These remarks would seem to imply a shift for the nurse from autocentric controlling, to allocentric controlling, then to allocentric nurturing. |
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I'll be up to Bedfordshire if you two don't mind. I'm on early shift in the morning so I'll have to be up and out by five. |
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While Millard did not shift from log cabin to White House, he did transport himself from beyond the Black Stump to strike it rich at Stawell. |
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Others hatch their eggs and tend the birth till it is able to shift for itself. |
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Blind Freddy could have seen that Danny was being beaten pointless, but Laurie refused to shift him until the last quarter. |
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The amount of that frequency shift becomes greater with greater time delay. |
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As the industrialisation of the valleys began there was little shift in the use of Welsh as a first language. |
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When inequality is higher the poor do not shift to less expensive forms of participation. |
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While there has been a shift to political parties, many contending for an office still run as independents. |
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These changes are not related to inflation, they reflect a shift in tastes. |
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New products may be introduced, older products disappear, the quality of existing products may change, and consumer preferences can shift. |
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Trade liberalization may shift economic inequality from a global to a domestic scale. |
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The main reason for this shift is the increasing importance of human capital in development. |
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Secondly, the red shift of the spectral lines would be so great that the spectrum would be shifted out of existence. |
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Several changes were proposed including a shift to regional operators owning the track and trains for their regions. |
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In April 2013, BP put its wind energy unit up for sale, to shift its focus more to its main oil and gas businesses. |
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It has recently taken on the nature of wholesale language shift, sometimes also termed language change, convergence or merger. |
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The Famine gave considerable impetus to the shift from Irish to English as the language of the majority. |
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After the Union in 1707 and the shift of political power to England, the use of Scots was discouraged by many in authority and education. |
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Ripostes, published in October 1912, begins Pound's shift toward minimalist language. |
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This shift in support by the Soviet Union motivated the Barre government to seek allies elsewhere. |
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Somalia's economy consists of both traditional and modern production, with a gradual shift toward modern industrial techniques. |
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As more countries have continued to become more developed, the interests of the world have slowly started to shift. |
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This radical shift from a chemically inert to an oxidizing atmosphere caused an ecological crisis, sometimes called the oxygen catastrophe. |
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This pivotal shift changed the simple promissory note into an agency for the expansion of the monetary supply itself. |
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A gradual shift of power during the 8th century led the kingdom of the Franks to evolve into the Carolingian Empire. |
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As speakers shift, there are discernible, if subtle, changes in language behavior. |
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The authors concluded that the Neolithic shift to agriculture entailed major population dispersal from the Near East. |
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A shift in language was expedited with the loss of men during the First World War and the resulting economic turmoil. |
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Here Gerald is frequently critical of the rule of the Angevin kings, a shift from his earlier praise of Henry II in the Topographia. |
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Brightness and contrast controls determine the DC shift and amplification, respectively. |
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The tides and currents of the river frequently shift mud and sand in the harbour. |
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Dikes were often built to allow for this shift in land change and to provide flood protection further inland. |
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This is especially common in some waterfowl, which shift from one flyway to another. |
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In 1999, only one right whale calf was born, compared to the 21 that were born in 1996, before the climate shift. |
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As global temperatures increase, the NAO is predicted to shift more often and to greater intensities. |
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Australia's government warned it would block moves to shift BHP's stock listing from Australia to the United Kingdom. |
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With this shift of perspective came an encouragement for alternative transportation, and locally based planning agencies. |
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This has largely been attributed to the reduction in state benefits and a shift toward the privatisation of public services. |
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In June 1990, the Riksdag voted for a new agricultural policy marking a significant shift away from price controls. |
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Before the 13th century almost all buildings were made of timber, but a shift began towards stone. |
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Due to this, the species composition of algal populations may shift in the presence of chemical pollutants. |
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In fact, the find at Bergakker indicates that the language may already have experienced this shift during the Old Frankish period. |
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Among Belgian and Surinamese Dutch speakers and speakers from other regions in the Netherlands, this vowel shift is not taking place. |
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This difference resulted from the High German consonant shift, with the Uerdingen and Benrath lines being two notable linguistic borders. |
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To the South, Low German blends into the High German dialects of Central German that have been affected by the High German consonant shift. |
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A consistent shift from land based trade to sea based trade has been recorded since the last three millennia. |
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The day shift ended, and the night shift started with 62 men running Piper Alpha. |
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The available evidence suggests that John did not regard the loss of the Duchy as a permanent shift in Capetian power. |
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On the screen we have seen Detroit shift to a Frisco defense, in which they overshift the two tackles and the end toward our flanker. |
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Frequency shift is caused by motion that changes the number of wavelengths between the reflector and the radar. |
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Doppler shift depends upon whether the radar configuration is active or passive. |
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Vehicles and weather moving parallel to the radar beam produce the maximum Doppler frequency shift. |
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Did in my hall in sight of least and most Bebreak his staff, my household office stay, Bad each make shift, and rode himself away. |
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The measure of the amount of frequency shift is directly proportional to the distance travelled. |
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Each antenna element or group of antenna elements incorporates a discrete phase shift that produces a phase gradient across the array. |
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The shift in weight, added to independent movements of the paddles, could lead to imbalance and potential capsizing. |
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When sedimentary strata accumulate through time, the environment can shift, forming a change in facies in the subsurface at one location. |
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Sedimentary environments can shift their geographical positions through time. |
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They then receive echoes back at the finely tuned frequency range by taking advantage of the Doppler shift of their motion in flight. |
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The Doppler shift of the returning echoes yields information relating to the motion and location of the bat's prey. |
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These bats must deal with changes in the Doppler shift due to changes in their flight speed. |
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A major reason for this is consumer attitude shift from consumption of red meat to white meat. |
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Thus the shift of ecclesiastical authority was away from Edessa, which in 216 had become tributary to Rome. |
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There was a shift in power from Western Europe and the British Empire to the two new superpowers, the United States and the Soviet Union. |
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Although the magnetic declination does shift with time, this wandering is slow enough that a simple compass remains useful for navigation. |
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The monarchs left it to the royal treasurer to shift funds among various royal accounts on behalf of the enterprise. |
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As interior structures of the pile are consumed, the pile can shift and collapse, spreading the burn area. |
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As they age and their gill rakers fully developed, menhaden shift their diet to primarily consume phytoplankton. |
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While dinosaurs were ancestrally bipedal, many extinct groups included quadrupedal species, and some were able to shift between these stances. |
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Over the years, as the shoals gradually shift, the erosion may be redirected to attack different parts of the shore. |
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Recent research suggests that USDA plant hardiness zones will shift northward under climate change. |
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About 25 million years ago, a shift in plate tectonic movements began to contort and crumple the region. |
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Advanced industrial societies are now seeing a shift toward an increase in service sectors over manufacturing and production. |
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These visits influenced him into believing the shift from Neanderthal to modern humans 40,000 to 35,000 years ago was sudden rather than gradual. |
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During the 1970s and 1990s, there was an epistemological shift away from the positivist traditions that had largely informed the discipline. |
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After World War II the emphasis began to shift toward an effort to explore the role culture plays in shaping human biology. |
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Sometimes a simple change triggers a chain shift in which the entire phonological system is affected. |
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This is because the vowel shift brought the already established orthography out of synchronization with pronunciation. |
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Language endangerment occurs when a language is at risk of falling out of use as its speakers die out or shift to speaking another language. |
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However, this same shift in the radiocarbon signal predates the start of Younger Dryas at Lake Suigetsu by a few hundred years. |
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Bordering dialects very probably continued to be mutually intelligible even beyond the boundaries of the consonant shift. |
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The High German consonant shift distinguished the High German languages from the other West Germanic languages. |
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The southernmost varieties have completed the second sound shift, whereas the northern dialects remained unaffected by the consonant shift. |
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The resulting language, Old High German, can be neatly contrasted with Low Franconian, which for the most part did not experience the shift. |
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Some scholars speculate that this may have marked a fundamental shift in people's beliefs or myths about life and the afterlife. |
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It was after the independence of Portugal in 1640 when the concept of Spain started to shift and be applied to all the Peninsula except Portugal. |
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Today, the pink-washed versions of toys that had been marketed solely to boys for decades are touted as a shift toward gender-neutrality. |
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North of the Benrath line up to the North Sea, this consonant shift did not happen. |
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And it reflects a profound shift taking place throughout Germany and Europe about Berlin's position at the center of the Continent. |
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This shift in thinking is boosted by a newer generation of Germans who see World War II as a distant memory. |
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The young tend to occupy a pelagic habitat, but shift to a more demersal lifestyle with maturity. |
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In narratives, discontinuative predicate focus is used when there is a topic shift, or when two referents are contrasted. |
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The radical shift in mentality is even more necessary when analysts see Education simply as a drainer of resources. |
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Commonly, there are stimulatory signals in mRNA distinct from the shift site that greatly increase the level of frameshifting at the shift site. |
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On a motorcycle, you work the clutch by squeezing a lever on your left handgrip, and you operate the shift lever with your left foot. |
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No hardbody, Maria's was a soft, squishy middle, probably from a few too many whipped cream indulgences on shift. |
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They have it going on partially, but then it is a day shift of men that works up to 5 and 6 o'clock. |
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Republicans will have their work cut out for them trying to shift blame to Democrats for their own erratic, haphazard and incoherent process. |
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The first quarter of the 20th century also saw a shift in the political landscape of Wales. |
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It was a chain shift, meaning that each shift triggered a subsequent shift in the vowel system. |
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During the Tudor period the Reformation produced a gradual shift to Protestantism, and much of London passed from church to private ownership. |
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The last shift left the pit on 10 December 1993, ending over 800 years of commercial underground coal mining in the region. |
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Danish was the main language of Anglia from the 9th to the 19th century, when a language shift towards German occurred. |
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Language shift during the 19th century replaced Irish with English as the first language for a vast majority of the population. |
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In some cultures, there would have been a significant shift toward increased starch and plant protein. |
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In the later Iron Age, an apparent shift is visible, revealing a change in dominance from cattle rearing to that of sheep. |
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This shift mainly took place in parts of the west, such as the southern Italian towns that sided with Hannibal. |
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The oration's religious shift is paralleled by a similar shift in Constantine's coinage. |
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Siegfried Kracauer was to be a particularly vocal critic in the twenties of the shift in perception brought on by the illustrateds. |
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The deaths of Count Geoffrey and the king in 1060 cemented the shift in the balance of power towards William. |
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Inevitably, the next-door neighbour began to mow his lawn just as she lay down her head after a long night shift. |
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However, a subtle shift took place in the way that intellectuals approached religion that was reflected in many other areas of cultural life. |
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The main job of the night shift was to inventory the store, and restock when necessary. |
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Enraged, the French king decided to execute a lightning campaign into Germany before the emperor could shift his troops to the West. |
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The shift from precision bombing to area attack is indicated in the tactical methods and weapons dropped. |
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Whitehall was destroyed by fire in 1698, leading to a shift to St James's Palace. |
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As of 2007, negotiations are ongoing to shift the development to the nearby Dale View quarry, a less sensitive area. |
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A linkage in my car's transmission is broken so I can't shift out of first gear. |
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This is largely to support airport shift workers and people with early flights. |
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Evidence shows that tectonics have caused rivers to shift course suddenly and dramatically. |
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The southernmost varieties had completed the second sound shift, while the northern varieties remained unaffected by the consonant shift. |
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Sometimes, Low Saxon and Low Franconian varieties are grouped together because both are unaffected by the High German consonant shift. |
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The majority of Southeast Asia has a wet and dry season caused by seasonal shift in winds or monsoon. |
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An economic effect of this imperialism was the shift in the production of commodities. |
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The military historian must often make shift to write of battles with slender data, but he can pad out his deficiencies by learned parallels. |
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Ecod, I thank your worship, I'll make a shift to stay my stomach with a slice of cold beef in the pantry. |
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Thus Godiva might have actually travelled through town as a penitent, in her shift. |
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His shift was over, and he was heading out on a mantrip, a type of shuttle that transports workers. |
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On a typical dark, wet Glasgow night, a bus driver coming off shift came in and ordered a chicken curry. |
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The gradual shift from traditional to reformed religion can be charted in Holbein's work. |
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The latter portion of the 14th century also saw the consolidation of English as a written language and a shift to secular writing. |
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John Donne's poetry represented a shift from classical forms to more personal poetry. |
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Until 1919 he was compelled by poverty to shift from address to address and barely survived a severe attack of influenza. |
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Reynolds has spoken of a shift from early goth to gothic rock proper, advanced by the Sisters of Mercy. |
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The shift to digital libraries has greatly impacted the way people use physical libraries. |
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This was primarily due to a shift in ideology toward expansion of the Games through corporate sponsorship and the sale of television rights. |
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That way the winning boat is insured against losing the lead due to a wind shift that favors the right side of the course. |
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The diplomatic philosophy behind the League represented a fundamental shift from the preceding hundred years. |
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It is very important that our focus should now shift to those territories and countries that really are tax havens. |
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The course of the Assembly saw a marked shift in party allegiance among voters. |
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He instead endorsed the Piast Concept, which justified a massive shift of Poland's frontiers to the west. |
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Jacob argues that there has been a dramatic shift in the historiography of the Reformation. |
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The General Election of 1906 also represented a shift to the left by the Liberal Party. |
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There were popular efforts to remove old enclosures, and much legislation of the 1530s and 1540s concerns this shift. |
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As with the late shift to fighter production, the Luftwaffe pilot schools did not give the fighter pilot schools preference soon enough. |
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Dermatologists are unsurprised at the latest cosmetological shift. |
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The shift of targets from air bases to industry and communications was taken because it was assumed that Fighter Command was virtually eliminated. |
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It also contributed to a demographic shift beginning shortly after Confederation that saw the francophone population decrease from a majority to a small minority group. |
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Periodically, pressure anomalies in the system shift from positive to negative as determined by the NAO Index, affecting temperatures and wind patterns. |
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This pedal engages the clutch, and until you do that you can't shift. |
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The ideal fluorophore is a small, hydrophilic molecule with a long emission wavelength, large Stokes shift, high extinction coefficient, and high quantum efficiency. |
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Junior hospital doctors reportedly face burnout and exhaustion, often work unpaid beyond their shift, and skip meals or fail to get adequate hydration during shifts. |
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I slowed her down, but she was goey and irritable. In fact, Rune always felt like a revving engine under me, an engine that wanted to shift into a higher gear. |
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The shift from several spheroids to one worldwide spheroid caused all geographical coordinates to shift by many metres, sometimes as much as several hundred metres. |
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Stresemann changed the editorial policy of the journal, leading both to a unification of field and laboratory studies and a shift of research from museums to universities. |
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The use of Egypt's immense land rents to finance the Empire's operations resulted from Augustus' conquest of Egypt and the shift to a Roman form of government. |
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In common with many other developed countries, Australia is experiencing a demographic shift towards an older population, with more retirees and fewer people of working age. |
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Michelet was one of the first historians to shift the emphasis of history to the common people, rather than the leaders and institutions of the country. |
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The coronation of Charlemagne as emperor by Pope Leo III in Rome on Christmas Day, AD 800 represented a shift in the power structure from the south to the north. |
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The second is a shift in the tilt of the Earth's axis, the obliquity. |
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She came out, standing a head taller than him, tugging a loose cotton shift into place, and made for a rough brick fireplace beside a pile of rusting pots and pans. |
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Just above, the museums top floor seems to shift slightly, its corners cantilevering over the edge of the story below as if it is sliding off the top of the building. |
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The Kattegat is a rather shallow sea and can be very difficult and dangerous to navigate, due to the many sandy and stony reefs and tricky currents that often shift. |
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The hydrological distribution of the Meuse changed during the later Middle Ages, when a major flood forced it to shift its main course northwards towards the river Merwede. |
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After the Union and the shift of political power to England, the use of Scots was discouraged by many in authority and education, as was the notion of Scottishness itself. |
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As the global temperature of the Earth warms each year, many butterfly species are forced to shift northward in order to keep living in their preferred climates. |
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A shift of settlement centres took place in the 4th century. |
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In the case of the continental Celts, this eventually resulted in a language shift to Vulgar Latin, while the Insular Celts retained their language. |
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This can cause a complete regime shift from seagrass to algal dominance. |
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The evolutionary shift in the morphology of the hyolingual complex was apparently primed by the optimisation of the food transport behaviour and not for food uptake. |
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The death of Maximian required a shift in Constantine's public image. |
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The shift from verse to prose dates from the early 13th century. |
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These revealed his obsession with pornography, his racism, his increasing shift to the political right wing, and his habitual expressions of venom and spleen. |
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This shift is not explicable by the application of accepted sound laws, and has been attributed to the effects of contact with a substrate language. |
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The High German consonant shift, moving over Western Europe from south to west, caused a differentiation with the Central and High Franconian in Germany. |
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Although the English language gradually spread into Cornwall after approximately the 13th century, a complete language shift to English took centuries more. |
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Yet these attempts to shift both footing and topic are overlapped, somewhat interjectively and thus in overriding fashion, as S begins with what is bearable as fake laughter. |
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The gear shift lever was moved to the handlebars for easier riding. |
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This similarity was reinforced in the late Middle Ages by the Ingvaeonic sound shift, which affected Frisian and English, but the other West Germanic varieties hardly at all. |
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This stimulated a shift in construction from drystone and other related materials to coral stone, sundried bricks, and the widespread use of limestone in Somali architecture. |
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By 3400 BCE, the Sahara was as dry as it is today, due to reduced precipitation and higher temperatures resulting from a shift in the Earth's orbit. |
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For the last 100 years, there has been a substantial shift from the primary and secondary sectors to the tertiary sector in industrialised countries. |
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However, by the end of the month, the lead has fallen to just 6 points, with YouGov analysis showing a big shift in support among Labour supporters. |
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In the late 11th and early 12th centuries cathedral schools spread throughout Western Europe, signalling the shift of learning from monasteries to cathedrals and towns. |
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After the Hanoverian King George I ascended the British throne in 1714 through the Act of Settlement of 1701, real power continued to shift away from the monarchy. |
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It marks another shift in power between the three central EU institutions. |
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Smith Barney, for example, goes so far as to shift the hours during which taxi rides home are expensable as nighttime lengthens and shortens, says Moszkowski. |
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The release of water raised sea levels again, restoring the ingress of colder water from the Pacific with an accompanying shift to northern hemisphere ice accumulation. |
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Based on the fact that Langobardic, extinct around 1000, has undergone the High German consonant shift completely, it is also often classified as Upper German. |
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The peace that followed the close of the war led to a further shift to the English language by the Cornish people, which encouraged an influx of English people to Cornwall. |
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The language functioned as a community language in Cornwall until a language shift to the English language was completed during the late 18th century. |
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However heavy industry declined in the late 20th century, leading to a shift in the economy of Scotland towards technology and the service sector. |
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Just as on the demand side, the position of the supply can shift, say from a change in the price of a productive input or a technical improvement. |
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Most notably, the international event such as the Olympics caused a shift in focus in the audience who now realize the variety of sports that exist in the world. |
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The history of the German language begins with the High German consonant shift during the migration period, which separated Old High German dialects from Old Saxon. |
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The decline of heavy industry resulted in a sectoral shift of labour. |
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In common with many other developed countries, Canada is experiencing a demographic shift towards an older population, with more retirees and fewer people of working age. |
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Biologists, however, shift the border even further to the east. |
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In the 1980s and 1990s, the economic centre of the country continued to shift northwards and is now concentrated in the populous Flemish Diamond area. |
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We could find no matches, and so we tried to make shift with the pistols. |
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In most cases, this results in an unstable interaction, in which the bodies exchange momentum and shift orbits until the resonance no longer exists. |
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The design emphasis of donjons changed to reflect a shift from functional to decorative requirements, imposing a symbol of lordly power upon the landscape. |
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The metal also has a flexible coordination geometry, which allows proteins using it to rapidly shift conformations to perform biological reactions. |
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Climatic change in the central Andes during the DCR, however, was significant and was characterized by a shift to much wetter and likely colder conditions. |
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The early modern trends in various regions of the world represented a shift away from medieval modes of organization, politically and economically. |
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Sociocultural anthropology has been heavily influenced by structuralist and postmodern theories, as well as a shift toward the analysis of modern societies. |
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Iain Loe, a spokesman for Camra, explained a preference for moderate alcohol levels and a perception that real ale was healthier as responsible for the shift. |
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Added to the panoply of other legislation designed to protect the natural and cultural heritage of the United States, this law also marks a shift in national awareness. |
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In the 1980s and 90s, the economic centre of Belgium continued to shift further to Flanders and is now concentrated in the populous Flemish Diamond area. |
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The latter bomb is believed to have detonated in the upper interior above the north transept and the force was sufficient to shift the entire dome laterally by a small amount. |
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In June 2013, the Romanian Government issued a Strategy to shift from analogue terrestrial to digital terrestrial that pushes ahead the until the date stopped process. |
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Hop on your left foot again, bringing your right foot back behind your left foot and then shift your weight onto your right foot, leaving your left foot in the air. |
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In the northern Rockies, a significant increase in pines and firs suggests warmer conditions than before and a shift to subalpine parkland in places. |
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After control of the station passed from the Channel Four Television Company to the Channel Four Television Corporation in 1993, a shift in broadcasting style took place. |
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Under the leadership of Juan Antonio Samaranch the Games began to shift toward international sponsors who sought to link their products to the Olympic brand. |
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And when I was done washing all the on-going shift's dirty dishes, I had to start all over again with the off-coming shift and the rest of the crew. |
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The timing of the crew shift is also critical when coming into the wind. |
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As the first time she became actively involved in the songwriting process of one of her albums, Wings marked a shift in Tyler's career, focusing on mainstream pop music. |
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His addition required Evans to shift from rhythm guitar to bass. |
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These include jaundice, abdominal fluid wave, microhepatica, ascites, enlarged portal lymph nodes, hypoalbuminemia and left shift of neutrophils in the peripheral blood. |
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It has been suggested that a subsidy shift would help to level the playing field and support growing energy sectors, namely solar power, wind power, and biofuels. |
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The situation was probably aggravated by a shift to a cooler, wetter climate in the region as well as by the introduction of malaria and other epidemic diseases. |
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The Doppler frequency shift for active radar is as follows, where. |
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It is hard to say for certain just why this brief but notable shift from passive to active millenarianism should have occurred during the Interregnum. |
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A shift in structure from bare tidal flat to pastureland resulted from increased sedimentation and the cordgrass extended out into other estuaries around New Zealand. |
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James boarded a ship at Montrose and escaped to France on 4 February 1716, leaving a message assigning his Highland adherents to shift for themselves. |
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This diet shift has an effect on the green turtle's skull morphology. |
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He argues that the removal of protective tariffs alone is never sufficient to improve the situation of the working class, unless accompanied by a shift towards land value tax. |
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A common pattern in North America is clockwise migration, where birds flying North tend to be further West, and flying South tend to shift Eastwards. |
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That requires social and political will, together with a shift in awareness so more people respect the environment and are less disposed to abuse it. |
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