At home I made strong coffee and had it with a half a bar of white chocolate but neither revived me. |
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Braque revived the Western idea of the female nude, also the drapery depicted is another traditional element. |
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Hot coffee revived her slightly and she heaved the new suitcase on to the pale bed-cover and flung back the lid. |
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After a long time, the revived projects are exceeding the value of projects shelved, showing overall buoyancy in the economy and investment. |
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The frontwoman revived the grunge look several years too late, pairing a vampy lipstick with mussed-up hair. |
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The reappearance of road gangs in Alabama revived painful images of the state and the South as a backward and racist region. |
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And I expect to be back here on Thursday, refreshed, revived and reinvigorated. |
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Ancient rituals have been revived, sacrificial altars rebuilt and lunar patterns observed with increasing attention. |
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And the third, a lapsed neopagan, revived her religious practice online and was the only one of the three who stayed there. |
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According to Mr. Sasi, paintings covered in grimy varnish can sometimes be revived through cleaning and revarnishing alone. |
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He gave the baby mouth-to-mouth resuscitation, and he revived although seemed a bit floppy. |
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Jesus just fainted while on the cross, later revived in the cool tomb and then left. |
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The peasant movement, like the workers' movement, revived in the wake of the victory of the revolutionary armies. |
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Clearly, something in the youthful blood revived the regenerative cells in muscle and liver. |
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To read D. H. Lawrence is to be revived by the electric current of energy that flows through his words. |
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Interest was revived in 1995 when a 60 kilometre coastal race from Mombassa was held. |
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Some European researchers have now revived the notion of dissociative processes related to somatic states and functions. |
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The concept was revived in the early 20th century by economists Joseph Schumpeter and Frank Knight. |
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Even as the southern protest movement achieved its civil rights goals, it also revived feelings of racial consciousness among African Americans. |
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Folk craft traditions have been revived and modified in response to the tourist trade. |
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Bacon has successfully revived his career after allegations of drug use ended his run on children's television. |
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While film-making was revived in the 1980s, the output remains small and the budgets are low. |
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If any revived consciousness can be seen in the events leading up to and following on from Seattle it is an anarchist one. |
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A design firm hired by the school suggested sales might be revived by the creation of a new symbol for the school. |
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He revived Britain's international position by joining with Prussia in 1787 to win back from France the predominant influence over the Dutch. |
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When he jumped to Volkswagen's Audi division in 1972, he revived it with such improvements as permanent all-wheel-drive sports cars. |
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In the late twentieth century rhetoric has been revived as the study of the structuring powers of discourse. |
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According to some analysts, the Iranian revolution has revived the Alavid Shi'ism, and the Safavid Shi'ism is on the decline. |
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It also revived a business coalition formed years earlier to promote the waterway for the benefit of communities along its shores. |
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Last year, his CD became a roaring success and saw the sagging career of another superstar being revived. |
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He revived the art of the essay, and brought new psychological and political insight into literary criticism. |
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If the markers do dry out, they are easily revived by running the tips under water and recapping overnight. |
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And it is not just the mack who is revived, but the women who will do anything for him, including sell their bodies. |
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So makeshift solutions were invented, revived and refined to get back a certain air of balance. |
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Apparently, James Bond will also drown in an enclosed water tank but be revived with some life-giving drug by a Japanese enemy. |
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If the current negotiations over a grand coalition should founder, these plans could be quickly revived. |
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The night was a terrific celebration of the past five years and many wonderful memories were revived. |
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The series is being revived after a recent thaw in relations between the two countries. |
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Then Christ's image is revived, and our distorted features become harmonized by the inner power of divine beauty working in us. |
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In 1700 the meridian project was revived and now, in addition to a number of other scientists, Cassini had his son Jacques to assist him. |
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We have revived the sport of mountaineering in a major way, after a gap of 43 years. |
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George Washington delivered the State of the Union message aloud, a practice dropped by Jefferson and not revived until the 20th century. |
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I didn't find out about that until later, because I fainted at the sight of him and wasn't revived until the tow truck came. |
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He also revived or bought several publishers for different editions and translations of the book. |
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As patron to numerous architects, he revived the pure Palladian style of Inigo Jones and almost bankrupted himself in the process. |
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The effort to invent a modern politics for Africa privileged ethnic representation-a revived, or sometimes even invented, tribalism. |
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Popular-yet-dormant brands, and tried and tested formulae are revived and revisited all the time. |
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The bees are of the old Irish black bee variety which have been revived by the group of beekeepers. |
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His reputation was revived by the Surrealists, who admired his visual punning. |
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They revived the handbell choir, answering God's invitation to sing a new song. |
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Financial services is a dead industry and cannot be revived anywhere close to what it was. |
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The party's electoral fortunes also revived in the state elections and by-elections. |
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The bus station will be located between what is currently Osborne Street and a revived Vineyard Street. |
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In the months leading up to the deadline, questions were revived about the power and prerogative of Congress to wage war. |
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It was revived after it was forced to suspend publication a few years ago owing to political reasons. |
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The creedal issue has revived as well, as the Evangelicals have recently called for a formulation of a confession of faith. |
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In Europe, a group of artists known as the Pre-Raphaelites revived old techniques of flame making and ornamentation. |
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I was revived by smelling salts but, without a substitute to replace me, I played on. |
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I think the Garden of Eden now revived by eco-spirituality, has come to represent the once hoped-for celestial paradise. |
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Arrayed against them are postmodernists and leftists as well as populist nationalists who have revived Maoist ideas about people power. |
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Survival hopes were revived after a deal was struck by chairman Nigel Hughes to continue the groundshare next season with Cheltenham Town. |
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His career revived, Layne leads what had been a moribund Lions franchise to three league championships in eight years. |
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But the revived interest in ergonomic theories to some extent must be the result of the graying of our work force. |
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Unlike the quickly revived flies, the larvae I have brought into the cabin seem stone dead even after hours of relative warmth. |
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At least if the draft were revived a big portion of the drinkers would be in other parts of the world. |
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In so doing, he revived hopes that he can be a worthy successor to Scottish greats Jim Watt and Ken Buchanan. |
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They felt they could have done without her presence, and revived their broiges with her in various media interviews. |
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In the 1970s, Hawaiians revived their traditional culture, and the state recognized Hawaiian as an official language. |
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Older traditions of internationalism and isolationism have been revived and adapted to post-cold war conditions. |
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So perhaps it's no surprise that brokerage firms have revived an old concept called option income funds. |
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He collapsed but was revived by staff and was transferred to Leeds General Infirmary where he suffered another cardiac arrest and died. |
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It will be the 35th anniversary of the event being revived after a break of several years. |
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It became extinct but has been revived as a rich cream cheese, made from double cream and given a crust of toasted pinhead oatmeal. |
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The box-office success of the film has allayed fears over its performance and has revived hopes for sequels. |
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Amid the urban riots, campus unrest, economic strains, and Vietnam War controversies of the late 1960s, Republican conservatism revived. |
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Admittedly, I worry that once I'm back in New York City, the concrete jungle I call home, my newly revived spirits will wither. |
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The show was such a smash in London that Mendes revived it in Manhattan in 1998 where it became a phenomenon. |
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The man whose Naya Theatre group revived theatre in the 60's is unperturbed by controversy and likes to move on. |
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It was revived yesterday after years of disuse to coincide with the opening of the area's new police headquarters at Whitebirk. |
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Under his influence her interest in Irish folklore revived, and she began to study Irish mythology, taking her research into the field. |
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These same gestures and movements, even the very words themselves, have been repeated and revived over many generations in that precise place. |
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A revived stock market helped boost income from equity and bond underwriting, as investment banking activity finally began to pick up. |
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Traditional crafts of the Kutch have been revived through ornate patterns and handwork of the Rabari, Mathua, and Ahir regions. |
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Instead of abandoning the city for the suburbs, neighborhoods have been revived, like Central Harlem. |
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The canal boom revived the idea of a waterway between Manchester and Sowerby Bridge. |
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While many other designers turned to the west for their influences, Edward stayed true to the kebaya, but revived for modern times. |
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In recent weeks, long-stalled restructuring schemes have been revived to merge redundant companies inside Temasek as well as spin off noncore assets. |
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Since the 19th century, Frisian has revived as a literary language. |
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So murderous was Funeka's left hook that Mofu was left prostrate on the canvas for some moments as medical personnel and concerned handlers feverishly revived him. |
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The pleasure and challenge the music presented me all those years ago, has been revived for me, even though I'm on the business end of a baton and not the French horn. |
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Even after years of severe dryness, some species can be revived with a little water, which is why they can survive regular tramplings on the city's pavements. |
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Close to his burning leader, Byu fainted, then revived and began to pray. |
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It has also been revived in Cornwall as the name for an equivalent assembly there as part of the rediscovery of Cornish, which died out in the eighteenth century. |
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But the sudden successes of the party in the State elections of 1841 revived the hopes of the old spoilsmen, and flattered them with the hope of again succeeding. |
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The Roman system of scripts ran from around 30 bc to ad 600 and was to influence the subsequent history of scripts, with certain elements being periodically revived. |
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The family-owned company that revived Pabst Blue Ribbon has been given the go-ahead to purchase Hostess out of bankruptcy. |
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Employees' hopes are revived, and shareholders see much less dilution. |
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Despite a revived interest in Scottish identity in recent years, the teaching of Scottish history is patchy and tokenistic with glaring gaps spanning hundreds of years. |
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The movement endured into the Roman era, was revived by humanists during the Renaissance, and was espoused by the philosophes during the Enlightenment. |
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True, they had no shower gel at the time and the heat treatments softened the grit and grim for removal while the cold waters revived the weary bather. |
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If you make a meal of your adventure, your spirit is revived. |
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Suddenly, water covered his face and the shock of the water revived him. |
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It was punch on the lawn again and the stirrup cup was passed around at Bruree Lodge on Saturday, as an old tradition was revived by a group of local farmers. |
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Some 300 other game shows have come and gone since producer merv Griffin revived Jeopardy! |
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A few minutes later, Ferguson, having been revived, sat on the sideline, helmet off, hair tousled, dazed. |
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Morris dancing was revived in the early 20th Century by the Tabs. |
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A second recent development in the study of marriage has revived the project of comparative social science as a complement to the ethnographic discipline of fieldwork. |
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Conservatism revived with the dual leadership of Bentinck and Disraeli. |
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The Moravians skipped Fourth of July celebrations for a few years after that, but they soon revived them. |
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Olbermann almost single-handedly revived the network by leading it on a leftward march. |
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It did not pain me instead it revived, reanimated and retrieved me. |
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The civil case was dismissed on a technicality but was later revived. |
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What a great skill to have and what a neat idea that it's been revived! |
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The generations before 1100 were the 'century of imagination',... when local exchanges revived especially in the bourgs growing up at castle gates. |
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The novel had a considerable vogue in its day, and bears witness to the religious and historical interests revived by the Oxford movement and the Pre-Raphaelites. |
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Now the topic is revived again, thanks to some deep digging from Izzy. |
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John Calvin's own position is often disputed, and subsequent Calvinism was frequently infralapsarian, although supralapsarianism has been revived recently. |
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The city was forgotten until the legend was revived in the 19th century. |
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Poland, Lithuania and Ukraine have revived a plan to form a joint battle group. |
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These words revived her moribund career, underscoring the truth that politics is mostly about locution, locution, locution. |
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Later, the Dukes of Burgundy appropriated the land and vines were revived by medieval monks. |
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Though the bar closed soon after, a movement had been sparked, and when it reopened in 1990, history was revived. |
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The original twilight Zone is renowned for the acting careers it revived or jump started. |
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Wuxi-based CSMC revived the sale earlier this week by slashing the amount it intended to raise by half after investors shunned a previous attempt in June. |
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The tracker mechanism continued in use into the 19th century and has been revived on present-day organs because it gives an immediacy of touch from key to pipe. |
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It's a merry, moving, wise play, compellingly revived by the repertory. |
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A French, German, and Italian production that became another unprofitable film for Welles, the film was recently revived in a fully restored print. |
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Can the miraculously revived Silvio Berlusconi cobble together a coalition? |
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And he revived the company by bringing it even truer to its consumerist roots. |
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The revived pack were, of course, fox-hounds and Patricia Loftus was the joint master with the late Dr. O'Brien as well as being the first whipper-in. |
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When it is revived at the end of the eighteenth-century by the English Della Cruscan poets, the tradition gains a new life in the orbit of the romantic movement. |
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For many years after the Marlborough carnival week was revived in the early 1970s it was held at Whitsun with the procession on the Saturday at the end of half-term week. |
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Three playoff matchups from last fall will be revived this weekend. |
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The gardens, nurseries, orchards, walled garden, arboretum, ice house, oyster farm and barnacle goose sanctuary will all, in time, be revived thoroughly. |
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However, it is understood the group have revived plans for a multiplex cinema and are expected to lodge a planning application in the coming months. |
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These trends have revived old debates and spurred new research. |
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In January, the newly revived Schiaparelli sent out its first couture collection in decades, presenting light, whimsical clothing. |
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A few years ago, some molecular embryology data on amphioxus have revived the long forgotten hypothesis that the ancestor of coelomates was a segmented animal. |
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After a long eclipse during the Middle Ages, the tradition of Greek and Roman republicanism was revived in the Italian republics of the Renaissance. |
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A once desultory and commercially moribund neighborhood is revived. |
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Semi-abstract sculptural figures inspired by folk art, first designed in 1963 by Alexander Girard, now colourfully revived by Vitra. |
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But it was not until the late 19th century that Owain's reputation was revived. |
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The festival was revived in 2002 in a different format, and is now an annual event. |
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The French Revolution revived religious and political grievances in Ireland. |
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Interest in these events revived in the English Renaissance and led to Boudica's fame in the Victorian era. |
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His nephew Edgar called himself King of the English and revived the claim to rule over all the peoples of Britain. |
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The title of Duke of Aquitaine, already revived, was now borne by Rainulf, although it was also claimed by the counts of Toulouse. |
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Schiaparelli's label is being revived by Diego Della Valle of tod's Group. |
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Its meetings appear to have been intermittent, but it was revived by Henry VII for his heir, Prince Arthur. |
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Towns and trade revived, and the rise of a money economy began to weaken the bonds of serfdom that tied peasants to the land. |
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By the end of 1554, the pope had approved the deal, and the Heresy Acts were revived. |
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Her memory was also revived during the Napoleonic Wars, when the nation again found itself on the brink of invasion. |
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In response to the Militia Ordinance, Charles revived the Commissions of Array as a means of summoning an army instead. |
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The French Revolution revived religious and political problems in Ireland, a realm under the rule of the King of Great Britain. |
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Full enfranchisement was revived in 1965, with the passage of the Voting Rights Act of 1965, which provided for federal enforcement of rights. |
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Commerce revived and the emperors oversaw the extension of a uniform administration to all the provinces. |
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By the beginning of the 8th century, the Carolingian Empire revived the basilica form of architecture. |
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The Byzantines also faced a revived Bulgaria, which in the late 12th and 13th centuries spread throughout the Balkans. |
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The contact with the theosophist Henry More, revived his interest in alchemy. |
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Hooke's reputation was revived during the twentieth century through studies of Robert Gunther and Margaret 'Espinasse. |
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The Welsh Assembly Government revived the scheme as the M4 relief road tolled bypass in 2007 but later abandoned it for financial reasons. |
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Nance's work became the basis of revived Cornish for most of the 20th century. |
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This was seen by Cornish speakers as a milestone, turning the language from a state of undergoing revival, to having been revived. |
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Other indigenous forms of education are being revived in various ways across India. |
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Between 14th and 18th century, Hinduism revived in certain provinces of India under two powerful states, viz. |
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Versions of revived Palladian architecture dominated English country house architecture. |
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In 1847, 8,000 British crown coins were minted in proof condition with the design using an ornate reverse in keeping with the revived style. |
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The Silk Road, which led from Europe to East Asia, revived in the 16th century. |
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During the English Restoration, it was revived and heavily revised by William Davenant. |
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But Jonson's career eventually made him a focal point for the revived sociopolitical criticism. |
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In the 19th century his emphasis on induction was revived and developed by William Whewell, among others. |
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It was revived in 2004 in a tour of England along with Robert Rankin's The Antipope. |
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This ritual was dropped from the coronation of Queen Victoria and was never revived. |
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The name was briefly revived in the Military Training Act 1939, in the aftermath of the Munich Crisis. |
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The American public liked it, but the critics did not, and it fell into neglect until interest revived near the end of the composer's life. |
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The piece was revived the following year, but was still not a great success. |
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New prog describes the wave of progressive rock bands in the 2000s who revived the genre. |
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In fact this tradition has been revived in parks and stately homes around the UK at promenade concerts such as the Battle Proms. |
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While in the US for the Shaffer play, Gielgud revived Much Ado About Nothing, this time with Margaret Leighton as his Beatrice. |
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Since 2000, Ealing Studios has resumed releasing films under its own name, including the revived St Trinian's franchise. |
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As a result, Byzantium revived Classical models of education and libraries. |
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Rosebery colours were revived as a change kit for the UEFA Euro 2016 qualifying matches. |
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Originated in 1832 and revived in the 1960s, the Gentse Feesten have become a modern tradition. |
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In 2003 the tournament was revived and England comfortably won, beating her old rivals plus Scotland, Ireland and Russia. |
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In the past the tournament has been axed and revived many times, and it was stopped for six years because of the Second World War. |
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King Henry III of England renounced the title of Duke of Normandy by that treaty, and none of his successors ever revived it. |
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This revived Caribbean trade provided rich new pickings for a wave of piracy. |
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In feudal and dynastic terms, the Scottish reliance on French support was revived during the reign of Charles II, whose own mother was French. |
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Allied and Russian forces were revived only temporarily by Romania's entry into the war on 27 August. |
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Most of these would be forgotten in the interwar period until World War II revived the need. |
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Most reject the idea that it alone miraculously revived Europe, as evidence shows that a general recovery was already underway. |
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The Hunslet Engine Company was revived in 2005 and is now building steam locomotives on a commercial basis. |
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Tolkien revived European epic literature in the tradition of Beowulf and the North Germanic Edda and the Arthurian Cycles. |
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It was revived after union with England in 1707 by figures including Allan Ramsay and James Macpherson. |
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He revived interest in the Confucian classics and introduced the west to classical Japanese poetry and drama. |
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The latest revival of traditional music from the late 1970s also revived the interest in this versatile instrument. |
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This also failed, and Sullivan never worked with Gilbert again, although their operas continued to be revived with success at the Savoy. |
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Between 1988 and 2003, after the company was revived, it recorded seven of the operas. |
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Although Comedy and Tragedy had a short run due to the lead actress refusing to act during Holy Week, the play was revived regularly. |
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Although the game was revived after the end of the war, the golden age of Argentine hurling had passed. |
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It was revived after union with England in 1707 by figures including Allan Ramsay, Robert Fergusson and James Macpherson. |
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Inverness Citadel was another popular side which became defunct, but had its name revived. |
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About the same time he revived the Sumner method of finding a ship's place at sea, and calculated a set of tables for its ready application. |
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He stressed a social vision that revived and preserved Scotland's communal traditions at a time of strain on the social fabric of the country. |
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In 1703, however, Anne once again revived the Order of the Thistle, which survives to this day. |
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In 2014 the tradition was revived after an official abeyance of several years. |
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This revived Roman law, in turn, became the foundation of law in all civil law jurisdictions. |
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The fortunes of Merthyr revived temporarily during World War II, as war industry was established in the area. |
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In modern times, interest was revived by Leo Tolstoy in his late works, particularly in The Kingdom of God Is Within You. |
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In 2000, he revived the tradition of appointing harpists to the Royal Court, by appointing an Official Harpist to the Prince of Wales. |
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In 2015, after nearly 50 years, the mint began producing its own line of bullion bars and coins under its revived Royal Mint Refinery brand. |
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However the practice was revived in 1794 with the invention of the cotton gin. |
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By the late 1920s, the publication of this type of literature largely abated and was only sporadically revived in the later 20th century. |
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The revival of interest in Celtic visual art came sometime later than the revived interest in Celtic literature. |
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When the revived series of Doctor Who was brought back, an aftershow series was created by the BBC, titled Doctor Who Confidential. |
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The script was written by Steven Moffat, later to be head writer and executive producer to the revived series. |
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The revived series has received recognition from critics and the public, across various awards ceremonies. |
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The local cycles were revived in both York and Chester in 1951 as part of the Festival of Britain, and are still performed by the local guilds. |
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They revived an adapted version of the production at Shakespeare's Globe in 2015 as The Mysteries. |
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It has been frequently revived, including on Broadway in 1999 with Matthew Broderick and most recently in the West End with Jason Donovan. |
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As a result, the Armorican peninsula was renamed Brittany, Celtic culture was revived and independent petty kingdoms arose in this region. |
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After World War II they were eventually subsumed into the revived corvette classification. |
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Napoleon had already abandoned his plans of invasion before the battle and they were never revived. |
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The idea was revived shortly before World War I with the craft using new gasoline engines. |
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The opening of the Suez Canal in 1869 revived European interest in the East, but no nation was successful in establishing trade dominance. |
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Racine in France and Goethe in Germany revived Greek drama, reworking the ancient myths. |
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However, the myth was revived in 1997 when author Dava Sobel presented it as an unqualified truth in her book Longitude. |
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The event was revived in 2002 at Seaclose Park, a recreation ground on the outskirts of Newport. |
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Domitian also revived the practice of the imperial cult, which had fallen somewhat out of use under Vespasian. |
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However, a new national consciousness was revived in Iceland, inspired by romantic nationalist ideas from continental Europe. |
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The Scandinavian settlements in Ladoga and Novgorod revived and started to grow rapidly. |
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Sallust was expelled from the senate in 50 BC on moral grounds, but quickly revived his career by attaching himself to Julius Caesar. |
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By then a revived Bagler party had formed in Denmark, taking another son of King Magnus Erlingsson, Erling Stonewall, as their king. |
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Like other Germanic deities, veneration of Thor is revived in the modern period in Heathenry. |
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Snorri was also part of this revived interest, examining pagan myths from his perspective as a cultural historian and mythographer. |
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Interest in Norse mythology was revived in the eighteenth century, and scholars turned their attention to it in the early nineteenth century. |
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The spice trade soon revived but the Portuguese would not be able to fully monopolize nor disrupt this trade. |
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The policies revived rebellions When trade restrictions were released, Fujian and Guangdong saw enormous outflows of migrants. |
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A dispute with Spain in 2002 over the tiny island of Perejil revived the issue of the sovereignty of Melilla and Ceuta. |
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Although the religion largely died out after the Tang, it was revived in China following the Mongol invasions of the 13th century. |
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The rediscovery of the Canary Islands by Europeans in the 14th century revived an interest in Atlantic island myths. |
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The oil boom in the '00's has revived the economy, but the benefits are not distributed evenly. |
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De Gonneville's long forgotten tales were revived as the basis of a French claim over these new lands. |
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During periods of decline, the Sri Lankan monastic lineage was revived through contact with Thailand and Burma. |
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They temporarily revived headhunting of Japanese toward the end of the war, with Allied Z Special Unit provided assistance to them. |
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Despite this evidence, however, the depiction of California as an island revived in the early 17th century. |
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The Jesuit missionary and cartographer Eusebio Francisco Kino revived the fact that Baja California was a peninsula. |
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Towards later era of the Ming dynasty, with declining government control, commerce, trade and private industries revived. |
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This provides a revived ideological and experiential faith in accordance to the need of the laity and period of time. |
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This Act, however, was repealed in March 1802, and Congress provided that the former circuit courts would be revived as of July 1 of that year. |
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In Europe, Irnerius, the Four Doctors and Accursius revived the study of civil law. |
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Dharmapala founded the Vikramashila and revived Nalanda, considered one of the first great universities in recorded history. |
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The Sultanate suffered significantly from the sacking of Delhi revived briefly under the Lodi Dynasty, but it was a shadow of the former. |
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Hart revived analytical jurisprudence as an important theoretical debate in the twentieth century through his book The Concept of Law. |
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The idea was revived and formulated rigorously, in the late 1980s by Kevin Murphy, Andrei Shleifer and Robert Vishny. |
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A contractor named Beamish heard him there and broke the door down, and an unconscious Isambard was pulled out and revived. |
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It is significant that after the death of George Stephenson in August 1848, the friendship of the two men was revived. |
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The conclusion many papers drew was that Sadler's Bill should be revived and passed. |
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In recent years, The Manx language has been revived after dying out and is now taught in some schools on the Isle of Man. |
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Renaissance magic took a revived interest in the occult, including necromancy. |
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This was rejected in parliament in 1970, revived in 1974 and finally resolved by the building of the Roadford Reservoir to the west of the moor. |
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A Christmas carol revived and reinvented it around the gift of giving. |
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A YOUTH centre is being revived thanks to a pounds 5,000 donation from the Port of Tyne. |
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He resigned after the first revived Dr Who series, as the poor luvvie fretted over being typecast. |
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Talion is revived from the dead between the events of the Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings. |
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A revived soap box derby for this year's Springtime In Paris festival will see the county closing a series of roads in the town. |
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The slasher-pic 80s is revived with gallows humour as resonant as deputy Dewey's dopey ringtone. |
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Chief Riruako revived NUDO in 2003, when he broke away from the opposition Democratic Turnhalle Alliance. |
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The musicals of Ivor Novello should be revived for the stage and Wales is the place to start the trend, according to singer Shan Cothi. |
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Does the mere possibility that a cryopreserved body may be revived indicate that it is potentially alive and thus still informed by its soul? |
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In muscles, young blood revived strength and endurance in old mice. |
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Fae Platten, four, stopped breathing on the way back from Tenerife and was only revived with an emergency injection. |
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They revived the mine at Skouriotissa in 1996 and implemented, for the first time in Europe, the practice of hydrometallurgy. |
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That's typically the case with these revived TV series, too. |
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Insouciantly idle, he used to be the laziest and fastest man in F1 before being dumped by Ferrari but returns renewed, revived and raring to go. |
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In 1985, Disney revived the iconic character of Dorothy Gale in Return To Oz, based on two novels by Frass nk L Baum. |
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Ruskin also wished to see traditional rural handicrafts revived. |
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Interest and expertise among Norwegians about craft brewed beer has risen sharply in a short time, and the old brewery traditions of this country are revived. |
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He revived the ancient May Day festival in the town, and was a leading figure in the establishment of Keswick School, Blencathra Sanatorium and the County Farm School. |
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In 800 the title of emperor was revived in Western Europe by Charlemagne, whose Carolingian Empire greatly affected later European social structure and history. |
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In the 1839 session, Fox Maule revived the 1838 Bill with alterations. |
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Though business revived in 1919, a shortage of building materials restricted the building of new mills, and activity was financial with the mills seeking recapitalisation. |
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The Occasional Conformity Bill was revived in the wake of the storm, but Anne withheld support, fearing its reintroduction was a ruse to cause a political quarrel. |
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Canal proposals were periodically revived in the 20th and 21st centuries. |
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Cornish died out as a community language in the 18th century but is being revived, and is now protected under the European Charter for Regional or Minority Languages. |
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In the 17th century, English common law judge Sir Edward Coke revived the idea of rights based on citizenship by arguing that Englishmen had historically enjoyed such rights. |
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In abolitionist countries, the debate is sometimes revived by particularly brutal murders though few countries have brought it back after abolishing it. |
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The company revived its classics label Heliodor to house its core classical signings and Elin is the first artist to appear on the newly branded label. |
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Kublai built schools for Confucian scholars, issued paper money, revived Chinese rituals, and endorsed policies that stimulated agricultural and commercial growth. |
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In modern times, interest in Zheng He revived substantially. |
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Lloyds instead hived off the branches under the revived TSB brand. |
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However, German reunification in 1990 revived the old debates. |
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The play has been revived repeatedly at moments propitious for raw expressions of National Romanticism and was especially popular during the Third Reich. |
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Mitch Daniels has revived a contentious proposal to lease the Hoosier Lottery to a private operator, saying the money could fund a proposed college scholarship program. |
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The development of inexpensive fiberglass rods, synthetic fly lines, and monofilament leaders in the early 1950s, that revived the popularity of fly fishing. |
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Seaclose Park in Newport, on the east bank of the River Medina, has since 2002 been the location for the revived Isle of Wight Music Festival, held annually. |
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The incident immediately revived the debate about goal-line technology, with a final decision on whether it is introduced expected to be taken in Zurich on 5 July. |
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In recent times, nickel and other metal supply has needed to turn to higher cost deposits in order to meet increased demand, and commercial interest in nodules has revived. |
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His spirits revived, however, and by half past three, his wife Alice had been put on board the destroyer Escopette, which was to escort the flight. |
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Revival of Celtic art has been seen in the Celtic jewellery that revived ancient traditions based on the museum pieces that archaeologists had recovered. |
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