Buttercups, various Hubbard squashes and giant prize-winning pumpkins belong to Cucurbita maxima. |
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Turner, who was brought up in Morley, near Leeds, said the key to a prize-winning pork pie lay in a combination of things. |
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Both the author and illustrator are prize-winning practitioners of their respective crafts. |
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Newsquest publishes more than 300 titles, including 15 daily newspapers and a network of prize-winning web sites. |
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The prize-winning butcher has been selling handmade bangers and high quality cuts of meat in Cricklade for the past 21 years. |
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We do work with outstanding, prize-winning authors, and we do propose projects to them. |
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And, if that schedule isn't busy enough, Bruce shows his prize-winning Newfoundland dog, Sailor, and his Labrador, Bailey. |
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By the way, the first prize-winning film shown in preview this yearbears the title Adulthood! |
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Ten other prize-winning posters and additional information on the two conventions were also on view at the launch. |
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Her list of prize-winning films is long, her productions are seen by millions. |
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He's a prize-winning breeder of poultry and waterfowl and started breeding bantams and poultry when he was seven. |
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One of last century's most potent literary and political figures is put under the microscope in this prize-winning biography. |
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Only a passing comment, but such carelessness has probably wrecked my son's future as a prize-winning novelist. |
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Or perhaps you got gypped genetically, and earning prize-winning abs has been a losing battle. |
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Verily, we must be living in a golden age of journalism if the number of prize-winning rags and hacks is anything to go by. |
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Popular and prize-winning, these angst-ridden accounts of the aspiring outsider seem to sweep the bestseller stakes. |
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It takes about 6 minutes for this and you can bet your boots you will see a prize-winning photograph pass you right by during this time. |
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Two of its prize-winning wines, the Semillon Chardonnay and the Shiraz Cabernet, have also come to town. |
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From the tender moist interior and crispy moreish skin, to the flavoured fennel, it was a prize-winning dish. |
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The prize-winning herd, established in 1964, was built up to 70 cows, plus followers. |
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We came here for the cakes from the prize-winning Village Store, but they were spoken for and the bow-tied shopkeeper wouldn't take a bribe. |
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The herpetologist recently entered his prize-winning carpet snake in the Wild Australia Expo at the Darling Harbour Convention Centre, Sydney. |
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Vassilev is also the founder and leader of Laureate, an exclusive string ensemble made up of international prize-winning string instrumentalists. |
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His second novel, All Hat, was a modern horse opera about an ex-con who's forced to pilfer a prize-winning steed. |
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It was in this same studio that Notman created his well-known series Cariboo Hunting, Moose Hunting, and Trapping, prize-winning items in every international exhibition in which they were entered. |
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Mrs. Westlake, Mrs. Pettit, Mrs. Finnie, and Miss Hunt are all possessed of imported white cats, which have proved worthy ancestors of many prize-winning kittens. |
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These rostra are competitive, and the prize-winning works have been broadcast in over 30 countries, including France, Netherlands, Austria, Spain, Portugal, Slovenia, Slovakia, Argentina, Cuba, Jordan and Tunisia. |
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First, you get to work with a number of exciting and prize-winning products, as well as, new and innovative solutions that influence people's ways of communicating via wired and wireless networks. |
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Meanwhile, the after-school gardening club has been working hard growing prize-winning fruit and vegetables, including tomatoes, sweetcorn and pumpkins. |
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The Orchestra also provides a platform for young European prize-winning soloists and helps young composers by introducing their music to new audiences. |
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Watch championship sheepdog trials, flower arranging, traditional wrestling and show-jumping competitions, and admire prize-winning bulls, horses, chickens and dogs. |
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A canopy of hickory, oak and mesquite shrouded the barn and the muddy red clay, pinpointing where the pork, chicken and beef were becoming prize-winning barbecue. |
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It describes the Birdman who covers his plot in hen houses and pigeon lofts, but also makes room for drain pipes in which he grows his prize-winning carrots. |
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In fact, Sayles was a prize-winning fiction writer before he ever penned a screenplay or shot a reel of film. |
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Certainly, it compares favourably with the prize-winning burble of previous years. |
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Hounsfield later acknowledged Oldendorf's pioneering study as the only other attempt at tomographic reconstruction before Hounsfield's Nobel prize-winning work. |
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We can dance the most brilliant spirited dance through the field of budgetary control at European level, but as long as the Member States do not dance along it will never be a prize-winning performance. |
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The prize-winning topic was the partially automated evaluation of moving ultrasound images, so that the hard-to-interpret images can be analysed more objectively. |
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The prize-winning Le Gruyère was produced by Guy Germann at the Grancy VD cheese dairy and, like all Kaltbach cave-aged cheeses from Emmi, was matured in the Kaltbach cave in the Canton of Lucerne. |
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They have even been sent to the prize-winning art quilter Fiona Wright, a resident of Gresford, Australia. |
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Louise Fairburn, 38, had her gown made from the dreadlocked fleece of one of her rare, prize-winning Lincoln Longwools. |
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Basy Fogelman, 9, of Worcester, Massachusetts, and Simmy Hershkop, 11, of Wilkes Barre, Pennsylvania, read their prize-winning essays on what Hannukah means to them. |
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This bongo-playing, wisecracking, Nobel prize-winning physicist's larger-than-life personality elevated him to icon status within the world of science. |
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Leo Esaki is a Nobel Prize-winning physicist who invented the tunnel diode while working for the Sony Corporation in Japan. |
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He listened with rapt, amused attention to what I told him about the role of LSD in his Nobel Prize-winning discovery. |
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The Turner Prize-winning duo reinterprets the union jack for their largest show to date in Berlin and Paris. |
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Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist George Will implied in an interview that Ebola may be airborne. |
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Most students known Diamond from the PBS documentary based on his Pulitzer Prize-winning book Guns, Germs, and Steel. |
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James Watson, of the Nobel Prize-winning team that discovered the structure of DNA, played up his curmudgeonly persona to the max. |
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The Pulitzer Prize-winning author has followed Frank Bascombe through four novels. |
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ProPublica is a Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative newsroom. |
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Katz, one half of the owners' management committee, said he didn't get to vote on Marimow's ouster and filed a lawsuit to get the Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist back. |
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Lanker, a nationally known Pulitzer Prize-winning photographer, died at his Eugene home March 13 at the age of 63 from fast-moving pancreatic cancer. |
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Prize-winning books continue a trend toward increased representation of blacks, accounting for most of the books with exclusively black characters. |
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