It's not so bad when the seat in front is up, but if they recline it then it presses rather painfully against my knees. |
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The main floor was littered with machinery and workbenches, the bulk and arches of cast-iron lathes, presses, moulds and mini furnaces. |
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In the kitchen, granite worktops are teamed with light beech presses, and a large island unit is used as a breakfast area. |
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Her sin is that she refuses to drink the Kool-Aid and presses people to provide verifiable facts. |
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The longer the process lasts, the faster the printing presses have to run in an effort to maintain stability. |
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In fact, most were published by university presses, the federal government or small independents. |
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Even the narrow passageways were clogged with piles of papers stuffed in among outworn printing presses. |
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Concentrate on exercises such as bicep curls, tricep dips and shoulder presses. |
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He walks up to one of the machines, inserts a ten-dollar bill in the appropriate slot and presses some green illuminated number pad. |
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For the less shockable audience of today, particularly one with a core of depraved Oxford students, this play presses all the right buttons. |
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It's actually quite relaxing, except for when she presses on an area near the big toe of my left foot which is total agony. |
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How about the mass adoption of VHS over Betamax video format or the advent of full colour, cost effective glossy printing presses? |
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How to give shape to a shapelessness that presses against and expands into silence? |
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Be sure to include at least two pressing movements per workout such as incline barbell presses and the bench press. |
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If it means going from 200 to 205 for bench presses, then to 215 and 225, I'm gradually achieving the long-term goal of benching 300 pounds. |
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The house includes a modern kitchen with attractive fitted wall and floor presses and a Belfast sink. |
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Production facilities include a variety of automatic and semi-automatic sheet metal presses, forming equipment and robot welding cells. |
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Here a convex vinyl ridge across the top of the threshold presses against the bottom of the door for a tight seal against drafts. |
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The rib cage presses down on the pelvis, reducing thoracic and abdominal space. |
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The first edition had twelve pages, and the incredible figure of 200000 copies rolled off the second-hand presses. |
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At present it features a range of beige storage presses, mainly at ground level, a matching worktop and a stainless steel sink. |
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This applies to squats, bench presses, curls or any exercise relying on a barbell or dumbbells. |
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He presses a sequence of buttons and information starts to scroll across the screen. |
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When the trigger releases the ball of the thumb presses forward and in that instant the gun is pushed to the right. |
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Even without the threat of war, an operation of this size presses at the margins of possibility. |
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The silence of the presses is deafening and the telescreen continues to bleat. |
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Food was scarce and money flooded off the presses. 476 million rubles were printed in April, one billion in July. |
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While squats and leg presses don't directly target the calves, they do rely on them for stability during heavier lifts. |
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Sugar presses forward, rolling this talking Sisyphus stone farther up the slope, flashing William a smile of reassurance. |
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The groundwater is becoming saline as the water table sinks because of overuse, and sea water presses in. |
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This features a quarry tiled floor, oak timber beams and numerous storage presses. |
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That's as it should be, as the newspaper has a global audience but not global printing presses. |
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Some of the best exercises include compound movements such as squats, lunges and leg presses. |
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For chest, bench presses are your central strength movement, while dumbbell presses are your assister. |
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Workers at the presses had their bags and lunchboxes searched, and their lockers and desks blitzed at regular intervals. |
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Sadly, the publication was already out of date as it rolled off the presses. |
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Through the plate glass window on your left, is a stainless steel vat, presses, and other arcana of the cheesemaker's art. |
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She takes out a sixpenny piece and presses it into his warm little palm closing her fingers over the money, her fingers over his. |
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Front delts are stressed by all shoulder presses and front raises, and they also assist in compound chest movements. |
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In the period since Tony Blair took office in May 1997, anatomies of Britain have been tumbling from the presses in dizzying profusion. |
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During the next 500 years, many printers in many lands invented better presses, designed new typefaces, many of great beauty. |
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John steps silently into the hallway and closes the door behind him, careful not to make a noise when he presses the button on the metal latch. |
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From a safe distance, a disposal expert presses a button, triggering an explosion which blasts the mine to pieces. |
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This is fitted with a hand basin and a double wardrobe with vanity area and overhead presses. |
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Two steps lead down to the kitchen, a bright room floored in quarry tiles and with polished wood presses providing plenty of storage. |
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These sheets are fed into large presses with casts shaped into a particular body panel, like a door, bonnet roof and bodies. |
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Begin your sessions with exercises like deadlifts, squats, clean and jerks, and bench presses. |
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To accomplish the latter, keep your heels close together and angle your toes slightly outward for lifts such as hack squats and leg presses. |
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It is fitted with traditional pine presses with further storage available in the adjoining utility room. |
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Precede this exercise with overhead presses and follow it with side laterals and bent-over lateral raises. |
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Cozy guest bedrooms upstairs with en suite showers, television and trouser presses provide privacy and personal space. |
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Behind-the-neck presses direct some of the stress into your lats, rhomboids, teres, spinatus, traps and the rest of your upper back. |
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Rising from her seat, Ally presses her cheek to Dawn's, effectively giving her an air kiss. |
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Examples of the latter are wine presses and farming innovations like the form of terracing and water systems. |
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The weight of her brother's scorn broke her heart, and she returned to her wine presses. |
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Some would work in the fields, others in the bakeries, and still others would tend to the wine presses. |
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Book III examines methods of transporting objects by such means as sledges, the use of cranes, and looks at wine presses. |
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While drumming, the male spreads his tail and presses it against the log, then begins a series of strong wingstrokes. |
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The FBI, relying heavily on hearsay and reportage from the American press and even international presses, provided an extensive profile of Baker as a political threat. |
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Are you seeing more commercial pressure from academic presses for historians to sexy it up a bit? |
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There is a disconnect, which allows for some distance between his actions and your button presses. |
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This has a sink unit, various storage presses and a walk-in wine cellar while a side door leads to an enclosed yard with a patio area, boiler house and fuel store. |
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In early medieval Europe, waterwheels powered olive presses, crushed mash, drove pumps, and operated the bellows of the blacksmith's furnace and forge. |
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University presses still compete for many monographs, including revised dissertations, and, contrary to this belief, they pay advances for a significant number of them. |
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Other aluminum bearing applications are in heavy tooling, such as boring mills, presses, lathes, milling machines, and grinding mills, and as hydraulic pump bushings. |
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The dual aspect master bedroom extends the length of the property and is fitted with a tiled fireplace and a wooden wardrobe with overhead presses. |
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It has the standard support for expanding small text snippets into full phrases, but also supports variables, autocorrects spelling, emulates key presses, and much more. |
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The mailers assist in the movement of newspapers from the printing presses to bundle-tying machines and then onto docks where they are loaded onto delivery trucks. |
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Volunteer teachers set up makeshift classes in the building's stairwell, in the hallway, and among the bench presses and barbells in a weight room. |
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I think it has something to do with the lovely lady who presses you to take more barley sugars and stickers, and full-cream milk instead of calci-trim girl milk. |
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That's no problem as the juicer measures a compact 15 inches high by ten inches wide, so it can fit easily into most kitchen cupboards or presses. |
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In a swallow, the tongue presses the bolus into the pharynx. |
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By 1520 62 German cities possessed printing presses, and between 1517 and 1524 the publication of printed books in these cities increased sevenfold. |
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There are sausage-makers, pasta makers, mincers, olive presses and, there on the shelf behind one of the proprietors, a rugged little cheesegrater. |
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The other result was that Bob became skilled at hand setting lines of display type, locking up printing formes and hand feeding both treadle and motorised presses. |
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He presses, a small and mirthless smirk coming to his stoic lips. |
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Nearly all titles on menstruation are geared toward preteen girls or are dry and academic, published by small presses. |
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The ocean swell presses a thick plankton soup into the fjords and channels in the area, forming a base for an impressive array of underwater life forms. |
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To the uninitiated, mothballs are marble size balls of a campher-like substance that one puts in drawers or presses to prevent moths eating holes in clothes. |
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The kitchen has fitted presses, a steel sink unit and a tiled floor. |
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Newman manufactures a variety of equipment, including surfacers, planers, ripsaws and presses. |
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Newman manufactures a variety of equipment including surfacers, planers, ripsaws and presses. |
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A highly-reliable, market-proven solution, Helios II has been successfully installed worldwide on hundreds of presses and rewinders. |
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European printing presses of around 1600 were capable of producing about 1,500 impressions per workday. |
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In addition to the iGen3 digital presses, Xerox Digital Color Select Gloss 60 lb. |
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Roger L'Estrange was a pamphleteer who became the surveyor of presses and licenser of the press after the Restoration. |
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Although an operator presses the button, the actuation is done by an immense series of levers and cranks. |
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Are you pushing your muscles beyond exhaustion to extreme soreness by trying to show off for the stud who spots your bench presses occasionally? |
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After around 1800, iron presses were developed, some of which could be operated by steam power. |
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Although newspaper and magazine companies still often own printing presses and binderies, book publishers rarely do. |
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In the 16th century, with presses spreading further afield, their output rose tenfold to an estimated 150 to 200 million copies. |
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You would create more force development by just doing bench presses and squats. |
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The Webers then looked at several smaller electric presses, but they didn't have shot volumes large enough for their needs. |
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The Company also designs, sells and services a wide range of press plate lock-up systems for offset and flexographic presses. |
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By 1500, printing presses in operation throughout Western Europe had already produced more than twenty million volumes. |
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By order of the Government, his presses were established in the Louvre, where they remained during the Consulate. |
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The printing press was invented in the Holy Roman Empire by the German Johannes Gutenberg around 1440, based on existing screw presses. |
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Many ancient presses still exist in the Eastern Mediterranean region, and some dating to the Roman period are still in use today. |
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This workpiece is placed between two rolls, an inner idler roll and a driven roll, which presses the ring from the outside. |
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Heaford manufactures mounters, mounter proofers, plate testers, flexo proof presses and gravure proof presses. |
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The roots of the Western media can be traced back to the late 15th century, when printing presses began to operate throughout Western Europe. |
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Everything at the school, including the large printing presses, moved to the North where the boys quickly settled into their familiar routine. |
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Lost in his bliss, he doesn't protest when she presses a spit-slicked finger to his grundle, or when she slips it lower, then deeper. |
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In reality, it often presses this onto its chest in order to fully empty the pouch. |
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Frid presses her aluminum foil over lengths of string, giving her sky a striation that becomes a kind of meandering craquelure. |
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One arm presses ahead, whereas the other four act as two pairs of opposite levers, thrusting the body in a series of rapid jerks. |
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The paper is then fed onto reels if it is to be used on web printing presses, or cut into sheets for other printing processes or other purposes. |
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Thus presses are usually included in the economic definition of machine tools. |
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Large production food presses are designed to apply uniform, simultaneous and omnidirectional pressure to food products. |
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In the 1st century AD, Pliny the Elder reported the invention and subsequent general use of the new and more compact screw presses. |
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Shoe presses increase bulk and consequently softness and absorbency, supplying some of the same benefits as TAD technology. |
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Ford Motor Co has installed the world's first hydraulic high speed tryout presses that use pre-accelerated drawing cushions in the bolster. |
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During his summers, he worked the presses at the Cape Codder newspaper in Orleans. |
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He improved upon the hydraulic presses invented by Joseph Bramah, and in 1825 designed a huge press for testing chain cables. |
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At that time all printing presses and publications were required to be licensed, and publishers were liable to the Court of High Commission. |
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Printing presses produced primers and other devotional materials, and recruitment to the English clergy began to rise after almost a decade. |
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The Sun used the same printing presses, and the two papers were managed together at senior executive levels. |
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By comparison, book printing in East Asia, did not use presses and was solely done by block printing. |
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Whatever draws or presses another is as much drawn or pressed by that other. |
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Between 1520 and 1550, printing presses in Spain were tightly controlled, and any books of Protestant teaching were prohibited. |
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It is the flat plate which presses against and transmits lateral thrust of the plough bottom to the furrow wall. |
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She presses a spoonful of marinated meat into the masa, wraps the cornhusk expertly, all the while breathing heavily through her mouth. |
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Bonneville was then briefly jailed and his presses were confiscated, which meant financial ruin. |
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The device takes the form of a guard for the punch presses which are used in grommeting mail bags in the process of manufacture. |
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Wausau Coated will provide a variety of pressure sensitive roll products including wine grades, films and specialty substrates optimized for use on HP Indigo digital presses. |
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A dual-layer SD manufacturing line will have two presses that feed into a single line that metalizes both discs, then puts a back-coating on each and bonds them together. |
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Mass production of printed works flourished after the transition to rolled paper, as continuous feed allowed the presses to run at a much faster pace. |
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Some, like university presses, are owned by scholarly institutions. |
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Buddhist monasteries were also engaged in the economy, since their land property and serfs gave them enough revenues to set up mills, oil presses, and other enterprises. |
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The company's products, recognisable by their distinctive green bottles, comprise a range of cordials, sparkling presses and spritzers which are sold worldwide. |
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The Library has a substantial private press collection, some 1,800 volumes in total, with representative examples from all of the important British presses. |
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The first edition, consisting of one thousand copies, sold out within two days of publication, and by November the fourth edition was at the presses. |
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Behind the drills were a series of presses, metal discs which cut down the sides of the trench into which the seeds had been planted, covering them over. |
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His work inspired many small private presses in the following century. |
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These 3-D pictures caused much excitement in the redtop presses. |
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There was lots of weird stuff going on with zones and matchups and presses and fastbreaks and ball-deflating halfcourts, but UConn won with defense. |
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Frehn bench presses more than 200 pounds and can power-clean 185 pounds. |
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A training schedule for the pupil at Blythe School, Coleshill, consists of three sessions a week, carrying out more than 30 squats a day, 30 stretches and 30 bench presses. |
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Rather than have six power racks, six bench presses, and six inclines, a modular system is more compact while providing a coach with a better view of a structured workout. |
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The longlisting is also, of course, fantastic news for Seren and proves that Welsh presses are publishing novels and authors who rank among the very best. |
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