However, Joe lets his emotions get the better of him and gets involved in the murder of their prime suspect. |
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The president names the prime minister following consultation with Parliament. |
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It also became apparent that the ridges are prime sites of seismic activity and basaltic eruption. |
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Malcolm Fraser as prime minister and Bob Hawke as ACTU president had a habit of driving themselves to the point of collapse. |
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The first thing is that your kids need to understand that stealing the ball and or taking it from the defender is not the prime objective. |
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Donahue is that rarest of TV creatures, an unabashed liberal with his own prime time show. |
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Today, this prime area of land at the foot of Table Mountain, continues to remain vacant. |
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The prime minister hopes to win back majority support from within his own party in coming months. |
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It is also in a prime location, with panoramic views of the stunning Peak District, visible from every window in the home. |
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This home's corner turret, wraparound porch and ornate detailing make it a prime example of Victorian-style architecture. |
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Over the years, gentrification spread its tentacles north of the river and then the moon villages became a prime real estate target. |
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There's some mixed metaphors in the lyrics and it's probably a prime example of bad 80s music, but hey, I love this song. |
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The present study focuses on how a surprising event intervening between prime and probe can affect negative priming. |
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After each question, the prime minister directed questions concerning a certain ministry over to that particular minister to answer. |
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Even where nutrients are scarce, this may not be of much importance if the prime limiting factor is water. |
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He was the prime minister of a supreme War Cabinet, backed up by a new Cabinet office and a kitchen cabinet of private secretaries. |
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Another MP suggested that the prime minister was working up an expectation for an early election among his camp followers. |
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We will now see how to find the greatest common divisor and the lowest common multiple of two numbers from their prime factorizations. |
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The droll, witty Harvard Lampoon staff, the prime joshers of the Ivy League, have selected People magazine for their next parody effort. |
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He is a jaded actor, past his prime and shooting an absurd commercial for Suntori Whiskey, for which he despises himself. |
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The interviewer was aghast that I could question the prime minister's integrity. |
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The Balinese rarely drink large amounts of alcohol and so foreigners were easily the prime consumers. |
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The prime minister has taken not only the centre ground, but a good chunk of the rightwing terrain as well. |
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The prime minister, has moved swiftly to attempt to stamp his authority on Somalia's 10 million citizens. |
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The most common prime pigment is titanium dioxide, a white pigment found in both oil and latex paints. |
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These people are usually the real movers and shakers and very rarely end up as president or prime minister, at least in democracies. |
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Despite his fortune, there are no yachts, no ski chalets, no private jets or villas in which to schmooze prime ministers. |
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As a result, the new prime minister, his cabinet and the National Assembly will be virtually powerless. |
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The building had been boarded up on several occasions and was a prime target for vandals. |
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However there are a couple of reasons that pros would use a prime lens over a zoom. |
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He is very smart and politically skillful, and his time as prime minister was very productive. |
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In 1985, it won an absolute majority, enabling the party's candidate at the time, Oskar Lafontaine, to become state prime minister. |
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This scandal over a questionable memo has been a prime example of the process in action. |
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You should use an airless gun to prime and paint your acoustic ceiling, by angling your gun slightly and spraying it lightly in all directions. |
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The patient would probably benefit from doing transbronchial biopsies with the lavage if that is the prime consideration. |
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He enjoyed wars and was the first prime minister since the duke of Wellington to have fought in battle. |
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A prime objective of lay-up is to prepare your boat for the inevitability of freezing conditions. |
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This guess is like the prediction that a six-sided dice thrown 6,000 times lands exactly 1,000 times on the prime side. |
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This allowed the return of the Shah family to power and, eventually, the appointment of a non-Rana as prime minister. |
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Junior high is a particular challenge socially and prime time for bullies to ply their special brand of meanness. |
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The opposition leader was having a grand old time joshing the prime minister. |
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Business interests are happy, though, even though they resent Netanyahu for his stint as the prime minister. |
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The most interesting question is whether the prime minister's iron grip on his party slipping? |
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It is a prime cause of substance abuse and divorce and can ultimately create a state of tension and chaos in the office and at home. |
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In the current national military strategy, transnational threats are of prime importance. |
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In mounted combat their prime weapons were bow and arrow and lance rather than the awkward and uncertain trade musket. |
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The governor general will announce at a later date when parliament will sit to choose a new prime minister. |
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The Knesset could, in a no-confidence vote by an absolute majority of its members, oust the prime minister and her or his government. |
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Yesterday the prime minister described the bombings as an attack on our values as a society. |
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It is the third time in as many years that ownership of the prime precinct has changed. |
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The prime concern of landscape painting is the depiction of natural scenery. |
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Glassie says the Herald story was unbalanced and was nothing more than a thinly disguised personal attack on the prime minister. |
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The Niger Delta region and culture area is a prime locale for engaging the above questions. |
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I expect his offer of a prime position, company car and tenfold salary increase to arrive shortly. |
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As a Liberal, Adelard Godbout was a supporter of Mackenzie King, the prime minister of Canada, and a royalist in sympathy with the British cause. |
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The first step is a prime minister or a cabinet minister who tells the truth and can be believed. |
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This makes provision for an interim government with a prime minister and rebel representation in the cabinet. |
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Now, the harbour and the main town are a prime day-tripper destination, bulging with buses. |
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I mean, neither of us is in the prime of youth anymore and this was a bit of a backhanded compliment. |
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He was a prime advocate of arguments supporting the holding of terrorism suspects without access to courts. |
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Again, all the prime minister had to do was call for calm and he was part of the lead news story. |
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Last night there was relief in Downing Street that the prime minister right had not ultimately found himself in a minority of one. |
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The prime condition is that returning Muslims must renounce their faith and convert to Hinduism. |
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The assembly will in turn elect a prime minister or president, who will appoint cabinet officers. |
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He said that the British prime minister had given an assurance that the inquiry would receive the fullest possible co-operation. |
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The prime minister has been embarking on a hectic schedule of overseas trips, summits, policy initiatives, walkabouts and social engagements. |
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Stafford at one time was one of the museum's prime contractors for restoring historic warplanes. |
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The land in question enjoys a prime location on one of the town's major access routes. |
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The pulmonary artery pressure during the initial 10 minutes of reperfusion is of prime importance. |
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Recent reports suggest larger than normal numbers of waxwings have headed to the UK this year, but Wiltshire has never been a prime destination. |
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Modern dress also looks anachronistic in a world where respectability is a prime virtue and cuckoldry a social stigma. |
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In an early number theory paper he proved that there is no odd perfect number with fewer than four distinct prime factors. |
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The prime minister is not sufficiently restored in authority that he can risk making a move against his still formidable Chancellor. |
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He would have made a great prime minister, if only the media would have gone easier on him. |
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But he did devote two prime decades to the minor if alchemic art of movie acting. |
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The main selling points for this property are its prime location and the character of the area, which is the Dublin 4 of Galway city. |
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In 1783, with Tory Prime Minister Shelbourne's government in ruin, George III was appalled at the idea of accepting a Whig as prime minister. |
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When finished, its prime function will be to house research in organic and analytical studies. |
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It doesn't really matter to me who is prime minister, who's president, who has what job. |
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On first glance, this indicates that the prime mover would have been yawing to the left quite rapidly even though the test section was straight. |
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A melting pot of nationalities jostle for prime parking spots for their cars and caravanettes. |
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The prime minister's Social Democratic party is itself notoriously split on the issue of European integration. |
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Patrick Mabaso, a successfully rehabilitated prisoner and the founder and manager of the reupholstery project at the church, is a prime example. |
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A recent honor was an assignment to design a kebaya for Datin Seri Endon Mahmood Badawi, wife of Malaysia's deputy prime minister. |
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Well, his firm had a base on the Old Kent Road under the name London Easylink, and its prime contract was route 185 from Lewisham. |
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But the one was kept away from key witnesses, the other meets in secret and reports only to the prime minister. |
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At one point as I was wading through gravy, gristle and fat that was masquerading as lamb cutlets, I thought I found a prime piece of meat. |
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These are hands-off, no-go, sacrosanct areas that the British prime minister cannot afford to have tampered with. |
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He offers an extensive list of by-the-glass wines to accompany their best-selling crab cakes and prime rib steaks. |
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For on offer was smoked salmon and beluga caviar, then a choice of lobster salad, risotto, prime beef fillet or pan-fried sea bass. |
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I need to be in prime shape for my wedding day, and chances are my daily constitutionals in the park are no longer going to cut it. |
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Everything takes much longer, as too many people are boarding at any one time and blocking the aisles near the prime seats. |
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He removed entrenched ministers in favor of his own loyalists and installed a close aide in the office of the new prime minister. |
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He said not only were staff members and the board of directors present, but the prime minister had delivered the feature address. |
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Of prime importance in the realm of religious objects are gold and enamel works and aquamaniles made of bronze. |
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Manchester is one of the prime areas for thefts of birds like macaws and parrots because a lot of people keep birds as a hobby. |
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This is the prime time of year to fish this region with excellent runs of all species and a large variety of rivers to choose from. |
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The press release called on intermediaries to improve the way they give advice on sub prime mortgages. |
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Indeed, Bizet's Carmen represents a prime example of the continued European fascination with oriental Spain. |
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Jon Newby, now top scorer after his seventh goal of the season, would be a prime target for ambitious clubs. |
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The Four Stroke Ruff is a wonderful embellishment that has three grace notes and a prime note. |
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On Lag 0 Ignored Repetition trials, the probe target was reassigned the word that appeared as the distractor in the second prime display. |
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Print on thin paper, perhaps tracing paper, and prime the mask white first. |
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Although still in his mid-50s and in the prime of his productive professional life, fibrosing alveolitis had left him severely disabled. |
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Much has been made of the suggestion that the supposedly moderate prime minister designate intends to disband the militias. |
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In most islands some small-scale farmers continued to occupy prime lands, maintaining a cash-crop culture on the margins of plantations. |
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He was swept to power as prime minister in 2001 in a landslide election victory. |
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If he can do what the Japanese economy needs, he will go down as a great prime minister. |
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He performed strongly at the final prime minister's questions, sending his troops off in good heart. |
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The tracks were prime targets of saboteurs fighting the Japanese in World War II, and, afterwards, the French who built the line. |
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It was the era when William Pitt, prime minister and head of the Tory Party, clashed with Charles Fox and his more liberal Whigs. |
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He was prime minister from 1995 to 1997 during Chirac's first term as president, and is widely tipped as his most likely successor. |
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Here she was in the absolute prime of her voice and her rendering of that famous Second Act is quite simply spine-tingling in all departments. |
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An estimated 10,000 to 20,000 participated in the demonstration while the prime minister was delivering his annual keynote economic speech. |
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In 1981, he became the country's fourth prime minister, but the first commoner after a trio of blue-blooded patricians. |
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That's fine, but do we need to focus on all the sordid details in prime time interviews with the victims, tell-all books and movies like this? |
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The prime minister now has relatively young and inexperienced aides in his political office. |
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The leader of the majority party in the Lower House is named prime minister and governs with a cabinet of ministers. |
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Be sure to prime or size any newly applied drywall compound before painting or papering. |
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It can be tough when your father, the prime minister, has just indulged in pulpitry about drunken yobs. |
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He included a west-facing roof deck atop the bedroom wing for a prime view of Norway's famous late-night summer skies. |
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He said providing a boost to agriculture and agro-industries will continue to remain the prime concern of the government. |
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In 1976 Wilson announced his resignation and Callaghan beat Michael Foot to assume the party leadership and prime ministership. |
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Who said the prime minister could not have reshuffled his Cabinet and not fired her and still given me a job? |
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So a third term for the prime minister would immediately be a bed of nails unless he made major concessions to his critics. |
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We are at a prime trading time for Keighley businesses, who are here all the year round, not here today, gone tomorrow. |
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The prime minister pledged to reboot his battered party by shaking up its ranks. |
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Each person could also be understood not only relationally, but also in terms of beauty, as the beautifier, the beautiful, and as prime beauty. |
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In the British political system a prime minister holds office so long as he or she maintains the confidence of his or her own MPs and cabinet. |
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Great Britain was a prime example of the constitutional, representative, oligarchical system. |
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The area of Croom, the Mill and its mill wheel was seen by millions of people throughout the United States on a prime time news programme. |
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When you hear that detectives are mulling an interview with the prime minister himself, you know it's big. |
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I know the prime minister's advisors read this site before setting policy, so I'm saying now, it's not on. |
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It seemed a prime suspect as an astrobleme created by recoil uplift following a hypervelocity asteroidal impact. |
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The prime was followed by a mask comprising a series of 15 ampersands that remained on screen for 500 ms, followed by a 300-ms blank screen. |
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Churchill, who was in office when Elizabeth acceded to the throne in 1952, is thought to be the queen's favorite prime minister. |
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Orange County was a prime beneficiary of Cold War largesse, and the enemy in Washington was their prime economic supplier. |
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She has also won acclaim as a short story writer, with one of her collections being aired on TV as a prime time serial. |
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It is not an institution with which a prime minister can afford to take risks. |
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The plan has been bitterly opposed by the prime minister's former allies and the 240,000 settlers who live in the occupied territories. |
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He had maintained that the charges were trumped up by the man and his cronies to prevent him from challenging the prime minister's rule. |
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The prime focus in the treatment of an AMI in the 1980s and 1990s was on the re-establishment of flow in the acutely occluded coronary artery. |
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For already painted drywall surfaces, sand repaired areas and spot prime with a quality latex wall sealer. |
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Rain, heavy cloud cover and thick fog in the area had prompted Albania's prime minister to cancel his own flight to the conference. |
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We, the contestants went to the prime minister's official residence to meet with him. |
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Prior to publishing, he also found an upper bound on the least prime divisor of an odd perfect number. |
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And they kept hammering away right up until the elections that ETA was a prime suspect. |
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At 28 he knows he is supposed to be in his prime and he knows there is a lot of lost time to make up for. |
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I listened with great care and attention to a detailed and lengthy statement from the prime minister. |
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The campaign is flat out, and so is the prime minister, a whirlwind of argument, arms flailing, fingers stabbing. |
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What goes into sausages is top quality meat, cut away when we chop the prime joints from a carcass and then trim the special cuts in the shop. |
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It dawns, suddenly, that we may not be helping the prime minister very much after all. |
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The moratorium on fishing for cod and witch flounder off the Grand Banks in the North Atlantic is a prime example. |
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They are also prime real estate for red squirrels, bushy-tailed wood rats, northern goshawks, great gray owls, and long-eared owls. |
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Despite being politically inactive, he was accused of being a Russophile and was even framed for organising a plot against the prime minister. |
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The former, as prime contractor, builds the aft and central superstructure, the latter the ship's bow and distinctive pyramidal main mast. |
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The prime minister of Tuvalu blamed global warming for king tides that are threatening to submerge the nine islands. |
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This prime slice of beefcake beds the young princess within moments of meeting her. |
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Oh, dear, fed most scrumptiously on the most beautiful prime ribs of beef you've ever cast eyes upon. |
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Yet few generator sets were available to provide power, and prime power needed to operate the reefers at Kandahar Airfield was limited. |
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The government has reconstituted the prime minister's advisory council on trade. |
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He is the prime mover in an international contest to extend the lives of laboratory mice. |
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British prime ministers lose office either because they lose a general election or because their party removes them. |
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It could also threaten what has been the golden goose for NBC, the Games on prime time. |
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Flooded banks with green vegetation are prime areas to attract forage fish and predatory bass. |
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This meadow is probably one of the prime zander venues on the river, and it also produces quality catfish on a regular basis. |
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The only major world figure not to come in person was the prime minister of Great Britain. |
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His horse got to be prime minister, and he apparently sold a chart-topping number of dukedoms, earldoms and baronetcies. |
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Don't get me wrong, there are other sports doing great things and Rugby Union for one is a prime example. |
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But some political analysts give him only until April as prime minister, citing turf wars between rival interest groups. |
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He will stay remembered as a good leader of the labourists, but not as a good prime minister. |
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At 28 he might be in the prime of his career, but he still sees things in others he would like to add to his own game. |
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The young virile fox is faster and will outrun the hounds, while the old fox past its prime will fall. |
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During that time he has auctioned both prime and store stock in several of the leading livestock markets across the country. |
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When there is a loss of habitat, the woodland caribou becomes a prime target for wolves that gorge on their plentiful prey. |
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And to do so it must make the efficient allocation of scare resources its prime objective at all times. |
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Mr Parker said an oil rig in a prime fishing zone off the Dongara coast was of major concern to local fishermen. |
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It also contradicts praise from the deputy prime minister's office about our excellent work in neighbourhood renewal. |
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The prime minister is slated to sit through an hour-long audio-visual presentation on infrastructure requirements in the state. |
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Generally, it has been the movie industry that has been the prime mover behind legislation requiring the use of anti-piracy devices. |
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As the economy slows to very modest levels of growth, cutting interest rates is a prime mechanism for boosting economic output. |
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The Ethiopian governmental structure is a parliamentary democracy consisting of a bicameral legislature, a prime minister, and a president. |
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Despite the prime minister's words, there are no signs that the British government plans to change its aggressive antiterror tactics. |
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He has won most of the honours that the game has to offer and in his prime was almost a scratch player. |
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For years, he has been providing him with prime vegetables from his flourishing allotment at very little cost. |
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A prime example is Laetrile, a useless and poisonous drug promoted for cancer treatment. |
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The prime minister looked worn and tense at his press conference yesterday, as well he might. |
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I suspect that this was supposed to be a savage attack on the prime minister's fitness for office. |
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They demand reinstatement of the dissolved parliament and return to appointing prime ministers on the recommendation of the House. |
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Rodents and lagomorphs are prime examples of breeders among mammals and have enormous incisors for their body size. |
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Far from rejecting male and female aspects, it places prime importance on them. |
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The prime minister may have acted in good faith but clearly procedure was not followed. |
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In water-starved Bangalore, lakes on its outskirts are not just neglected but turn prime property for land sharks. |
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Charming, elegant and historic, the Baur au Lac occupies a prime lakeside position in one of Europe's cleanest and safest cities. |
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Periodicals were then the prime means of communicating ideas among the informed and cultured elites. |
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The blogosphere has a prime opportunity to champion a cause that the media has ignored. |
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A Southwest official earlier had gone on record as saying the airline was looking at Pittsburgh as a prime expansion candidate. |
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With the handover in sight and the rifts patched over, the chancellor and prime minister have never been so publicly united. |
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I might be wrong, but folk of my generation are probably Apple's prime audience. |
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In January 1972, Mujib was released from confinement and became the prime minister of Bangladesh. |
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Studies have shown even that alphabetical order of names can be the prime factor in winning or losing elections. |
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A carving of the whale, mounted by its rider, occupies the prime spot above the local wharenui, a permanent reminder of the tribe's beginnings. |
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The prime attraction in the museum is the terracotta structure of the mother goddess, Indira Mata or the locally known deity of Laja Gouri. |
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A former wife of the father had termed the father a prime case for child abuse. |
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Such a sequence consists of the remainders, or residues, after squaring consecutive whole numbers, then dividing them by a given prime number. |
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It can seem on prime summer days that only a handful of Texas' half-million coastal anglers are not wading the bays or surf. |
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On his election as prime minister, Aznar engaged a policy of repression towards ETA, arresting its leaders and main supporters. |
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These novelas air during prime time, much like a miniseries, and typically run about six months. |
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India cannot afford a prime minister who shoots his mouth off on sensitive issues and then issues tedious clarifications two days later. |
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For seven years he has sent appeals requesting the help of the president and prime minister but has not even received an acknowledgement. |
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As new arrests roil News Corp., a prime antagonist in the hacking cases may be readying a stateside challenge. |
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This may be due to the partial disbanding prior to recording where only Tairrie and her multi-faceted prime axeman Mick Murphy were left to record The Brutal Language. |
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If her partner had suffered trial by media, in their reports about his being the prime suspect, his libel action allowed the papers the latitude to outline just why. |
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At least they will be spared the callously quick handover of British prime ministers, with the humiliating exchange of removal vans on the day after the election. |
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An older and rueful prime minister may reflect that some of the optimism felt on that spring day in 1997 is still around, and maybe he can take some credit for that. |
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The Maoists offered to resume negotiations with the prime minister. |
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The chancellor of the exchequer calls the prime minister a liar. |
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The locals simply raised an eyebrow and watched as the foundations were dug on a prime shoreside location, and construction began on the epitome of cultural imperialism. |
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Rudd is polling ahead of both gillard and the conservative opposition leader, Tony Abbott, as preferred prime minister. |
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It is reasonable to surmise she will stoutly support the prime minister. |
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The subsequent round-table sequence of statements from prime ministers at the end of a bad-tempered evening did more harm than good, he told officials. |
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The prime minister used his keynote speech at Labour's spring conference in Gateshead to acknowledge it was largely his fault that his bond with the public had frayed. |
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To the very eve of Partition, Jinnah was acquiring prime property in Karachi and Bombay. |
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Having proven his ability to operate successfully on a shoestring budget he is regarded as a prime candidate to return to the cash-strapped club he served for many years. |
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Yet there are worrying signs that the prime minister plans to end his war against the real Labour party with kamikaze attacks on its most cherished values. |
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Putin and medvedev are to swap jobs, with medvedev becoming prime minister. |
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And Steubenville was a prime example of our crummy attitude when it comes to bringing attackers to account. |
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A former prime minister, Ayad Allawi, is a Shiite with humongous support among Sunnis. |
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The choice of the venue at that precise time was calculated to do the maximum damage to the prime minister and to highlight his lofty disdain for anyone who gainsays him. |
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New saltmarshes, mudflats and sandflats would evolve and help to form natural sea defences, as well as create a prime location for rare species to make their homes. |
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The prime minister calculates that he enjoys enough support in the capitol to derail any negotiated settlement that requires his nation's concessions. |
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Before he became prime minister, he had also headed the powerful education and industries ministries as well as the cabinet committee on economic affairs. |
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How much is a prime parcel of Arctic land with a water view? |
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Domestically, the prime minister maintains the dubious line that he is the only man who can keep the still-fragile peace. |
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Strongly tinting any surface it touches, heavy-bodied and opaque, it recalls the industrial, bringing to mind, among other things, the red lead paint used to prime steel. |
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The celebrated scholar and calligrapher Ibn Muqla, who served three caliphs of Baghdad as prime minister and died on July 20,941 AD, copied the Quran in the early Naskh style. |
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Historically presidents and prime ministers would give inspiring speeches to their nations, psyching them up and uniting them into one determined force to be reckoned with. |
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High occupancy rates have been seen in prime shopping centres and areas. |
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Putin has hinted publicly that he favors Tymoshenko, noting they had a productive relationship when she was prime minister. |
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With Europe stuck in a double-dip recession, the United States once again finds itself a prime engine of global growth. |
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It has been suggested so far that the more popular or media-centred depiction of the prime minister as an autocrat may be more of a caricature than an accurate portrait. |
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His views on these issues, and those recently proclaimed by former Labor prime minister Bob Hawke, show both informed realism and political courage. |
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British-born, he had a level of self-possession that seemed virtually Bond-like in the urbanity vacuum of CBS prime time. |
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The role of ceramics in building chronologies and as signifiers of cultural similarity single this artifact category out as a prime focus for archaeometric research. |
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London Irish couldn't believe their luck, snapping up one of the best buys of the season, a finisher of proven pedigree in the prime of his career. |
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Peter had many great skills, but even in his prime he was a heedless driver. |
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A fleet of classic tractors tow passenger-carrying trailers around the perimeter road, taking visitors to the prime viewing locations all around the circuit. |
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The prime minister will go to the White House within the hour. |
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The prime minister would, it is said, have taken the plunge had it not been for the bloody-minded insistence of his chancellor in sticking to the Treasury's five tests. |
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If you've got prime ministers trading in the appointments of regulatory umpires in return for political favours, then you are in a banana republic. |
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His prime objective was the renegotiation of the Japan-US Security Treaty. |
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He gets very aerated about the idea of the prime minister lying. |
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In 2002 the same king sacked the same prime minister for failing to hold elections, only to reappoint him last year with a mandate to hold elections and open peace talks. |
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This can be seen not just in distant exurbs or suburbs, but in prime inner-city neighborhoods. |
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Gulen is a former ally of the government who has now distanced himself from the prime minister. |
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The president should not designate a prime minister for the political purposes of winning in the local elections or managing careers for a future presidential candidate. |
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Critics of the measure say that the imposition of fees will kill the popularity of Bonaire as a prime haven for yachts cruising in the Southern Caribbean. |
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The seizing of an American reporter was only a matter of time, and the bespectacled and disheveled Ostrovsky was a prime target. |
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Widely derided as being out of touch with the country, in fact the prime minister showed an acute awareness of the opposition's weaknesses and how best to exploit them. |
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The Teshekpuk area, a network of wet meadows, river deltas, coastal lagoons and small ponds, is the prime calving grounds for a 25,000-strong caribou herd. |
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The British prime minister comes from a family line packed with pedigrees and is distantly related to the queen. |
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Australian police yesterday won the right to analyse genetic samples taken from a prime suspect in the suspected murder of a Yorkshire backpacker. |
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When the exponent is a prime number, I say that its radical cannot be divisible by any other prime except those that are greater by one than a multiple of double the exponent. |
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Norway has indicated it has suspended formal involvement in the talks, adding to the pressure on the prime minister and the president to end the political stalemate. |
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Some veterans have prime docks that historically offer great shrimping. |
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When the prime minister who presided over all of this is hailed as a statesperson and visionary, are we not laying the foundations for full-blown fascism? |
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Because six is the product of the first two prime numbers and is adjacent to the next two prime numbers, many senary fractions have simple representations. |
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In late-night circles, where some are watching the experiment of putting Leno on the air in prime time with undisguised malice. |
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The darling Downs produce prime beef, fine cotton and hard wheat. |
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With the internet the prime reason for the existence of cities is gone. |
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Through the 1980s the Pakistan captaincy had alternated between the two, a game of musical chairs in which prime ministers and generals also participated, behind the scenes. |
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He is a prime example of how adversity brings out the best in people. |
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Every year Britain's serving prime minister delivers a speech dealing with foreign policy to the Lord Mayor of London's official banquet, dressed in white tie and tails. |
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The 51-year-old inherited the baronetcy from his late father, Sir Denis, who had the hereditary title bestowed upon him after his wife ceased to be prime minister. |
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Britain's first blind prime minister would certainly have tabloid appeal. |
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He first rose to the position of prime minister in 2006, as head of a minority government. |
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Even our prime minister felt it necessary to proclaim his secular outlook by donning what looked like an inverted tea cosy on his head at his annual iftar. |
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The prime minister's personal financial integrity is beyond question. |
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Perhaps the most damning fact is that there are no breeding golden eagles, hen harriers or red kites on what should be prime breeding habitat for those species. |
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The prime minister has also reportedly paid for diction lessons to smooth out her rough Neapolitan accent. |
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His kitchen worktops offer a prime example of this approach. |
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One is Dmitry Rogozin, the former ambassador to NATO and current deputy prime minister. |
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I perceive a flock of snow-birds, skimming lightsomely through the tempest, and flitting from drift to drift, as sportively as swallows in the delightful prime of summer. |
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The last time this tech entrepreneur and serial big-noter appeared on the program, he had a few controversial things to say about the prime minister. |
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While in London, Harriman also launched an affair with Pamela Churchill, daughter-in-law of the prime minister. |
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January and February are also prime months for spotting California gray whales off the coast as they migrate towards Baja. |
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He was invited back by the prime minister and by the president, and he was assured of safe conduct and that the legal issue will be resolved in a legal way. |
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They are curiously obsequious, seeming to promise presidents and prime ministers a favourable verdict in return for a few invitations, a few decorations. |
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A prime example of creepy camouflage is thinking of harassment as compliments. |
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Chefs and nutrition experts say Scots are wasting a prime source of healthy and tasty food on their doorstep by failing to support growers of soft fruit. |
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The low-grade kangaroo meat used in the sausages is in a different class from the high-quality prime cuts that reach Moscow's pricier restaurants via Europe. |
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Their prime customer, a manufacturer of metal cans, was delighted. |
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While the two prime ministerial styles were different the words parroted by them and their respective ministers have been very similar over the last few years. |
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Watched by two beefy minders in the row behind, the prime minister was working diligently on his red boxes, accompanied by Cherie in sparky mode and their daughter, Kathryn. |
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But Clarke has so far been seemingly ultra-honest by admitting he still nurses an ambition to be both the leader of the Conservative Party and prime minister. |
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They are not only those identified by the prime minister, such as ineptness of the original police investigation. |
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I need only show you Edison, NJ and Fremont, CA as prime examples of this fact. |
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That resistance, so far, has forced the British prime minister to limit what he will call for in the commons. |
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One photo shows an obviously aroused nude man who is identified as Mirek Topolanek, former prime minister of the Czech Republic. |
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British prime ministers, of course, are elected based on which party wins the most seats in the House of commons. |
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