If you prefer the modern, industrialised phalanx of grey and fuscous brown, then I refer you to Eamon McCann in the Belfast Telegraph. |
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The trophies and insets painted in the vertical margins of the Soane frontispiece and title page may refer to those duties. |
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Online shopping is now a norm, so people refer to the Monday after Thanksgiving as Cyber Monday. |
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The judge did not refer the jury to the fact that a mistaken witness can be a convincing one. |
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Strawson's idea was that descriptions refer because their anaphoric pronouns do. |
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These figures refer to cars that were imported by the official franchise holders. |
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Dene is a word from Northumbrian English used in Northumberland and Durham to refer to a steep-sided wooded valley through which a burn runs. |
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He may, alternatively, ask the Criminal Cases Review Committee to refer the case to the Court of Appeal, she said. |
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We also refer patients for mechanical control measures of hair growth including electrolysis and laser therapy. |
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The plaid is a length of tartan cloth draped over the shoulder and does not properly refer to the pattern, which is the tartan. |
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Perth has numerous specialists in skin diagnosis to whom general practitioners could refer patients. |
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Due to the similarity in function among thorns, spines, and prickles, we will generically refer to all plants bearing them as armed. |
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Her immense wooden sculptures refer to a primitive form of life in primordial worlds. |
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She even argues that there should be no obligation to refer patients to a pro-abortion doctor. |
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The results suggest that probation officers frequently refer probationers to treatment without coercion. |
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Adjectives that refer to people are sometimes introduced by the definite article the or by a possessive pronoun. |
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Explosives experts refer to rapid explosive reactions as detonation and slower explosive reactions as deflagration. |
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Fill them out with examples drawn from your texts and analyse anything that you quote or refer to. |
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There is a two-page affidavit, your Honour, which does refer to exhibits to the document. |
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This allows the pathogen to grow and infect the seed resulting in what we commonly refer to as seed decay or damping off. |
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Your doctor may refer you to a psychiatrist or a community psychiatric nurse. |
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People trying unsuccessfully to raise money for charitable purposes refer to the phenomenon of donor fatigue. |
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I refer to the Tuesday afternoon trip in advance of the big Fourth of July holiday weekend. |
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Articles should not refer to other publications for information regarding ethical approval. |
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Many refer to the Devil, or rely on descriptions of satanic cults as symbols of evil and death. |
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These subclans are exogamous, and the members refer to each other by using kinship terms. |
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There are two words in Old Icelandic that specifically refer to fire-drills. |
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When the inflammation doesn't involve the optic disk, doctors refer to it as retrobulbar optic neuritis. |
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She has been using images from popular culture to create images which refer to a traditional form of interior decoration. |
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Peers often hold back and may refer to the gifted person in derogatory terms. |
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The terms jacinth and jargoon refer to zircons in the old names of the stones. |
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The forms and imagery of these sculptures refer to assertiveness and aggression. |
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This could refer to any of the passerines, though most likely a canary or similar caged exotic. |
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The reference to 'spreading flocks' would more plausibly refer to the lambing season, in early spring, when flocks enlarge dramatically. |
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Place decisions refer to the ease of access which potential customers have to a service. |
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Yep, the woman I doorstepped earlier has sent a response to Friday's frantic emails two hours after the event to which they refer happened. |
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Then she trained to be a nurse so she could give herself a qualified opinion without having to refer to these doubting medical experts. |
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Such a user might find it efficient to be able to refer to formulaic phrases by code or abbreviation without even viewing the display. |
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Most bodybuilders refer to water in the pejorative, fingering it as the cause for water retention or a puffy and bloated appearance. |
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Nowadays, of course, we do not refer to a toast but always a piece of toast, but the French have as an irritating Anglicism un toast. |
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Statistical tests refer to differences between experiments and their corresponding controls. |
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I think it would be helpful if I very briefly refer to the precise finding of that employment tribunal. |
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I refer to the hordes of people from cheap hotels, apartments and cruise ships who invade the space at Sandy Lane. |
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The names usually refer to the tall flowering spike which in medieval times was dipped in tallow and set aflame as a torch in the evening. |
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We refer to this method as resolvent method and briefly review it in the Resolvent Method section. |
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Users of these sequences are kindly requested to refer to the present paper in addition to the accession numbers. |
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No one bothered to refer to the significantly expanded, easily accessible pocket book edition. |
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Some refer to the north side as the right bank and the south as the left bank. |
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Aristotle and Theophrastus refer to him a number of times but never identify him as a Pythagorean. |
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I refer to the very low levels of the availability of private equity which tends to neuter any entrepreneurial ambition. |
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Kunz and Baskerville refer to a fluorescent greenockite from Franklin, but no data are given, and the description is of limited utility. |
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He did refer to the Greens, but I do not recall him referring to you since the other point of order. |
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During the war, beginning in eastern France, it was used to refer to groups of irregulars who had organized themselves to fight the Germans. |
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The staff were not expected to inform on clients but should refer matters to their superior. |
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He argues that because of the small numbers of people killed we are predisposed to refer to the outcome as murder rather than war. |
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It is quite possible for a name to refer to something of which it, itself, is part. |
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Your Honours will see the second-last paragraph of what I might conveniently refer to as the digest. |
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This is used to refer to anyone capable of finding ingenious solutions to problems. |
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The ego is itself the centre of consciousness and it is what we refer to when we use the terms I or me. |
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The images all refer to the fetishistic obsession Western science has with classification based on visual evidence. |
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It can refer to polyvinyl chloride, but in caulks it generally indicates polyvinyl acetate. |
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Obsequiousness tends to refer to a desire to ingratiate oneself, and to win benefits through flattery. |
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I've always wondered why we use a plural pronoun to refer to a third, rather nebulous, individual. |
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You have not chosen to particularise what defects and dilapidations you refer to. |
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Once the family has been explicitly mentioned, Lanchester can refer to them with pronouns, in particular the pronoun them. |
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She is happy that we're planning a fall ceremony, which we brazenly refer to as a wedding, because it means she gets to be a flower girl. |
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We refer to entire eras in history of the United Kingdom as the Elizabethan age, or the Victorian period. |
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However, I've never seen a kid use the same pronoun in contiguous sentences to refer to different people. |
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He said that we could not refer to groups of people in derogatory terms. |
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If rescheduling is not possible, managers will need to refer to the applicable collective agreements to determine impacts. |
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The terms refer to different dialects of the spoken Chinese language. |
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It may issue a new decision which replaces the decision challenged or annul the decision and refer the case back to the previous instance. |
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Hypotheses or suppositions that refer to beauty, truth, genius, civilization, form, social position, taste, et cetera. |
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In some cases, the two appeared to be used synonymously, while elsewhere they seemed to refer to separate categories. |
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There were some matters the tribunal did not refer to although they could have, and some minor errors in relation to the details of this elaborate and complicated scheme. |
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I still have a gripe with journalists who consistently refuse to refer to documents like those above when constructing their various conspiracy theories. |
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In Canada this term can refer to physical processes that further remove suspended solids, such as sand filtration. |
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In this context, I refer in particular to the 'global gag rule', or Mexico City policy, as reinstated by President Bush. |
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Some of them allude to musical eras of the past, some refer tongue in cheek, in a more or less hidden manner, to famous compositions. |
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Other bureau advisories refer to as many as two dozen possible witnesses with Saudi connections. |
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The essence of what some would refer to as duty is embodied in this concept of responsibility. |
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What concepts or ideas do we continue to refer to as we move through this curriculum? |
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This is what I refer to as integrating the information collecting function and the sentencing process. |
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This is a shining example of what many people refer to as food sovereignty. |
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In this paper we refer mainly to conditions of unipolar depression that are considered severe enough to warrant treatment with antidepressant medication. |
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The word 'traditional' does not refer to something static or unchangeable, but rather denotes this localised matrix. |
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Offshoring is actually a very old practice, which economists refer to as the specialization of labour. |
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Big meals are prepared in schools so that children can enjoy their meal with their female teachers, whom they refer to as their second mother. |
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In Russia, polyclinics with practising homeopath physicians, if necessary, refer their patients to hospital consultations. |
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The initials BSW refer to blind side waterproofing, meaning that after application, the membrane is hidden between two concrete structures. |
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The United States Rico amendments refer to racketeering, influence, corruption, organization charges. |
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Do all service providers know how to refer clients for health information and services outside their area of expertise? |
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I will not demean the honour of this House by repeating them but most of the members know the incidents that I refer to. |
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Cases that the Commission decided to defer, deal with, refer to conciliation, stand down, return to officer or reconsider. |
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You only have to refer to the exceptions if this value is not equal to zero. |
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A brief mea culpa: in this book I refer to efficiency as a value, out of deference to folk-sociological conventions. |
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Such provisions may restate generally recognized rules of international law, or refer to established principles of cooperation between Parties. |
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A counter assistant who is asked a question to which he or she is not sure of the answer, for example, should refer it up, either to a dispenser or ultimately the pharmacist. |
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More importantly, though, I refer to fairness in the commonsense, flexible meaning of the word. |
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You can also refer to a flow chart, which summarises the various steps mentioned in Article 251 of the Treaty. |
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However, in some cases we cannot refer to them as fossils, since the fossilization process has not been completed. |
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The analysis in chapters E and F below will, therefore, have to refer to the unreduced gross expenditure figures. |
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They use it to refer to their place of business, as a metonymy to designate a geographical territory, not an administrative territory. |
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It has told Indian hospitals that it cannot refer UK patients because flying time to India exceeds the three hours limit set for transferring patients. |
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The parties have 14 days to reach an agreement on the amendments, failing which the employer may then refer the matter to an arbitrator. |
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The term may refer to a group that is small in number or it may connote inferior social position. |
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Often informants will refer to subjective concepts such as cleanliness and dirtiness. |
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If you wish to consult a psychiatrist or a psychotherapist, talk about this with your GP who can refer you. |
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Many of us refer to winter as a harsh and cold time, but in fact it is also a time of coziness and warmth. |
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Epidemiologic monitoring to identify suspect cases and refer them to the proper health centers. |
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It is no easy thing to refer to ressentiment without touching on the composite aspects the term conjures up. |
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The parameters refer to two passenger-cars: Model A is a small European vehicle and Model B is a largish medium-size European vehicle. |
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It is important to be specific and to frequently refer to any new laws and standards in effect in order to constantly update working conditions. |
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Some refer to these things as pork barrel politics and perhaps they are right, unfortunately. |
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If defects are found refer the examinee to an optometrist or ophthalmologist for a full eye exam. |
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From now on, I will refer to stable staff not as lads or lasses, but as grooms, in recognition of the trade that they practice, which demands skill and commitment. |
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Several points which had been lurking somewhere in the hidden depths of what I like to refer to laughingly as my mind crystallized as I was watching the game. |
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If the sign's proper function is to refer to its referent, it is self-cancelling. |
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Such provisions usually refer to the removal of distinguishing marks on the face or body such as tattoos, moles and birthmarks. |
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Whenever we get into nebulous descriptions there is the potential to use what I refer to as weasel words to benefit perhaps the governing party. |
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Sometimes the project acronym is not a true acronym and is simply a code name used by the participants to refer to the project. |
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Productions and distribution rights refer to the production and distribution of televisual products and movies. |
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I take that to be your perestroika, to match the glasnost which you refer to, but not an everlasting reform, not a constant state of flux. |
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I know there are a lot of discussions going on about the pension system at the moment and the Commissioner may, indeed, refer to that later. |
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The word Brugge does not refer to the bridges over the Reie River. It is an adulteration of the Old Norwegian word for jetty. |
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Thus, they may charge the ringleader, but refer the others to alternative measures. |
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Before choosing any caravanning trip, ask the organizers to refer you to clients that have already participated. |
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However, I wish to refer to some of the matters that are of particular interest to us. |
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The Stoics used to employ the term ataraxis to refer to this state of equanimity, and according to many, it is desirable to be free of passion, neither loving nor disliking. |
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We refer you to the detailed statements which Egypt delivered on those two occasions. |
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It would have been unnatural, or premature, to refer to the restoration before the dispersion had taken place, provided such restoration were an object of justifiable prospicience. |
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Digital citizenship can refer to how people work through the World Wide Web, across geographic boundaries, to identify injustices or solve problems together. |
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Perhaps, we should refer to the sublime, partial taming of instinctual drives rather than a clear cut deaggressivization and delibidinization of them. |
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The laws rarely refer to prevention, treatment, care or support services among women, and never among men who have sex with men. |
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One will refer to the specific pages clarifying the calculation of the transits and in order to understand this periodicity. |
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Those rules relate, for example, to agreements whereby parties refer a dispute to arbitration and the recognition and enforcement of arbitral awards. |
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The lawyers refer the patients to these neurologists after an accident or a work-related injury leaves them with back trouble. |
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Your clinician can refer you to a physical therapist to devise a plan that fits within your level of mobility and physical conditioning. |
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Hunt did not refer to the recovery team's submission in his reasons for giving approval. |
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In closing, I want to refer to Environment Canada's role in understanding the situation. |
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Therefore, from this point forward, the article will refer to mine action and not specifically to disarmament. |
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We should stick to the facts and when we refer to persecution we should remember who is persecuting whom. |
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As a flight attendant, I deal with excessive and oversized bags on a daily basis and kiddingly refer to myself as the carry-on baggage police. |
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Individual Internet sides refer also to other Internet sides, for whose technical and contentwise normalness we are not responsible. |
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Be aware that some of the writeup in the Classes section may refer to concepts from the Objects section. |
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However, I want to refer back once again to the expression of regret of the House. |
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L 7KHWHUPV¶KDWUHG·DQG¶KRVWLOLW³· refer to intense and irrational emotions of opprobrium, enmity and detestation towards the target group. |
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One of the most devastating types of emotional abuse is what I refer to as shaming behaviours. |
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Smart cards refer to plastic cards the same size and thickness as credit cards, which carry an integrated circuit chip. |
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Ask them to refer to Harris' sketch for use of contour lines and crosshatching. |
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The term crotal may also refer to a closed bell containing loose pellets, similar in construction to a sleigh bell. |
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Today the term rhetoric is generally used to refer only to the form of argumentation, often with the pejorative connotation that rhetoric is a means of obscuring the truth. |
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I refer to the fact that a number of candidates could not afford to enter the lists because of financial difficulties affecting their parties. |
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In closing, I want to refer to a festivity that was held in Toronto last night which the minister, I and some others had the privilege to attend. |
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Please refer to the free baggage allowance page or your flight ticket for the maximum permissible weight of your baggage. |
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Low supplies refer to levels which put in danger industrial development or ability to feed a population. |
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Waiting list figures refer to new applicants for social housing and not existing social housing tenants requesting a transfer. |
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On 12 May 2005, the Prosecutor notified the Chamber of her intention to refer back four cases to the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia. |
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It is thus inaccurate to refer to this pill as emergency contraception, given its potential to act as an abortifacient. |
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If you wish to use it, we can refer you to the authors with whom you can make an arrangement regarding the use. |
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Select a product family from the table of elements, or refer to the alphabetical list of chemical products distributed. |
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In episodes that refer to two of his paintings and a detail from a third, she starts as a woman in a long, green dress, stretching and curling constrainedly on a chair. |
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Both the ISP and the MP refer to the disclosure of data to the HR Director. |
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Put another way, flexible rates refer to potential, not to actual changes in the rate. |
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For the knowledge, it is necessary to refer to the 4 small triangles schematized higher. |
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As her condition worsened, pressures mount on her doctor to refer her to another physician or to hospitalize her. |
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The strawberries are another canting reference to the name Barry, and the Maltese crosses refer to the Order of St. John. |
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In this vein, we can refer to examples of well-paying jobs, that are generally not acquired, but are more accessible to men rather than women. |
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When we refer to the human brain we mean more than the pinko-grey jelly that fills our skulls. |
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In the plural, they can refer to members of the person's family. |
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For details on the hit songs that are programmed for each amp model, refer to the table at end of this owner's manual. |
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Will there be a second clock to keep count of the speakers who refer to it? |
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For this, we refer the interested reader to a wide-ranging list of references. |
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For a list of references, please refer to our 'Portfolio' page or contact us. |
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But in the cases that we refer to the criminal authorities, it is pretty clear that these are people who were deliberately and knowingly cooking the books. |
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I have heard some of his colleagues irreverently refer to him as Paddy. |
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If no agreement can be reached, ECHA will give permission to the new registrant to refer to the necessary information. |
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Please refer to INSTALL.linux, which gives in depth instructions on getting OpenBSD working with Linux. |
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If the problem persists, then you should refer to the documentation supplied with your xD picture card for further information. |
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It does not address or refer to problems of urbanization, especially food insecurity in urban areas, undernourishment or obesity. |
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It's also a play on words because it can refer to relationships, binds, ties. |
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For further information and a more in-depth analysis of the problem, the reader may refer to the reports listed at the end of the fact sheet. |
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An employer or employment agency that refuses to refer older adults is breaking the law. |
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Please refer to this website for the latest versions of the statistical tables and for any updates or corrigenda subsequent to printing. |
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They can be programmed to refer to the master clock at preset times and set their own internal clock to the right time. |
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Always refer to the tire decal on the door jamb for the minimum load pressure and tire size information. |
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When in doubt on the interpretation of these rules of conduct, members should refer to the Ethics Committee of their Institute or Corporation. |
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Unyoked from the activity of driving, most people experience what researchers refer to as passive fatigue, a state in which awareness is dulled. |
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Other observers refer to disorganisation, boredom, excitability, insatiability, egocentricity, low self-esteem and depression. |
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Furthermore, both the pencil drawing and the medal refer formally and conceptually to other works by Eduardo Chillida. |
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A list will appear with all possible article's title options that might refer to the same subject once you enter an option search. |
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Many of her supporters refer to her as Ethiopia's Aung San Suu Kyi, the Burmese prisoner of conscience. |
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Note: All quoted costs refer to calls made from a landline within the relevant country. |
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The Diccionario de Plantas AgrÃcolas and Zander refer to this species under the name R. spicatum Robs. emend. |
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The term paramecium is also used to refer to individual organisms in a Paramecium species. |
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It was now raining cats and dogs outside if I refer to the zeal with which the people were digging into their raincoat while exiting the place. |
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Both terms are used in common speech as if they are synonymous and refer to persons that have vanished without explanation. |
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I am quite deliberately saying product counterfeiter, rather than refer to a peddler of phoney products, which sounds very harsh. |
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We refer to hollowing-out as the situation where the target firm is shut down following a merger with a domestic or foreign acquirer. |
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For information, refer to the hotel website. This venue, formerly known as the Creagorry Hotel, was home to the original ETON rocketeers. |
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The names «Gog and Magog» refer to this prophecy of Ezekiel, describing how Satan will lead the nations to besiege the New Jerusalem. |
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I refer to the fact that we have one of the most sophisticated battlefield response teams for biological warfare that exists on the planet. |
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In other words: there are scarcely any empirical values and no generally applicable approaches to refer back to. |
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The terms tercile, quartile, quintile and decile should refer to the percentiles which divide the distribution into 3, 4, 5, or 10 equal parts, respectively. |
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The one I use most of the time, and which I refer to in this post, is only for postgrads, academics and professionals, all of whom really should know better. |
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African American men also commonly use it to refer to behavior they find distasteful. |
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In this article, we refer to all county-level units as counties. |
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The reader may have to refer from one section to another and one section may be superseded or modified by what is written in another. |
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Indications may be used which refer to privately owned brands or names, provided they are not laudatory or are such as to mislead the consumer. |
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The name of the village is believed to refer to the existence of some kind of megalith or a stone set to limit properties. |
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Indirect effects refer to effects on human health or the environment occurring through a causal chain of events. |
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Both Shia and Sunni Arabs habitually refer to the Kurds with ill-disguised contempt. |
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Rather, it is best to refer to it selectively as a starting point toward an overall plan to address your developmental needs. |
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For articles left in a taxi on the way to the airport, please refer to the taxi cab company you used to get to the Airport. |
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They refer to those who continue to accept the work of Satan instead of cutting it off even though they go to church. |
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If a health care provider has personal barriers to providing nonjudgmental care and information, they should refer patients to another provider. |
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Each of the five elements mantras call forth the assistance of Divine concepts that most people refer to as gods. |
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When speaking about hope, in one sense we refer to it as a natural gift, a universal feature of all humankind. |
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The term graphic design can refer to a number of artistic and professional disciplines which focus on visual communication and presentation. |
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To be a success 'n your work you must study the follow'ng carefully and refer to them often. |
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The importance of apples in Gerona's culture can be gauged by the number of popular song lyrics that refer to the fruit. |
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These memories refer to the cruelty the witches experienced at the hands of the jailors and by the orders of the watchers. |
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They offer make-do solutions to temporary concerns and, therefore, refer to their forms as only fleetingly perfect compositions. |
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Please refer to the text on the tally sheet when the indicator has turned pink. |
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If you are person of faith, refer to your spiritual reference book for guidance. |
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If you misspell the tag, CVSup will behave as though you had specified a valid tag which happens to refer to no files at all. |
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Further examinations refer to the interdependency between the filling and the carton, for example, to examine the resistance to stress cracking. |
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A community may refer to another municipality, or a reserve, or a rural area. |
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Please refer to the hp300 FAQ page for information on how to change the ROM mode. |
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If using the headset for the first time, refer to the tag attached to the headset for assembly instructions. |
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These three terms refer to land-use changes, for example from forest to cropland and vice-versa. |
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The Trotskyite trials were open, and we again refer the reader to the accompanying supplement. |
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Most of the works on Tamil Siddhas refer to sage Agastya as a preceptor of the Tamil Siddha doctrine. |
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To help you follow the steps in preparing a budget, simply refer to the Worksheets in the foldout portion at the back of this guide. |
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The eight spokes of the Catherine wheel refer to the number of Dr. White's children. |
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Check that the photosensitive drum is in position, otherwise refer to the previous section: fitting the photosensitive drum. |
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Our ecclesial model can refer to this reality and be positively influenced by it. |
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Only the first referral agent to refer a specific new player is eligible to collect the bonus for referring that person. |
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In many cases, physicians are reluctant to refer patients to palliative care for fear that the demand will outstrip resources. |
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Mr. Al Babin: No. The interesting part of it is that sometimes I refer to myself as a longhaired, flat-footed civvy. |
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There is per definition no definable market price for a portfolio of this type in that there is no previous history of sales to refer to. |
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It is a point to which we can refer when we try to encapsulate the entire country. |
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Please refer to the information circular for the items of business to be transacted at the annual meeting. |
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In cosmetology, this term is used to refer to adding water through impregnation of the upper layers of the epidermis. |
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That is why you must have a game plan to guide you, to refer to and to see whether you are making progress. |
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For pome fruit, stone fruit and hops please refer to the individual use descriptions for activity-specific restricted entry intervals. |
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Please refer to the manual of your paraglider to find out if this might be the case. |
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In that case, we would like to refer you to our 'virtual window display' at www.ipower.eu. |
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This has the appearance of dispensing with the use of proper names and dispensing also with the recognition of what proper names typically refer to, viz. individuals. |
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The term rheumatic disease is used to refer to all types of arthritis and rheumatism, and also includes diseases of the soft tissue, muscle and bone. |
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I am not going to refer to jewel thieves nor am I going to refer to shoplifters in this place. |
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We ask you to name one or the other, when you use a direct quotation or when you refer to the general principles of the methodology Praxeme. |
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Also, you refer to this building in Ville Saint-Laurent as a white elephant. |
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The views which continue to hold sway in this field rarely refer to cooperatives. |
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Finally, this question does not specifically single out and refer to the issue of access to medicines in developing countries and least developed countries. |
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Prairie dogs use their language to refer to real dangers in the real world, so it definitely has meaning. |
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Spinoffs refer to any technology that is a direct result of coding or products created by NASA and redesigned for an alternate purpose. |
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I refer to the state of our divisions and alienations of spirit on account of religion. |
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American males often used British terms such as Cousin John or Jake to refer to a privy or a chamber pot. |
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Nowadays speakers on Twin Earth are well aware that their word 'water' does not refer to the Earthian stuff. |
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Once endured it is enjoyed as my owndom. Elsewhere I refer to this process of enduring hardship as the only possible source of hardihood. |
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The Eudoses are the Jutes, these names probably refer to localities in Jutland or on the Baltic coast. |
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Glacials, on the other hand, refer to colder phases within an ice age that separate interglacials. |
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The term Hindu in these ancient records is a geographical term and did not refer to a religion. |
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The term has also more recently been used by Hindu leaders, reformers, and nationalists to refer to Hinduism as a unified world religion. |
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Buddhist texts also refer to the three Vedic sacrificial fires, reinterpreting and explaining them as ethical conduct. |
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He also has characters frequently refer to days of the week and specific hours to help the audience understand that time has passed in the story. |
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For additional information regarding Jane Austen's family and ancestry, please refer to Jane Austen's family and ancestry. |
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In popular culture the term is sometimes used to refer to a sense of sportsmanship and fair play. |
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The wolf may be a tribute to the city's founder, Sir Arthur Chichester, and refer to his own coat of arms. |
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These Romans also used other names to refer to tribes living in that area, including Verturiones, Taexali and Venicones. |
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This term is sometimes also used to refer to elections for multiple winners in a particular constituency using bloc voting. |
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The word chair can refer to the place from which the holder of the office presides, whether on a chair, at a lectern, or elsewhere. |
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Many Virginian place names refer to the archipelago, such as Bermuda City, and Bermuda Hundred. |
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The third and fourth numbers refer to the track number, which can be any number from 00 to 99 inclusive, and are usually numbered sequentially. |
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Despite the Brethren's rejection of the term 'member', many observers use the term to refer to those who attend meetings. |
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I used the term, and also 'Pop Culture' to refer to the products of the mass media, not to works of art that draw upon popular culture. |
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Cairn originally could more broadly refer to various types of hills and natural stone piles, but today is used exclusively of artificial ones. |
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The early records refer to all the Irish and Ireland in Latin as Scoti and Scotia. |
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Protohistoric may also refer to the transition period between the advent of literacy in a society and the writings of the first historians. |
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The Romans called the land north of the wall Caledonia, though in some contexts the term may refer to the whole area north of Hadrian's Wall. |
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However, more complex movements are influenced by musicality and lyrical relevance to express emotions or refer to a message. |
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This name is used informally to refer to a common local species or all gulls in general, and has no fixed taxonomic meaning. |
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The word fortification can also refer to the practice of improving an area's defence with defensive works. |
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This term is primarily used to refer to citizens of the United States, and less commonly to those of other North American countries. |
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In the idiom jump on the bandwagon, jump on involves joining something and a 'bandwagon' can refer to a collective cause, regardless of context. |
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Many English exonyms have been used to refer to the indigenous peoples of the Americas. |
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Both nations agreed in 1979 to refer the question of maritime boundary delimitation to the International Court of Justice in The Hague. |
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Now bayonnaise can refer to a particular mayonnaise flavoured with the Espelette chillis. |
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Caulk can refer either to the caulking substance or to the process of applying it. |
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I refer to hallucinatory or pseudo-hallucinatory luminous phenomena, photisms, to use the term of the psychologists. |
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Many of those ephemeral devices, which experts refer to collectively as photographica, were used to illustrate the book. |
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Several of the sagas refer to cult houses or temples, generally called in Old Norse by the term hof. |
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The term has also been used to refer to people from Barbary, a region encompassing most of North Africa. |
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The term Mongol became used to refer to all Mongolic Speaking tribes under the control of Genghis Khan. |
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Byzantium is a term used by modern historians to refer to the later Roman Empire. |
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The term zootomy is also sometimes used to specifically refer to animals. |
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The drawings that must be assumed to be pictures of Muhammed depict a religious figure, and none of them can be considered to be meant to refer to Muslims in general. |
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Only products with initial code 5, 6, 7 and 8, according to the SITC, which refer to chemical products, manufactured articles, machinery and equipment of transport and several manufactures, respectively, are taken. |
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Hemming complained that this was a breach of privilege and in January the Commons agreed to refer the issue to the standards and privileges committee. |
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