality creates that unbearableness: droughts, plagues, storms, floods. |
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A second song of Moses also describes the coming of devastating plagues, as a response to the corruption and unrepentance of men. |
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And men were scorched with great heat, and blasphemed the name of God, which has power over these plagues. |
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I spent an hour or so lying in bed contemplating those pictures you see of mouse plagues in Australia and understanding finally why it is that people get bread bins. |
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Corruption plagues effective governance, discourages investment, obstructs progress towards poverty alleviation and hampers development. |
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The unclean spirits of the satanic trinity are like frogs, reminding us of the magicians' enchantments during the plagues in Egypt. |
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This alignment of memory with orality in opposition to literacy remains a contemporary problem that plagues rhetorical memory, as the emphasis on memorization implies. |
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The IPM means that we use the natural enemies of pests, such as ichneumon wasps or ladybirds, to fight plagues. |
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Most of us would agree that access to quality education is the surest way to eradicate the poverty that plagues so many Aboriginal communities. |
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But there's disappointment in store when Rameses refuses to listen to Moses's plea to let his people go, and Egypt is visited by … four plagues. |
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Their differences aside, both groups bonded over the shared goal of escaping gangs and the violence that plagues their respective communities. |
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The Flash Appeal process allows organisations to avoid the fragmentation and competing proposal problems that plagues humanitarian assistance. |
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The plagues advanced from land to land and even the elements have made heard their voice of justice and reproach at so much evil. |
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These three plagues remain the most pressing challenges for the world and compete with early childhood care for funding. |
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This year we were spared devastating hurricanes, severe drought and plagues. |
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The vulnerability of the population is exacerbated by emergencies such as cholera, yellow fever, locust plagues and floods. |
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These are two plagues CIMMYT one day intends to fi ght using genetically modifi ed wheat varieties. |
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These conflicts and disasters have created poverty, unemployment, plagues, and homelessness. |
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Yet, the persistence of social exclusion significantly impedes poverty reduction efforts and plagues economic growth and social development. |
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Could you tell us about the measures launched to reduce poverty, which still plagues a good portion of the Azerbaijan's people? |
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The addiction to adjectives that plagues so much fantasy writing has vanished. |
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One of the new products DeLaval is launching is a high tech insecticide to control on-farm plagues that harass animals. |
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Trees are hard to kill, but their populations can be decimated by the same types of parasitic or bacterial plagues that can destroy human populations. |
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The time has come for a Basic Income Grant as one way of responding to the degrading poverty that plagues our country and weighs heavily upon our minds and morality. |
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These, he insisted, were harbingers of the twin plagues of socialism and secular humanism. |
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But what Shteyngart describes is the sort of dysfunction that occasionally plagues even the best and most solvent carrier. |
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True to its common name, the East Coast sea nettle, Chrysaora quinquecirrha, lives along the United States' eastern shore and plagues swimmers with painful welts. |
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Cooking up scientific explanations of the plagues has been a pastime for years. |
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The lack of natural checks and balances from top predators and browsers has led to some species teetering on the brink of extinction, while others spread like plagues. |
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God promised he would release them from slavery, but not before Pharaoh had refused their release and God had visited ten plagues on Egypt to demonstrate his power. |
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From there came the years in Egypt, ending when Moses brought forth the plagues to convince Pharaoh to let his people go, and the parting of the Red Sea. |
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The two witnesses will respond by calling for more plagues to come upon unrepentant mankind. |
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A lot of depredators that live in the fences contribute to fight the crops' plagues, for example the bird of prey decreases the population of rodents, which are very bad for agriculture. |
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Likewise, the goal of the seven last plagues will be to free the people of God from the oppression of Babylon, the apostate power of the last days. |
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Armies of workers suffered in the pursuit of the tsar's dream, laid low in the winter by bitter cold and in the summer by epidemics and mosquito plagues. |
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A confidential meeting behind closed doors is to be held to discuss Japanese knotweed, which plagues headgerows, verges and riverbanks. |
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One might also wonder why the Legal Service felt it necessary to delete all references to mobbing, a phenomenon which plagues many companies and civil services. |
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When the plagues of the seven bowls are poured, everyone, regardless of how powerful or strong, will tremble in fear of the great disasters that will descend upon them from the wrath of God above. |
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These two will prophesy of events that are coming, and their message will be reinforced by the power of God Almighty, through signs and miracles, mostly in the form of plagues and control over weather. |
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Nitrogen pollution plagues New Hampshire's Great Bay estuary, depleting eelgrass beds and threatening fish populations. |
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Ten Biblical plagues over Egypt, ranging from locusts to the death of the crown prince, finally forced Pharaoh to let Moses's people go. |
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What a lot of wars, invasions plagues and expropriations the monasteries have suffered during eight centuries and when the danger diminished then their communities reassembled again to carry on. |
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The Commerce Minister Cham Prasidh, 14 March 2005, vowed to resign at the end of the year if by that time corruption still plagues the taxation and regulation of the garment industry. |
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The pestilences and plagues of the 14th century had bred an inordinate fear of death, which led to the exploitation of simple people by a church that was, in effect, offering salvation for sale. |
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Those fiscal difficulties that we had with SARS, mad cow and all those other plagues and pestilences, as the minister has described, will be rippling through our 2004-05 fiscal year. |
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During the Renaissance, after another trilogy of wars, plagues and famines, the burg doesn't get bigger anymore but embellishes, which is a sign of prosperity. |
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Your logic is faulty, reflecting cachexia and the general agnosy that plagues your race. |
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We must travel voiturier, which among many conveniences and suitablenesses has its plagues for an impatient spirit. |
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The raptured saints in the air will rejoice when the plagues of the seven bowls are brought, because with these plagues God would avenge them all. |
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The floury bedbugs are an important group of insects, in which there are many plagues worldwide recognized, for the serious affectations that they cause on cultivations of agricultural interest. |
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God has foretold not only the magnitude of these events, but also the countries and exact areas of the world that will experience specific plagues and cataclysms. |
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Throughout the Tudor period, Windsor was also used as a safe retreat in the event of plagues occurring in London. |
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During that time, cold winters, ash fall from volcanic eruptions, and bubonic plagues adversely affected the population several times. |
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With increasing use of smart meters, which mitigate the problem of intermittency that plagues renewable forms of energy, demand for rooftop installations should grow strongly in these places. |
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It is also likely that disease and famine undermined the will to resist: there were smallpox epidemics in the early 1890s, widespread rinderpest in 1892 95, and locust plagues throughout the decade. |
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Application of insecticidal or fungicidal sprays from the ground or from low-flying aircraft offer a short-term measure to check sudden plagues of insects or outbreaks of fungal diseases. |
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The development of Yaba and Ebute Metta housing estates following the bubonic plagues of 1920s and 1930 also facilitated the expansion of the municipal bus services, initially dominated by private operators. |
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That ill-fated choice paved the way for a watering-down of the audit report that plagues markets to this day. Even in the age of voluntary audits, accountants were rarely held accountable for their clients' sins. |
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Eurasian diseases such as influenza, bubonic plague and pneumonic plagues devastated the Native Americans who did not have immunity to them. |
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Set in a post-apocalyptic America of plagues and fear, ecological disaster and moral blight, The Pesthouse is a vision of the American dream gone horribly awry. |
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In Homer's Iliad and Odyssey the gods are implicated as the cause of plagues or widespread disease and that those maladies could be cured by praying to them. |
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In the 1330s, a large number of natural disasters and plagues led to widespread famine, starting in 1331, with a deadly plague arriving soon after. |
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The demographic consequences of this famine, however, were not as severe as the plagues that occurred later in the century, particularly the Black Death. |
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By around 1420, the accumulated effect of recurring plagues and famines had reduced the population of Europe to perhaps no more than a third of what it was a century earlier. |
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Arbereshe and Schiavoni were used to repopulate abandoned villages or villages whose population had died in earthquakes, plagues and other catastrophes. |
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Due to the plagues, the land was sparsely populated, but the entire area was controlled by the Pokanoket Tribe and Federation, led by Chief Massasoit. |
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