But lately the talk has been of dressing room splits and players not pulling their weight. |
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Each acorn was cleaned, weighed, and examined for insect larvae exit holes, splits in the shell, and protruding radicles. |
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After all bets and raises are called, hands are shown, and the winner collects or splits the pot. |
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Stress cracks are internal splits within kernels, and indicate that the corn underwent severe drying conditions. |
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Through a series of wipes, the screen splits into as many as eight images simultaneously fighting for the viewer's attention. |
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The ghost of his splits hang over Bigger than Blue, but it never slips into woebegone narratives or diatribes. |
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Just as I notice them, the formation splits, the outer ships breaking off in both directions along the line. |
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If you're bowling and feel a headache coming on, take two aspirins and stay away from splits. |
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Dresses are short and feature drawstrings at the bust, or tight and tarty leather with back splits and piping. |
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Each dancer had to perform splits in all directions, backbends, contortions, or any unique movement in the dancer's repertoire. |
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You were not able to check whether there were any splits or tears in the lead in the parapet gutter? |
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It's a kind of chocolate bomb, a ball of crisp chocolate that crackles and splits to reveal delicious chocolate ice cream inside. |
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As the referendum approached, longstanding splits between the minimalists and maximalists within the republican movement became significant. |
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They are a rare form of identical twins, which are created when a fertilised egg splits into two embryos. |
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Whilst tittivating the deck and coach roof, I used any spare epoxy mix to treat little splits and areas elsewhere. |
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The country's belligerent veto threats seemed to signal its willingness to force grievous splits in the Security Council. |
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Contortionist Daniel Browning Smith discovered his incredible bendiness as a child when he fell from a top bunk and did the splits. |
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This electricity splits the water molecules in an electrolyte, producing hydrogen. |
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A fission weapon consequently works through the creation of an uncontrolled nuclear reaction, which literally splits the atoms. |
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These cracks were narrow splits, predominantly perpendicular to the seed's long axis. |
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In contrast, frost cracks are vertical splits that penetrate deep into the wood. |
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Equally uncomfortable as cold sores are cracks and splits that can sometimes occur in the corners of the mouth or on the lips. |
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It allows you to visually inspect your cases for cracks and splits much more easily. |
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Finger splits, or fissures, are one of the more frequent winter skin complaints Kunin addresses. |
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There are also types of adhesive caulking that will mend split or loose roofing shingles as well as splits or cracks in siding. |
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Cracks, splits and holes are by definition one of the biggest problems in sealing technology. |
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Society is in chaos, tainted with conflict and splits between the haves and have-nots, conservatives and progressives, and management and labor. |
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Nevertheless, splits occurred along class lines, on the issue of temperance, and on account of differences in personality among the leaders. |
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The long and short of it is that the splits and divisions on the far side of the House are irreconcilable and deep. |
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In the early 1940s, however, splits appeared in the Fianna Fail government over how beneficial land distribution was. |
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You don't just get up and do the splits in your late 30s no matter how enthusiastic you are, Laucinda says. |
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Remember the days when you could effortlessly do the splits, kick like a Rockette and put your foot behind your head on a dare? |
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His left foot started to slide away on a patch of ice, but he caught himself before he managed to do the splits. |
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He was the one that would fan the horse's head and then almost do the splits in midair and land on his feet, and the crowd loved that. |
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He is an ageing rocker who has found, mid-concert, that he can no longer do the splits while playing his guitar solo one-handed behind his head. |
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Lindsay saw Marissa trying to do the splits and almost touching the ground. |
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She currently can run the 40-yard dash in 5.5 seconds, do the splits and jump 30 inches for her vertical leap. |
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I occasionally try a few moves and last time I attempted it, I could still do the splits. |
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I may be 230 lb but I can do the splits and dance the Cajun two-step for two hours. |
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But you try doing the splits upside down with your head underwater and all the while keeping a smile on your face. |
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At age 74, she was more than capable of performing cartwheels and the splits! |
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They soar, spin, and dive to the floor, then spiral swiftly back to shoulder stands, splits and endless balances. |
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But she has been asked about her ability to do the splits on several occasions. |
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He has even taken to adopting a putting stance that looks for all the world as though he is about to do the splits. |
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Nor do we have all of the split posts, as there are too many half splits with the central pith intact. |
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Seating himself on his accustomed stool, he began to weave the splits dexterously in an out. |
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Then as he walked, he wove the splits into a basket to be traded at the store for whatever provisions the family needed. |
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So you come back and you hit the stick of wood right in the middle, right through here, and it'll give you two splits. |
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They use only quality top-grain leather in their products and do not use leather splits or vinyls. |
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Also, when you're bowling well, the miss-hits don't leave you with big splits and tough spares. |
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The big-hook players leave many more difficult spares and splits than a player with a narrower angle of entry. |
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As a fierce relay anchor, Correia has the fastest 50 and 100-yard freestyle relay splits in history. |
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The talk was of stroke-rates, times, splits, lactate curves, heart rate, aerobic thresholds. |
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Hamilton is setting fast times on the road, but no-one is matching the splits of leading duo David Millar and Laszlo Bodrogi. |
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Over the last two years, Davis has kept a chart of Thorpe's record times and splits on the wall of his bedroom. |
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In front of the shallow side of the eastern channel is an area of brilliant white sand which splits the reef in two. |
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Optical interferometry is a technique that splits a laser beam into two beams by using a partially silvered mirror. |
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The chest plate splits open, the ex-skeleton lowers him to the ground and he is unclamped from the mechanism. |
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Jack splits and goes off by himself to a smoky, downtown club where the crowd is black, the bop is hard, and the drinks unwatered. |
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If you do woodwork at school, you learn to exploit the properties of wood, such as it splits along the grain. |
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Its head looks like a dandelion clock, from which flows a long tail which broadens and splits about a degree or so along its length. |
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At the base, a bird's trachea splits into two branches, the bronchial tubes. |
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A spectroscope splits light up into its component hues so that its precise mixture of colours can be analysed separately. |
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Significant price changes due to dividends and stock splits must be made when they occur. |
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In a three-game match, I always have fewer than 10 strikes, catch a few splits, and the night is lost. |
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The sunlight splits the chlorine into highly reactive ions that break ozone down into normal oxygen molecules. |
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However, if this is not the case, then phylogenetic networks represent sets of contradicting splits by hypercubes. |
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In some cases, it splits into two vessels, one of which remains in the pelvis to supply pelvic viscera. |
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The building narrative progresses through ill-omened and distorted imagery of horses ill in a hospital and gaping splits in reality. |
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For example, there are six permutations of order of appearance for the three evolutionary splits mentioned above. |
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The dancer who jumps highest, turns fastest, or splits legs into the most physically improbable position is the best. |
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If caught early enough, the cracks can be filed away before they spread deeper a bit like filing a cracked finger nail before it splits. |
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The Mariners believe that shin splits that sidelined their fireballer during Spring Training is the reason for the his struggles. |
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During fission, a nucleus splits into two nuclei of less mass with greater stability. |
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As the steel corrodes into rust, the re-bar expands and splits the concrete open. |
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Even the splits within the establishment are a product of popular anti-war pressure. |
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A flying wedge splits the pilgrims in half with some premier-division high-elbow work. |
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But the splits that fractured the women's movement are hairline cracks compared with the schisms within the Pankhurst family itself. |
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The enzyme splits and hydrolyzes dietary lactose into glucose and galactose for transport across the cell membrane. |
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The ecdysial suture is the region of the arthropod exoskeleton that splits to allow the animal to emerge during ecdysis. |
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In the 1860s a controversy over predestination among Midwestern Lutherans caused further splits that lasted well into the twentieth century. |
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He banged his head on the way over, hated the ground and did the splits over the first fence, pulling all the muscles in his chest. |
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He splits a hot pretzel and gives her half, which she dips into warm cheese sauce. |
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The guacamole man comes over, splits open an avocado, adds all the right spices, and mixes your guac right in front of your eyes. |
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Potentially damaging splits have emerged on some local enterprise company boards. |
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But as he splits, she is separating into two quite distinct parts, slipping out of his control. |
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Reject those with obvious flaws, such as splits, and try and get hold of those with an even coloration. |
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Barela trails Heinrich just 49 to 51 percent, and the Oracle splits their likelihood of winning right down the middle. |
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Once opened, this fissure between internal and external splits Hemon apart, giving him, effectively, double lives. |
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There was no leader whose speech could be dissected, no party whose splits could be anatomised, no single manifesto whose implications could be discussed. |
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They can exacerbate splits within a ruling leadership, foment popular unrest, or expedite a dwindling current account. |
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Despite divisions in Afrikanerdom and splits in the government over strategy, the security forces, including the black police, had remained loyal. |
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Meanwhile, the splits within his party, he claims, have been devastating. |
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Any definition of intellection or perception, therefore, that splits them into two disparate parts, misunderstands the nature of knowledge and of reality. |
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The view is mind-boggling, with a precipitous drop into the defile of the Lairig Ghru, the great pass that splits the Cairngorms, linking Aviemore and Braemar. |
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While most people can digest lactose with no difficulty, some have trouble because they do not produce the enzyme lactase, which splits lactose into digestible parts. |
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One of the more interesting splits in the book is the difference between your time at Manchester United versus at Everton. |
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The chimney pushes through the steep roofline and splits in two. |
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In years where the Academy splits on picture and director, one of the winners comes as a surprise. |
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Founded in 1932, the Bluebell Girls are one of the last remaining companies to dance the traditional cancan, with its flying kicks and punishing splits. |
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The stern of the Febrero must have come to rest on this rock, as the propshaft sticks out to the south through a gully that splits the rock into two pinnacles. |
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His target splits with a satisfying rumble, and then the fragments detonate as he strafes them with more bullets. |
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In Louie, comedian Louis C.K. plays a version of himself who splits caregiving with his wife. |
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Cracks and splits can be detrimental to good accuracy, and could possibly cause injury to the shooter should the rifle decide to come apart when fired. |
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Either way it'll get you doing the splits on the dance floor. |
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Labor's Yachimovitch is promising parliamentary rescue if Likud splits apart. |
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The investment world considers insider trades an indication of fundamental company or market changes, such as potential mergers, stock splits, or industry weakness. |
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If you look around and don't see as many strikes, and a lot of splits or spares are on the board, the lanes probably are playing a little bit tougher. |
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On certain splits, or even on spare shots when a single pin is needed, bowlers will roll the ball from what they consider an easier or safer angle. |
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Secessionism splits people into parts, artificially separating the voting booth from the synagogue pew. |
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The Avon Foundation Breast Cancer Crusade generally splits its funding for screenings and science equally. |
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Until the last two to three years, Microsoft was able to keep its stock price continually climbing and stock splits coming by steadily increasing earnings per share. |
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John dropped me off where the road splits, a desolate place. |
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The salvage team took emergency action to block splits below the waterline as an estimated 1,000 tonnes of water flooded the vessel's lower car deck. |
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You had mentioned that twins can develop when the inner cell mass splits in the blastocyst and forms two embryos enclosed in a common trophoblast. |
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This tip will make the skates turn in an arc so you won't do the splits! |
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Her principles, her prejudices, her confrontational style divided British society and still splits parts of the Tory Party. |
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Depending mainly on the thicknesses of the members, the midplane splits one of the two members into two frusta, thus making a total of three frusta to analyse. |
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British journalism revelling in racial division the other side of the Atlantic rarely seems to trouble itself to look at the ethnic splits this side of the pond. |
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Afara splits very readily and takes glue, stain and polish well. |
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It interleaves the remaining analog signal with the digital and splits them in time by transmitting the analog information separate from the digital signal. |
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I recommend a latex wood filler for repair of splits and dents. |
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The Daily Beast looks at the court file and finds one of the nastiest he-said-she-said cases in the history of celebrity splits. |
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Make sure that the split end areas are dried as straight as possible since splits look worse when they are allowed to wave, curl, frizz or spike out. |
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Whatever the short-term outcome of these manoeuvres, the splits and divisions within Fiji's ruling strata will only fester and lead to further political instability. |
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On both sides, paths slant down to the river as it splits around the 4-acre landmass. |
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Despite the many splits and divisions which have plagued the Gaels through the years, there have always been a few things which brought us together. |
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Go for lickety-split banana splits with your buds, or go to a show and get tickets at the door. |
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On impact the bone splits between the diploe and the plates, leaving fractures bevelled on the internal faces. |
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Although no replacement starter was named, Alfred Aboya often splits time at power forward and center. |
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When the climbers hammer an ice ax the ice splits and cracks with a sound that echoes in the canyon. |
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A study in 1964 proposed that when a host species such as a firefinch splits, the corresponding indigobird species splits, too. |
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Under a wide variety of conditions, first movers in ultimatum games tend to propose relatively equal splits. |
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At the dressing sheds the slate-dresser saws the blocks into various sizes and then splits the smaller units into sheets. |
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Jeremy Cox, barelegged, hyperathletic and coarse, gets his kicks by kicking into 180-degree splits. |
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A series of tectonic splits caused formation of various basins, each drifting in various directions. |
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At Lower Parting, close to Gloucester, it splits in two to pass either side of Alney Island. |
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In the west, the route connects with the Great Western Main Line at Paddington and runs to Hayes and Harlington, where it splits. |
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Many branches of Presbyterianism are remnants of previous splits from larger groups. |
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However, legislation by the United Kingdom parliament allowing patronage led to splits in the Church. |
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The three tier championship splits drivers according to their racing experience. |
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The city is situated on the River Lee which splits into two channels at the western end and divide the city centre into islands. |
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This deepens and widens until it extends across the disk and the animal splits in two. |
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This finely bedded material that splits readily into thin layers is called shale, as distinct from mudstone. |
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Medially, the canthal ligament splits and surrounds the lacrimal apparatus. |
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Besides cosmetic damage, the splits may allow decay to start, although growing fruits have some ability to heal after a split. |
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Checks and splits occur more frequently at the ends of lumber because of the more rapid drying in these locations. |
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In the North Sea, it splits into two arms representing the ancient riverbed at the end of the last ice age. |
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The upper part of the bay splits into Chignecto Bay in the northeast and the Minas Basin in the east. |
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Yet the conflict inside the new host of the new loyalty, and the political manoeuvres used by the Russian Empire, led to splits in the Cossacks. |
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Old historical splits have frequently drifted since the time they occurred and may be independent of current phonetic palatalization. |
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The endoclitic splits apart the root and is inserted between the two pieces. |
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Searching out the causes of disorder, apart from his recommendation of Fa, Shen Dao observed splits in the ruler's authority. |
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As Garden Street, it splits in two at an elongated roundabout surrounding a service station and a pub. |
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It rejoins and splits again to cross the River Lune on the Greyhound Bridge and older Skerton Bridge. |
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It splits the wood into two parts by the pressure concentration at the blade. |
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This then splits to give the myotomes which will form the muscles and dermatomes which will form the skin of the back. |
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The Aire Gap splits the Pennines into north and south by allying with the River Ribble. |
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The first improvement of the lower river was at Newark, where the channel splits into two. |
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Take the key in the parent node that splits the left sibling and the leaf, the split key, and insert it into the leaf. |
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The more unaware the self is of other selves, that is, the more complete the splits, the greater the degree of schizoid pathology. |
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We've never had any cause to split up,'' said Chris, who splits his time between touring with The Real Thing and breeding champion Afghan hounds. |
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Both human and mouse embryos develop from a fertilized egg, or zygote, that splits into two cells, then four, eight, 16 and so on. |
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Courtney Scribner's snowboard splits in two pieces for uphill climbs, then reattaches for downhill rides. |
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Some of them would open up deep splits in core Democratic constituencies. |
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Kids will love their range of knickerbocker glories, banana splits, hot fudge sundaes and milkshakes. |
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Assemble the banana splits by peeling and halving the bananas lengthways and placing each one in a banana split dish or shallow bowl. |
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She likes ordinary pleasures such as banana splits, eating chocolate, her warm red coat, and a boyfriend she met on a double date. |
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The 67-year-old did the splits in mid-air during a routine with BBC newsreaders. |
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The phosphonium borate splits into H2 molecules and phosphine borane, then recombine under cooler temperatures to create the original compound. |
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The early mesoderm splits into two layers that line the inside of the body cavity and the outside of the gut. |
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Stock splits, buybacks and dividend increases all send a message to the market, one that is often good to heed. |
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The very tag end of the Mississippi River splits Plaquemines right down the middle, into Left and Right Banks. |
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On the basis of the above discussion, it can be said that in the highest node, there is Sino-Tibetan which splits into Sinitic and Tibeto-Burman. |
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A plug tap splits the difference between the two and has some taper to the cutting edges. |
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The cytophore now splits internally in such a way as to separate an inner sphere from an outer envelope. |
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Since 1996, when there were 643 stock splits, totals have trended downward, reports Thomson Financial Securities Data. |
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The reverse and forward stock splits have occurred automatically, and the Company's stock record books now reflect these transactions. |
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The reverse and forward stock splits have occurred automatically and the Company's stock record books now reflect these transactions. |
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After removing the mushrooms, he splits a stottie cake widthways and puts both halves cut side down in the pan to absorb the juices and butter. |
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The body splits lactates into lactic acid and hydrogen ions. |
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West of Continental Europe, it splits into two major branches. |
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There it splits into anatomically distinct superior and inferior branches, both of which pass through the tendonous ring to proceed to their target structures. |
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Balfour had hoped that under a Liberal government splits would reemerge, which would therefore help the Conservative Party achieve victory at the next election. |
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It splits up in two as it passes through the centre of Lancaster. |
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This splits the ridge into a central part and two distal parts. |
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Big Bay Highway splits off from Canal Road near Turtle Bay on the east coast, runs generally west to the mountains, and then leads north to Big Bay. |
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This expanded taxonomy elevated many established subspecies to full species, but was criticised for not using, in every case, peer reviewed information to justify the splits. |
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Water flow from the North Atlantic current enters the Arctic Ocean through the Norwegian Current which splits into the Fram Strait and Barents Sea Branch. |
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Near Lage Zwaluwe, the Nieuwe Merwede joins the Amer, forming the Hollands Diep, which splits into Grevelingen and Haringvliet, before finally flowing into the North Sea. |
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Recently placed third in a list of eligible Scotswomen, Sarah splits her time between her career as a consultant psychiatrist, Dirty Harry and several other music projects. |
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In the 19th century, there was a diversification of theological beliefs in the Religious Society of Friends, and this led to several large splits within the Quaker movement. |
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From these early splits, many more splits occurred intradenominationally and continue to occur as of 2004 with the splitting of the Grace Apostles from their parent church. |
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The pheneticist and evolutionist classify species and genera in this manner. Not so the cladist, who deals with the unknown quantities produced by phylo-genetic splits. |
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Ellie, Georgie, Jessica and Holly are monochorionic quadruplets, formed when one fertilised egg splits four times, creating identical embryos sharing the same placenta. |
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Factionalising and splits led to the farcical sight of two or in some cases three far-right candidates contesting the same seat, fatally splitting the vote. |
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