Three pods in the centre of the dash house the primary instruments, while the minor controls are grouped together beneath them. |
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Ten days after the poppy blooms the resin is extracted by lancing the pods. |
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To capture the essence, split the pods open lengthwise and scrape the seeds into sweet or savory dishes, then add the pods for good measure. |
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The book festival is in a square, filled with huge tents, pods and even a yurt. |
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A uniform, regionally concordant layer of amphibolite with occasional ultramafic pods, termed the Sta Amphibolite, overlies the Sta Series. |
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The helicopter can be fitted with gun pods, rocket launchers and air-to-air missiles attached to two removable weapons sponsons. |
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In dry edible beans, anthracnose causes unsightly cankers on plant stems, pods, and seeds. |
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Nearby, male nutmeg trees are planted next to the blooming female trees with the red laced nutmeg peeking out of their ripe yellow pods. |
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There were pods like small lumpy rugby balls sprouting straight from the trunk. |
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The multi-role fighter can be armed with air-to-surface, air-to-ground and anti-ship missiles, as well as rocket pods, bombs and cluster bombs. |
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Big-eyed bug survival was higher, and emigration was lower, when lima bean plants had pods than when they did not. |
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To test this hypothesis, we established 20 X 30 m field plots of lima beans with many pods and with few pods. |
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For ground attack, the aircraft can be armed with rocket pods, bombs, cluster bombs or air-to-surface missiles. |
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Moving the radiators to wing tip pods created a cooling problem while on the ground because the radiators were out of the prop blast. |
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The pods were threshed, and the seeds variously winnowed, yandied, parched, pounded, ground, and made into a paste to be baked into cakes. |
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At last I try roasting them in the oven in their pods before crushing the lot and yandying, the Aboriginal way of sorting seeds. |
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On board the battle ship Alkaline, Dex moved cautiously to his station near the jettison pods. |
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The two ships then released all of their escape pods, effectively hiding the one with Brimstone and his second in command. |
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Rocky summit species include the rather rare Huddleson's locoweed, a three-to-four-inch-tall, hairy white plant that produces pink-to-purple flowers and oversize seed pods. |
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Put tamarind pods in a small saucepan and barely cover with boiling water. |
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Viable seeds were extracted from the pods, scarified with a file, and germinated in the Botany Department greenhouse facilities at the University of Georgia. |
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Bruise the cardamom pods with the back of a knife to release the seeds, and add to the pan, giving a stir as you do so. |
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The rampant vines produce numerous pods that turn purple as they mature. |
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The exhibition includes a South African ficus, a tamarind with pods, elephant grass from Africa, cherry, bougainvillaea, fig, Accacia and trees collected from forests. |
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At each harvest date, three vessels of three plants each or six plants were separated into leaves, stems, taproots, lateral roots, flowers, pods, and grains. |
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Better known for its seed pods, green and dried seeds, and edible flowers, the winged bean also has an edible, nitrogen-fixing tuber which can be prepared like a potato. |
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The maincrop pea Greensage has been bred from a cross between Greenshaft and a semi-leafless variety to give long pods carrying up to 11 sweet-tasting peas. |
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Kaya and I were taking a walk to the pond this morning when along the roadside I noticed a locust tree that still had some long felty pods hanging from it. |
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Notably lacking are spikelet fragments, chaff, awns, pods, and weed seeds that comprise the debris from processing such crops for storage or from using dung as fuel. |
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Pilot whales can often be spotted resting in large pods at the ocean surface, yet very little is known about the submarine behavior of these deep-sea hunters. |
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We caged either 100 or 200 pea aphids on a single lima bean plant with or without pods, with or without a single big-eyed bug, and with or without 20 corn earworm eggs. |
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Why do they and honey locusts have sugary pods so attractive to livestock? |
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The instrument cluster is all housed in two pods, with the speedo and the tacho housed well inside those pods, preventing a nosy passenger from peeking. |
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The pods had no artificial gravity fields of their own to provide inertial dampening effects, so the Marines strapped themselves securely to the vertical backboards provided. |
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Most of the pods are clustered around the base of the plant, and only a few are found several inches away. |
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In burning slabs like pyroclastic flow the top of the tower slewed off, militia pods falling out and tumbling. |
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By the end of the season, my pod count finalized at 781 pods, or approximately thirteen pounds of superhots. |
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In its native form the branches of the honey locust are thorned and bear seed pods up to a foot long. |
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One by one the family are transformed by the pods, until only the angstful teen daughter is left to make her escape. |
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The pods feature natural rubber flooring and white beech veneered internal walls. |
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Targeting pods can bulge out a bit, and leak out unwanted signals. |
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Even ants may outwit you on several green seed pods, including lilies, coleus and alocasia, as well as the fruit of apples, pears and berries. |
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The same question could be asked of the large seed pods of the honeylocust and the Kentucky coffeetree. |
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The centerline drogue and wing aerial refueling pods are used to refuel aircraft fitted with probes. |
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Add hot edamame pods and sprinkle with sea salt and toss to coat. |
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Ripe pods of red peppers can be sun-dried on trays, or in long ristras, or dried in half the time in a food dryer. |
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The showy blooms are soon followed by conspicuous fruits, which have the appearance of yellowish, bladderlike pods. |
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The waters around the islands are home to pods of huge sperm whales, northern bottlenose whales, pilot whales, Orcas and Sowerby's beaked whales. |
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Released from his pen in the Westman Islands, he was reluctant to join killer whale pods. |
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Assiduoud field-workers have discovered little pods of a rock called eclogite in the rocks around San Bernardino. |
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Planting dates, soil moisture, nutrition, and pest management should be designed to protect the first flush of floral buds, flowers, and pods. |
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There are 21 small transportation pods that can each carry up to four adults, two children, and their luggage. |
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Dolphins tend to travel in pods, upon which there are groups of dolphins that range from a few to many. |
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Although they are traveling in these pods, the dolphins do not necessarily swim right next to each other. |
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A few species, like the harbour porpoise, are highly sociable, but pods generally do not exceed ten individuals for most species. |
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Swimming in pods allows dolphins to better defend themselves against predators. |
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A largely spent flower head showing open flowers, as well as developing seed pods. |
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Later the pods become covered completely with white powdery mass composed of mycelium, oidiophores and oidia of the fungus. |
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Basque whalers would have given it such name after observing pods of orcas hunting baleen whales. |
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In resident pods, births occur at any time of year, although winter is the most common. |
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Transient pods have been sighted from southern Alaska to central California. |
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Closely related matrilines form loose aggregations called pods, usually consisting of one to four matrilines. |
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Clans, the next level of resident social structure, are composed of pods with similar dialects, and common but older maternal heritage. |
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Similarity in dialects likely reflects the degree of relatedness between pods, with variation building over time. |
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When pods meet, dominant call types decrease and subset call types increase. |
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Dialects of killer whales not only distinguish them between pods, but also between types. |
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This community comprises three pods which live mostly in the Georgia and Haro Straits and Puget Sound in British Columbia and Washington. |
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Whales and dolphins who live in pods may accompany sick or debilitated pod members into shallow water, stranding them at low tide. |
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Belugas, being white, hunt in large pods near the surface and around pack ice, their coloration acting as camouflage. |
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The vehicles were already available in the form of electrically powered people pods designed and built by EasyMile of Toulouse, France. |
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It's not the most sweeping of restyles, that's for sure, but there are neater headlight and tail light pods. |
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Life-sized people pods and a bespoke 'blue screen' sequence engage the visitor with real people and their actual city. |
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When they came to the people pods on Crater Street, Ace hid in the underground holding pod, hoping they wouldn't find him. |
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For what amounts to a transmission tunnel with two people pods, the Viper's cabin is actually quite roomy. |
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Atypically among crop plants, peanut pods develop underground rather than above ground. |
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The oldest known archeological remains of pods have been dated at about 7,600 years old. |
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In West Africa, it substantially replaced a crop plant from the same family, the Bambara groundnut, whose seed pods also develop underground. |
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Peanut plants continue to produce flowers when pods are developing, therefore even when they are ready for harvest, some pods are immature. |
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If too late, the pods will snap off at the stalk, and will remain in the soil. |
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The pods are covered with a network of raised veins and are constricted between seeds. |
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After the peanuts have dried sufficiently, they are threshed, removing the peanut pods from the rest of the bush. |
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Peanut pods are borne on pegs arising from the main stem and the side branches. |
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The pods are snapped off the plant, which is why they are sometimes called snap beans. |
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Each attendant carried a unique bouquet made of different green florals, varying among succulents, leucadendron, green trick, ranunculus, kale, hydrangea, and poppy pods. |
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The company started packaging coffee for home consumption in 1965, and in 1972 was the first to sell it in teabaglike pods for making single cups. |
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Peanut pods develop underground, an unusual feature known as geocarpy. |
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And now, much like the linear accelerators he designed to push his theoretical people pods, Musk is planning to encourage forward movement on more Hyperloop designs. |
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The killer whale hunts in pods and targets belugas and even larger whales. |
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Unlike matrilines, pods may separate for weeks or months at a time. |
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To avoid inbreeding, males mate with females from other pods. |
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Researchers later discovered transients are not born into resident pods. |
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Splitting pods make an audible pop, and sitting beside a caragana hedge in August or September is akin to sitting before a giant bowl of Rice Krispies. |
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Sei whales usually travel alone or in pods of up to six individuals. |
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Dolphins are highly social animals, often living in pods of up to a dozen individuals, though pod sizes and structures vary greatly between species and locations. |
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The bladderpod is a pretty bush. It has loads of bright yellow flowers and the punching bag seed pods that give it its name. But, to be honest, it stinks! |
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The beachfront is the venue for top boardsailing championships and features a long promenade and pier with a chance of seeing pods of dolphins at play. |
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