Pile the creamy mixture into the freshly baked croustades, top with the lids and serve straight away with a large green salad on the side. |
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Return the croustade to the oven for 10-15 mins, to heat through, then remove from the tin and serve on a warmed plate. |
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Spoon into the bread croustades and serve hot, garnished with snipped chives. |
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Season well and serve with olive oil croutons, and snippings of fresh green herbs. |
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A little while ago he sent me a proposed solution by email, a method of moving the cup while you walk that should serve to damp the oscillations. |
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If things work out, you will have a perfectly divine singularity to serve up to family and guests. |
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Everywhere you look outside, there are turrets and spires, while inside the tearooms serve Clootie dumplings. |
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Quintessentially British and loved by everyone I know, Eccles cakes can't fail to impress if you serve them with a really good cheese as dessert. |
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Some have theorized that comic books serve the modern function of the epical myth. |
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Whether you serve a fruity deep-dish cobbler draped with a homemade pastry crust or a lush pumpkin cheesecake, keep the servings small. |
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Puerto Ricans and Chicanos are linguistically linked, but if you invite them over for frijoles and serve refried beans, one will be disappointed. |
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Pour the sauce over the frikkadels and serve at once, or present it separately in a bowl. |
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When I plan to serve frikkadels with pasta I always add a pinch of thyme, sage and tarragon. |
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Clean cultivation should serve as an effective aid in managing white fringed beetles. |
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Outdoor play space also should include cubbyholes or spaces that can serve as role-game features. |
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Alcohol may serve as a cue, making certain behaviors more accessible and likely. |
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Clinic visits may serve as important cues to action that serve as a basis for behavior change. |
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Ronald Ray points out that there is no inherent right to serve in the military, and many things can disqualify people from eligibility to serve. |
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The primary care physician's emotional response to a patient can serve as an early cue to pursue a somatization diagnosis. |
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Consequently, these characteristics may serve as cues that are used by respondents to guide their interactions with survey interviewers. |
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Make frou-frou desserts with those cherries on top or, just serve the cherries alone. |
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However, the cult of the business personality was, in part, designed to serve as a distraction. |
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But Martha was cumbered about much serving, and came to him, and said, Lord, dost thou not care that my sister hath left me to serve alone? |
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Equally, it may serve as mitigation in the director's favour in fixing the period of disqualification. |
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The eighth seed broke him in the third game of the match and from then on broke serve at will. |
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In summer I serve them at room temperature, but you don't get the full flavour if they're chilled. |
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The ever-canny Ronald Reagan was the only Republican president since Eisenhower who managed to serve two full terms. |
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Their health has already deteriorated after a year in jail and will worsen further if they are compelled to serve their full terms. |
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Such 'pragmatically self-verifying' propositions seem too specialized to serve as models for foundational judgements generally. |
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Our decision, if it goes against him, means that he is taken into custody now to serve his sentence? |
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Unmold and serve the galettes warm, as a side to game or roasted meat, or as the centerpiece of a salad. |
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I championed earmark reform, also, to help Congress stop wasting money on those things that do not serve the public interest. |
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They built halls to serve as language schools and as places for dramas, films, judo lessons, poetry readings, potlucks, and parties. |
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In the hotels, there are tuxedoed waiters who fussily serve weekend visitors from Milan. |
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The instrument package would remain on the last-stage rocket, which could serve as a counterpoise for the furlable antenna of the beacon. |
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In Galle's harbor, just a few damaged boats serve as a reminder of the fury of the waves. |
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If it was damaged beyond repair, well it must have some functionality even after it can no longer serve its original function. |
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His drawings feature annotated cutaways of fierce reptilian creatures revealing inner organs that serve various destructive purposes. |
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Green's cut-glass accent, clipped looks and cool demeanour only serve to reinforce his image as a fully paid-up member of the Establishment. |
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Engineering human biological change is, in these terms, a very different matter from engineering animals and plants to better serve our needs. |
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The deal will serve as a template for the government as it moves to disinvest itself of all its banking interests over the next four years. |
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Pulmonary endothelial cells serve as gatekeepers to trafficking inflammatory and immune cells. |
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This disgusting man will only serve four years and then be free to inflict pain and suffering on other women. |
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Tapas bars are proliferating because they serve up a wide variety of flexible, unpretentious, gutsy food and modest bills. |
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The bishop ended by apologising for upsetting his flock and saying he had been honoured to serve the Church. |
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A core of invited extramural scientists will serve as primary discussants to address the conference objectives. |
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He will not be the first, or the last, and inviting one or two into the A-team squad for training will not serve to halt the exodus. |
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Mummy portraits of Rome and Egypt serve as the earliest examples of encaustic painting. |
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That linkage, once made, may serve to confirm, modify, or completely disconfirm. |
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Species and site characteristics often serve as a general guide to fertilization in established Christmas tree plantations. |
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The job of a tour guide is to serve tourists, not solicit customers for the shops. |
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On special occasions or when guests are visiting, the Vietnamese serve rice wine, beer, soft drinks, or coffee. |
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Firm but fair, educated but impulsive, he embodies the finer qualities of a paternalistic seafarer proud of his ability to serve his country. |
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Learning how to serve had begun to yield to women's changing aspirations and increasing economic emancipation. |
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This here pub opens at noon on parade day to serve up Irish stew and other good grub, with live, lively Irish music. |
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He has a big serve and groundstrokes but probably needs to work on his volleys a bit. |
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Although serious cases by skin infection are rare, it may serve as a source of diphtherial infection for spread of the organisms. |
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Pour into each mug, and serve with cinnamon sticks or sprinkle with ground cinnamon. |
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The dining table is just adequate enough to serve the family and is placed in such a way that it is just a few paces from the kitchen. |
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At one point he grooves a serve that recalls the mop-haired pro from Tennessee. |
|
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Hinge the club slightly in the backswing, then allow the grip to serve as a reminder to hold that position past impact. |
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He would perform his role as an elder statesman while continuing to serve the party and the government, the party officials said. |
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Sanders also is in discussions to serve as a spokesperson for infomercials. |
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As such, these works serve as a convincing proof of principle and have informed our own approach to the problem of dominance evolution. |
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Qualitative approaches, such as those described by Bernard, increasingly serve our investigations informatively. |
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A careful computational analysis can provide further insight and can thus serve as a valuable adjunct to chemical intuition. |
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Lesser priests and priestesses serve the shrines of fetishes, minor spirits, and focus on cures and magic charms. |
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A heightened female sensitivity to ingested ethanol could possibly serve useful functions. |
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When his serve and his forehand are not in fine fettle there is very little left of Roddick's game. |
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The incident on the pilot boat spurred harbour bosses to serve an injunction on the striking boatmen, preventing them from a repeat protest. |
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If you carry a handgun you do so to protect and serve the public or you possess a concealed carry permit to protect yourself and your loved ones. |
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Not everyone has to be all things to all digital editors, but the industry really needs digital natives to serve increasingly digital audiences. |
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The group will eventually digest the data into reports, which will serve as irrefutable evidence in the court of public opinion. |
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Generally, really good concept cars serve as models for much milder production vehicles at some point. |
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And in the double-height exhibition space, two large window-screens, with built-in shutters, serve to break up and diffuse the sunlight. |
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If anything, it would serve only to knock something in its electronic innards loose. |
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For failing to appear at the previous hearing she will serve another concurrent sentence of two weeks. |
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He was sentenced at Preston Crown Court to serve fifteen concurrent life sentences. |
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The same soldiers and leaders who adapt, learn and innovate on our battlefields serve in our institutional Army. |
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An exploration of his work will serve to illustrate his considerable creative genius. |
|
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If you're on a diet to lose weight, you'll stay away from places that serve fattening food. |
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I'd generally serve it with a jacket-baked potato for each person and a green salad or vegetable, depending on the season. |
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But many of them only serve the slogan with their lips, and do not abide by it in practice. |
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Further, at a given vapour pressure difference, O can serve as a measure of stomatal conductance as well. |
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The English have now learned how to make top-notch coffee, and many places serve it in French press pots. |
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The English and the nascent Indian confederacies realized that cooperation would best serve their respective interests. |
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And to serve this objective, Egypt has been heavily involved in many regional and international meetings and conferences. |
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To serve spoon some pineapple mint and heirloom tomato salad onto the center of a plate and set a yellowtail snapper fillet on top. |
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One arm of the U can also serve to divide the kitchen from an adjoining room, such as a family room or great room, in place of a solid wall. |
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County councillors are members of the public who stand for election to serve the people of Essex. |
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I thank them all for their commitment to the people they serve and to our democratic institution, this Parliament. |
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For instance, serve veggie hot dogs with a leafy salad dressed with oil and vinegar rather than canned baked beans. |
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Wardrobes or linen presses can serve in a kitchen as a larder or anything you fancy. |
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The paper would serve as a legal document in court should they find it necessary to file a lawsuit in the future. |
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The institutional Buddhists, as I've described, they were trying to show the State how they could serve the State's interest. |
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One reason that public libraries, parks, and land trusts serve the commons is because they are institutionally designed to serve everyone. |
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The cafes serve up cheap food like noodles and congee with customers sitting on plastic chairs in the open air to eat it. |
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Stamps also serve important instrumental and expressive functions in the lives of heroin distributors. |
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He struggled privately with gender identity early in his tour of duty, when gays couldn't openly serve in the military. |
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Compact discs may soon serve as diagnostic tools to be used in doctor's offices, or even at home. |
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That means companies that serve the market gain vast manufacturing economies of scale. |
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Thus, they serve more as an accompaniment rather than an integral part of the book. |
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Nanak insisted that every Sikh house should serve as a place of love and devotion, a true guest house. |
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The present crime situation should serve as a spring-board to unite people of all walks of life. |
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The only purpose it is intended to serve is to boost the election prospects of the ruling party in the State. |
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As such, they serve as distinctive fingerprints, suitable for differentiating among individual walnut trees within the same species. |
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Four hundred and fifty dwellers in a large Pueblo Joven would serve as directly elected officials of the Pueblo Joven. |
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This consisted of three to five men who were all loyal to the king and hand-picked by him to serve him. |
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If you want to serve them, pre-slice and plate them before placing them on your table. |
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But you'd have to serve devils on horseback and a really heavy Cabernet Sauvignon, of course. |
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The lexical items that become grammaticalized must first serve commonly needed discourse functions. |
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A proliferation of media outlets emerged to serve specialized interests and constituencies as a consequence of economic reform. |
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In the end, the trip does not serve its purpose, and most come back haggard, with another week of drudgery awaiting them. |
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I am shocked that a newspaper which purports to serve the interests of its readers should attack such an eminent social engineer. |
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Hotels serve international or Czech food, which is hearty and homely and very addictive. |
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Having gone a break up, he dropped his serve but it was no cause for alarm. |
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Let cool and serve or store in small airtight containers for up to one month. |
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The Bills hope he can rapidly develop into their starting quarterback and serve that role for many, many years. |
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You can form the fish paste into cakes, fry them in a little olive oil, and serve with aioli. |
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The new changes serve to increase flexibility and pastoral support for students contracted into the scheme. |
|
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In developing countries, children serve as one of the major contributors to family income. |
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He overcame dropping his serve in the opening game of the first set to break the Italian seventh seed twice to take the set. |
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But needing two games for victory, Henman dropped his serve for the first time against the Slovakian. |
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They may symbolise our more intuitive and instinctive parts or serve as messengers for the unconscious. |
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Both cover crops fix a lot of nitrogen and produce high yields of biomass that serve as organic matter to enrich the soil. |
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The German dropped his serve at 1-1 when he made a forehand error, and Canas held his serve comfortably to decide the first set. |
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A lack of substance in party conferences and conventions means that they merely serve to bring rhythm to the political year. |
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By the same token, an original or funky coffee table, end table or even barstool can serve as the conversation piece of your loft. |
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To serve, cut around each slice of bread and serve each piece upside down with pineapple and juices on top. |
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In a small saucepan, she poached some tangy California dried apricots in some water with a bit of sugar to serve atop the chicken and rice. |
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In order to progress in rank, position, and authority, officers will be required to serve at least one tour prior to selection for flag rank. |
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Moreover, the better restaurants, such as the Steak House, serve decent food and very drinkable wine. |
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Stiffer penalties were imposed for being drunk and clubs had to meet strict conditions to obtain a licence to serve drinks to members only. |
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Cafeterias on northern routes also have Class B liquor licences, which serve wine, beer and coolers. |
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Ordinary events can serve as reminders of the trauma and trigger flashbacks or intrusive images. |
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The restaurant is owned by three genial Irishmen who used to serve a simple French menu to their neighborhood clientele. |
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The VMI cadets were ordered to Richmond to serve as drillmasters for thousands of recruits who gathered there. |
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The deciduous and evergreen trees around the small circular polder could serve as an uncontrived wall. |
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But they can also burn up time, serve as a forum for politicking, and end up ratifying mediocre plans. |
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The Russian Czar, Peter the Great, devised the system in which young men were drafted to serve in the military for prolonged terms. |
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This isn't about politics but about the men and women who choose to serve this country. |
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Schnyder, serving for the match at 6-5, trailed 0-40 but held her serve after three deuces. |
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Your false allusions to union-driven puppetry only serve to strengthen my resolve. |
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We are of the view that governments are there to serve the needs of the people and maximise the benefits for all. |
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Cine and the WHO are drafting a document that will serve as a guide for researchers and communities in health research projects. |
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Without moisture, our corneas, which serve as protective domes for the front of the eyes, would dry out and could become cloudy or injured. |
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The laser beam source can be observed from downrange and could serve as a target. |
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To keep it simple, serve the juice just like that, or thicken it with a little slaked cornflour. |
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On a warm night, cook the rice ahead of time and cool it to serve with coronation chicken or a Thai chicken salad. |
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For dessert sprinkle the dish of fruit with a little white sugar and serve with the cream and sorbet. |
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It was also a dismal store and the concept of trying to serve both upmarket and downmarket clients was never going to work. |
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It is too early to tell if reforms such as post-tenure reviews will serve as useful correctives. |
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There are a number of transport corridors and oil pipelines that are in the process of development to serve this function. |
|
We serve broccoli stems and florets steamed and tossed with a vinaigrette salad dressing just as you would a salad. |
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The big bag of popcorn she bought could serve as hours of TV snacks for her. |
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They have no land or houses, just low, corrugated iron structures that serve as houses. |
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It is feared that it would only serve as another slush fund for corrupt government officials and politicians. |
|
In fact, among all the detritus, flotsam, and muck, this movie could serve as a strategically tossed life preserver. |
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The daily quota of manioc flour must be of five level alqueires, placing enough harvesters so that these can serve to hang up the coverings. |
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We like to serve the meat wrapped in large cos or iceberg lettuce leaves with fresh mint, coriander and Thai sweet basil. |
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But when they do this on the eve of elections, it is difficult to believe they are motivated by a genuine desire to serve the public. |
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The only real tradition here is that the groom must give his bride a dower to serve as insurance for her future. |
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The new building grows out of the original Victorian cottage hospital which was intended to serve passing riverboat traffic. |
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Assemble sandwich however you wish and serve with roasted portobello and garlicky wilted spinach. |
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There has been increased foreign investment in cotton gins, but most industrial concerns operate at low capacity and serve the local market. |
|
Federer returns to form, using the kick serve to good effect to take his first service game in three. |
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They hide their lies in doubletalk, manipulating our English language to serve their own ends. |
|
This should serve as a timely warning to all as the countdown to Hallowe'en continues. |
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You serve no useful purpose, except as a bit of eye candy for passing motorists and aren't contributing anything to the team. |
|
Pier blocks serve as a transition from the posts supporting the girder to the concrete foundation footings. |
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Finally, it has been suggested that a pH shift could serve as a signal to induce systems to counteract imbalances. |
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The back spans were designed to serve as a counterbalance for the main span, making heavy concrete construction desirable. |
|
Post offices serve many functions apart from postal services and many elderly people cannot travel a great distance to reach one. |
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They may serve either as the focal point of a piece of jewelry or as components of the overall design. |
|
Rafter started the brighter and broke serve when Agassi double-faulted, holding out to take the first set. |
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The golden rule for puddings is always to serve a wine that is sweeter than the dish. |
|
Meanwhile, witches' brooms serve as a safe haven for daddy longlegs and pseudoscorpions. |
|
This critique of modernist nationalism-as-mental-colonialism has come to serve as the fig leaf for the postmodernists. |
|
In Bulgarian folklore tradition, masked games serve as ritual blessings for good health, fertility and well-being. |
|
She double-faulted to lose her serve for 4-all, then double-faulted again in the final game to reach match point. |
|
|
Pro-vitamin B5 and zinc serve as backup, latching on to the binding sites in the hair follicle where DHT would do its damage. |
|
The females of many species deposit their eggs on just the few plant species that serve as food sources for the emerging larvae. |
|
And neither are condemnatory statements and protests, although they do serve the purpose of highlighting this scourge in our society. |
|
The proposed new chain would also serve greasy sausage and fried mashed potato pancakes. |
|
They serve an incredibly large Italian beef sandwich that will put you into quite the food coma. |
|
The Japanese, like most other Asians, do not usually serve meals in courses but set all the dishes on the table at the start of the meal. |
|
When the local courthouse was built it was designed to serve both Ontario County and Oshawa. |
|
Originally these plants were meant to serve only as a cover crop, enriching the soil with nitrogen and biomass. |
|
I usually serve round steak of kid goat with boiled potatoes, salad and cowberry sauce, often with sauce too. |
|
The company is trying to reverse years of progress on rangeland restoration to serve a handful of cowmen. |
|
The foregoing remarks hardly rise above the level of common sense, but they serve to frame a rather striking historical fact. |
|
Diaghilev demonstrated that music could and should have an organic function in ballet, not merely serve a decorative purpose. |
|
He warned that those which continued to serve out of hours could face prosecution and possible closure. |
|
In Lombardia and Veneto it is impossible to find a restaurant or bar that does not serve Prosecco. |
|
Most jazz magazines are only slightly more readable than airline glossies, and serve roughly the same purpose. |
|
Many mussel species depend on specific species of fish to serve as hosts for mussel larvae, or glochidia. |
|
Collections of this kind were to serve as a promptuary or preparatory store essential for speakers and writers. |
|
The ashes marking our foreheads on that day serve as a paradoxical remembrance of a future event, our death. |
|
In the past, lifeboats largely depended on inshore fishermen to serve as coxswains and crew. |
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The euro's recent strengthening on the foreign exchanges would serve to dampen inflationary pressures and boost purchasing power, he continued. |
|
|
Henman messed up the first-set tie-break after coming back from 5-down only to double-fault at 5-5 and allow Saulnier to serve out. |
|
They serve as a reminder of the soccer glory of the city, once a cradle of football talent in the country. |
|
But Enqvist stormed back to tie it, only to double-fault on his last serve before Agassi hit a backhand cross-court winner to end the first set. |
|
Plastic milk crates often serve as flexible storage units for penny-pinching college students. |
|
New Testament deacons serve the Lord by conducting the caring ministry of the church. |
|
A top woman player used to be able to get away with a middling first serve and a cream puff second serve. |
|
As soon as it is cooked through, fold it double, turn it out on a hot dish, and serve at once. |
|
I have to buy the food, prep it, prepare it, serve it to you, and clean it up, but I don't get paid for my time. |
|
They also serve as guides for determining the proper dosage of certain drugs. |
|
Ethiopia is another ethnically heterogeneous country comprised of about 70 languages, which serve to distinguish the various ethnic groups. |
|
Santa Lucia has been set up as a family place that could serve as a cafe in the daytime and a restaurant in the evening. |
|
Specifically designed to serve as a Hudson River dayboat, the Albany was completed in late March 1827 and put into service in early April. |
|
It stressed the need for convergence of fiscal and monetary policies to serve as a foundation for a monetary union. |
|
These rods can serve as surrogates for doorposts that would render the continuous utility poles a symbolic wall or border. |
|
The land allowed for defense in depth and could also serve as a bargaining tool for peace treaties when the fighting stopped. |
|
Neuroinformatics projects that serve as databanks or repositories implement a variety of procedures to improve data quality. |
|
It does not replicate or expand on the programmes, but offers an account of the century to serve as a background, or context, for them. |
|
Only pubs that do not serve food and pubs that limit their food to snacks such as crisps will not be subject to the ban. |
|
The fact is that it is not for the defence to have to request the prosecution to serve its evidence. |
|
The berries would serve as a meal for bugs, birds and other critters that happened across them. |
|
|
Britain and France sought to maximize their interests by economic and political frameworks designed to serve their advantage. |
|
It also contains various plant steroids that serve as hormone precursors as well as vitamin B 12 and carotene. |
|
The Thai began by holding serve and a cross-court backhand dropped just out in the second to give him a break point. |
|
Sailboats are some times fitted with a garboard drain plug to serve the same function when wintering ashore. |
|
Now, with print circulation in free fall, publishers have got to serve ads and collect revenue from somewhere. |
|
This award will serve the purpose of filling two gaping holes in the higher education landscape. |
|
But can science find the means to thrive in a free-flowing digital information environment and still serve all its masters? |
|
When I finished high school, I didn't go to graduation exercises, I went straight to serve in the army. |
|
Give it all a good stir and serve on warmed plates, just as the Dolcelatte starts to melt. |
|
Where the Crown can demonstrate that there was no prejudice to the accused flowing from a delay, then such proof may serve to excuse the delay. |
|
Others ask whether having all scientific information freely available to the public would really serve the public's best interest. |
|
Buy some jars of pesto and serve on crostini with mozzarella, goat's cheese or roasted vegetables. |
|
It's open early to serve late-morning cappuccinos and espressos. |
|
A single oscillator can serve as both a sensor and an orifice. |
|
Sift confectioner's sugar over the top of the cake and serve warm. |
|
Most fund companies serve both institutional and individual investors. |
|
Duquin argues that nonactive representations of women may reinforce the view that women's bodies serve an ornamental, rather than instrumental, function. |
|
Top with crab mixture and serve with finely diced red capsicum. |
|
These characteristic vibrations serve as molecular fingerprints. |
|
In doing so, the danger also exist that we might accentuate Africa's post-colonial particularity where politicians seek public office to serve ethnic constituencies. |
|
|
This should serve as a warning to the inveterate consumerists, who presumably also face extinction should they fail to erect legal barriers to suburban sprawl. |
|
This book is intended to serve both as an introduction to the study of globalization and as a more detailed statement of the transnational practices approach to globalization. |
|
This type of experiment, by its very nature, does not provide long travel times to serve as controls, so conclusive results are difficult to obtain. |
|
By contrast, the remaining six independent lawmakers, without the backing of a caucus, virtually stood no chance to serve as convener of any legislative committee. |
|
The destroyers have also been fitted with command and control facilities that allow them to serve as flagships for Canadian or allied task groups. |
|
In addition to their role as traditional Christmas decorations, poinsettias can serve as tokens of goodwill, friendship and joy during the holiday season and beyond. |
|
While social movement theorists cite that electoral politics serve only to co-opt our work, we must ask ourselves if certain publications don't do the same. |
|
Never before had a protein been found to serve as a catalyst to promote chemical reactions to form the glass or a rock-like material of a biomineral. |
|
Add parsley or coriander and serve with crusty bread and a green salad. |
|
A tense-looking Henman, perhaps still dwelling on Friday's singles defeat, flirts with danger at 15-30 but finds his first serve at the crucial moment to escape. |
|
Situated on the corner of Charlemont Street and Grand Parade, the office block is entered via a reception area where two lifts serve the building's five floors. |
|
The tender attention paid by the wife to her husband's body, the detailed steps of her betrayal, and the subtle note of portent, all serve to heighten the drama. |
|
Many of my past campers serve as counselors at my Summer Camp. |
|
Shop assistants who no longer needed to serve behind counters would be available to circulate and answer questions about the price, size and quality of goods. |
|
Because the book's community is defined implicitly by the text as an internal colony, theories of postcolonialism serve to highlight colonial structures embedded in the text. |
|
If you are a post office box in this profession and if you serve someone's interests which are in discrepancy with your own professionalism then it is obvious. |
|
A letting void period should run from the present time as nothing in the previous twelve months letting period will serve to foreshorten the future period needed to let. |
|
They are offered as commentary on the formal qualities of sculpture, but have been infused with just a little too much personality to mildly serve as object lessons. |
|
For a treat, serve the guests green sherbet with cream soda or ginger ale. |
|
It had crates piled against it on the inside to serve as sentry stands, and makeshift crenellations atop for better protection of the archers that stood watch. |
|
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The temple can serve to foster spiritual growth and development. |
|
Together with a suitably sized matchbox to serve as the fourth wall, this created a parallelepiped volume which was filled with stacks of pennies. |
|
But she throws in a slower serve which foxes the French player. |
|
The pair said they were partly attracted to the pub, which has a 50-seat restaurant, because it was a free house, allowing them to serve a selection of real ales. |
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I am not persuaded the provinces do have the constitutional or legislative authority to serve a process commenced by summons beyond the borders of Canada. |
|
The plaintiff must issue his process and must serve it on the defendant. |
|
Their purpose is not simply to serve as a deterrent but they would be a usable instrument of military power, like a tank, a fighter aircraft, or a cruise missile. |
|
Being able to crumb a disgusting cut of meat, fry it and serve it with a foul tasting gravy and side of coleslaw doesn't mean you are number one in the culinary arts. |
|
In the pentamerides, the outer hinge plates serve the function of supporting the delicate crura by connecting the crural bases to the medial portion of the hinge line. |
|
The act of the secondary observer writing down an observation when the primary observer has not indicated a detection can serve as a cue to the primary observer. |
|
The fudge and compromise which will inevitably ensue means that it is unlikely the stadium which is eventually built will serve the best interests of the fans. |
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The enlarged, fleshy, white funicles of the neotropical Chrysothemis friedrichsthaliana are rich in fatty oil and serve as a kind of elaiosome in ant dispersal. |
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If time is short, serve purchased frozen potstickers or gyoza instead. |
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Having developed the capacity to play some breathtaking rugby, we have sometimes failed to serve this captivating dish with a side order of pragmatism. |
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Why did I miss that serve when it was game point in the championship? |
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Also known as crankshaft dampers, these devices dwell in the harsh environment of a vehicle's engine and serve to reduce the noise and vibration of a vehicle. |
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Minority pharmacy graduates may be willing to serve as mentors or preceptors for minority students and participate in student recruitment activities in their local area. |
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The preponderance of Latin terms seemed to serve two purposes. |
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Let me illustrate here with an example about music, which may simply serve to marginalize and delegitimize the issue I'm discussing, but hey, that's why we're here. |
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Retaining its magnificence and glory, Surakarta Keraton, along with the Mangkunegaran Fort, has continued to serve as a symbol of Javanese culture. |
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I intend my typology to serve as an intellectual tool for purposes of discussion, not to indicate absolute demarcations or a rigid classification. |
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The pair, who have always protested their innocence, were jailed for life and told they would have to serve a minimum of 15 years before becoming eligible for parole. |
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So be certain that the hardware and software serve and enhance the human relationship between the messenger and hearers instead of depersonalizing it. |
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I serve it now as an alternative to a cheese or pudding course. |
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This tool rotates horizontally rather than vertically in the soil, thereby disrupting fewer layers, and the couple hopes it will serve to discourage the gophers. |
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When everyone is worried about losing their built up areas that serve as shops and residences, the magnificent gopuras of the temples stand in eloquent silence. |
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So much so, dancers of other forms like Orissi in east, Sanjukta Panigrahi and Sonal Mansingh, expressed desire to serve as devadasis in temples, an irony lost on all. |
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That is not to say that he will not hit a purple patch at Wimbledon but if his serve falters slightly his chances of reaching another Wimbledon final will evaporate. |
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They still serve breakfast, of course, but it typically consists of fresh fruit, baked goods from local suppliers, and the old standby of granola or cereal. |
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But as long as it doesn't serve the economical interests of the grey men, those who control the governments that control the world, it won't happen. |
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Though the book's elaborate details might make slow going for many readers, it will serve as a valuable resource for scholars and political activists. |
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First, a single square in the grid is chosen to serve as the focal point. |
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Bring it back to room temperature for at least an hour before cooking, and serve with a green salad tossed in olive oil, lemon juice and a touch of Dijon mustard. |
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Priests and social elders often serve as guides and mediators to help resolve relationship conflicts and dilemmas, facilitating communication and dialog among the parties. |
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The electrical organs consist of modified branchial muscle tissues which are highly modified to serve as electrocytes, miniature organic batteries. |
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Low tables with smooth, easy-to-clean surfaces can serve as both dining tables for snack time and as work surfaces for art projects or puzzle making. |
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Grace lifts us, inspires us, frees us and emboldens us to serve God. |
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The preparation of guggul in traditional Ayurvedic medicine can serve as a model for the detoxification of various resins intended for internal use. |
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But the indexes serve as a rough guide to the appalling reality of the rising household expenses of the majority of English people in the Tudor period. |
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For many players, his repertoire could serve as a model worth emulating. |
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