Part way along there was an astonishing profusion of pinkish-white twinflowers alongside the trail. |
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The area was called Bloodroot Valley because of the profusion of bloodroot flowers that blanketed the valley in the early spring. |
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There was a profusion of roses in blow and there was a wildness about it that I thought was very delightful. |
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The profusion of the greenery allows feeling comfortable even during July heat. |
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Hotels, villas and restaurants ready to accommodate holidaymakers have sprouted in profusion on the mountainside. |
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Barely three months earlier, where now there was such a profusion of colour, there had been manicured ski slopes. |
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Popular literature offered the penny dreadful and a profusion of magazines that published novels and other literary work serially. |
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Every fall, my Christmas cactus displays a spectacular profusion of blooms on a covered patio in San Mateo, California. |
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A profusion of beads was worn, the heaviness of the glass probably impressing upon the wearer the weight of symbolism contained in the beads. |
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Nature's abundance and metamorphic energy stimulates a similar profusion in the poet. |
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As we walked on, beautiful Indian sunbirds, their iridescent green flanks flashing brightly in the sunlight, flew past in a profusion of colours. |
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Yet despite their profusion and evident popularity these figures have received little scholarly attention. |
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It bears a profusion of upright, bottlebrush-like flowers that are deep maroon. |
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Despite the profusion of individual skills the composite performs considerably more poorly than the sum of its parts. |
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Around them are landscape paintings and decorations with a profusion of colours. |
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He is a mild-mannered fellow, whose only sartorial gesture in this Tour has been a profusion of designer stubble. |
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Sadly, the profusion of animated logos seems unlikely to abate any time soon. |
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Jazz piano gets an overhaul in the studio with a profusion of electronic sounds. |
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Anyone who has used a lead light while camped out on a warm night will know what a profusion of bugs will be attracted to it. |
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Instead of taking joy in the profusion of spring blooms, Jane struggles to take a breath. |
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A profusion of roses, old fashioned and modern, and herbaceous plants scent the air. |
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One of their noticeable features is the profusion of hollowed-out window decorations. |
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Caudwell throws up his hands in despair at the extravagant profusion of theories. |
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Each springtime since, motorists and passers-by have enjoyed the profusion of colour when the trees bloom. |
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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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It is also propagated by layering, divisions and by seed which it sets in profusion. |
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A profusion of mosses, liverworts, lichens and ferns cover the woodland floor and festoon tree trunks and branches. |
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Nothing survives of the original garden except the profusion of attractive plant life that engulfs Gordon Town. |
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The choir stalls displayed large bunches of wheat and asparagus ferns, while colour was added by a profusion of dahlias. |
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The bush in this area grows in luxuriant profusion, even on the high rocks off the coast. |
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Bright red salvias, phlox, anthurium and balsam flower in profusion in neat rows, and no wonder Thangam won the first prize for her garden. |
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The whole was accompanied by a profusion of wines, followed by nuts and preserved fruits, then Madeira, port or sherry. |
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After days of beech forest, the sudden profusion of mountain holly, Mt Cook lily, tree fuchsia, and dracophyllum, is striking. |
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Archaeologists also found a profusion of cowries and roughly 800 large bronze relics. |
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Pines, birches and juniper grow in luxuriant profusion on a valley floor lush in bilberry, cowberry and heather. |
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The profusion of words on the quilts counterpoints the simple linear sewing on the sheets. |
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These particles should appear in profusion only at the very high energies at which the unification takes place. |
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On the other hand, the televised games are damaged by the profusion of commercial plugs, logos and the like. |
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Its impact is enhanced by incisive writing and compelling evidence in profusion. |
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Their studies resulted in a profusion of new families, genera, and species. |
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The gardens have small topiarian trees, rose arbours, palm and lemon trees and a profusion of colourful flowers. |
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Within spongy layers of sea ice, microscopic algae bloom in profusion as sunlight floods in from above. |
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The present book breaks new ground, unearthing a treasure trove of visual delights as well as a profusion of new information. |
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In recent years literature has seen a profusion of irony and exotica, as if writers are too exhausted to keep up the fight, and instead hope to distract us. |
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In every month the tourist will find some aesthetic pleasure peculiar to the season, such as the plum blossoms or the cherry flowers, growing wantonly in beautiful profusion. |
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But the overwhelming impression, reinforced by the river's constant laughing and quarrelling beside you, is of nature's profusion, of its own abundance. |
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On the whole, the collection was quite wearable with a profusion of cuts and colours, but the designer still has some miles to go before the buyers start placing their orders. |
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Whitman loved adhesiveness so because it is a friendly profusion. |
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For those who are looking for something smaller from the Far North, there is a rich profusion of hand-woven articles and intricately carved boxes and keepsakes. |
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The unmanageable profusion of tags for people, places, and kinships, distinguishes scientific expertise from other modes of knowledge and authority. |
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A profusion of white fibers issuing from the ventral aspect of the dentate nucleus converge rostrally to form the main part of the superior cerebellar peduncle. |
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A freak straight-line windstorm caused a massive blowdown of trees in the area in 1999, and the profusion of fallen timber raised fears of a catastrophic firestorm. |
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It explains why fairytales boast such a profusion of curses, dragons, witches, and potions. |
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The altar has a profusion of Mannerist ornament, pierced scrollwork, vigorous strapwork, combined with many tiny figures, and floral and grotesque motifs. |
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The work I am talking about is a surface dressing instantly recognisable by the light grey coloured gravel and the profusion of loose stone chippings left on the surface. |
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Finger-rings and ear-studs, stone necklaces and ornamental chokers, brightly hued bracelets and innovatively shaped pendants are there in rich profusion. |
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The main crops my bees feed themselves on are sycamore, but there is quite a profusion of different flowers in the area, along with clover and heather. |
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The conventional view held that cultural impress on the New World was rudimentary, artless, too recent to have mellowed the garish profusion of nature. |
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With its profusion of midwives and naturalistic post-natal care, it is one of the few representations we have in western art that touches on the actual process of childbirth. |
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The profusion reigning everywhere gave birth to luxury and pride. |
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The initiative aims to inspire more British people to take a short break in England and enjoy the profusion of high quality food and drink available. |
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Though we had been led to expect that the latter dish would be a profusion of different ingredients and flavours, John simply could not pick them out. |
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He stared unbelievingly through the windshield at the rocks bouncing madly on the hood and the growing profusion of small dents on the surface of the metal. |
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A profusion of lamps and candles relieved the gloom, bathing in a pink glow sofas, settees, armchairs, side tables, escritoires, and curios the pair had collected. |
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No two animals were exactly alike, though unmistakable as hare or wild goat or chukor, as bharal or marmot, a wild profusion of them. |
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Let's not give in to chromophobia, or a fear of the profusion of diverse color evident in the first Haitian Constitution. |
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Whether you're planting a rockery or want to create a profusion of colour in a border, Moss Phlox is the ideal choice. |
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The flowers of throatwort are produced in delicate sprays borne in profusion for months on end. |
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Killer T cells normally exist in profusion, with more than 1,200 per microliter of blood. |
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Given what seems to be the ever-growing profusion of coffee vendors, imagine what a crisis it would be if coffee were suddenly rationed. |
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A jumblesome profusion of cuttings and grafts offers a more promising metaphor than does bonsai. |
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We set the men at work felling trees, selecting for the purpose jarrah, a hard, weather-resisting timber which grew in profusion near by. |
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The small purple petunias are produced in profusion and without ceasing during the entire season. |
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This work is based, unlike much of Elgar's earlier writing, not on a profusion of themes but on only three. |
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Today, finer grasses allow a profusion of colourful plants, from betony, buttercups and bugle, to stitchworts and scabious. |
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The bridal bouquet was a teardrop-shaped profusion of white Freesias and stephanotis. |
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The biennial profusion of campaign billboards and posters stipples the land that Lady Bird wants to beautify and Lyndon yearns to own. |
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Modern electric light sources come in a profusion of types and sizes adapted to myriad applications. |
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The upper parts of the dale are particularly striking because of its large old limestone field barns and its profusion of wild flowers. |
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The SSSI is made up of mostly coastal dunes and salt marsh attracting breeding birds and a profusion of flowers. |
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The area exhibits a profusion of distinctive rock landforms rising above the granite shield that covers much of Zimbabwe. |
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A profusion of languages and subcultures developed within the Maya core culture. |
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With the abolition of the Forms of Action in 1832 and 1833, a profusion of writs was no longer needed, and one uniform writ came into use. |
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The profusion of ataurique throughout the palaces reminds us of their interdependence with the gardens that they frame or look out upon. |
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The gardens have been thoughtfully and skilfully planned and contain a profusion of shrubs, flowers and trees including peony, quince, wisteria, clematis and a Judas tree. |
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Its most interesting feature was the profusion of not only the cut columellae of whelks, but the hundreds of small bits broken out of the anterior end of gigantic hard clams. |
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Impatiens were found growing throughout the Islands in great profusion. |
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Internally, there are also strong visual similarities in the simple lancet windows of the east end and the contrasting profusion of Purbeck marble shafts. |
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His hair, in great profusion, streamed down over his shoulders. |
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The profusion of the abovementioned examples implies that the words that have retained the postvocalic dental stop should be considered borrowings. |
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