As each hour passed, I tried to feign health in the same way some of you healthy people take unforeseen upset stomachs when you want a sickie. |
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Their stomachs turn, but he just carries on looking at the river running between his dirty feet. |
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The story which unfolded over the past few months at Nottingham Crown Court was enough to make the most sturdy of stomachs turn. |
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None of them had eaten anything all day so, as usual they were trying to fill their stomachs with beer and moonshine. |
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Jon did a fantastic dinner, and had sensibly catered for overstretched stomachs by opting for a buffet rather than a sit-down meal. |
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There are many more underfed people in the region, but at least this could have filled the stomachs of the most needy and marginalised people. |
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Newbold's group at the Institute of Rural Sciences in Wales has worked to produce organic acids to prevent methane buildup in cow stomachs. |
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These animals do not ruminate, and their stomachs may be simple and one-chambered or have up to three chambers. |
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Animals which do this include cows, sheep and goats, and they all have four stomachs. |
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Maori on the muttonbirding islands used to drape the cool tuatara on their stomachs to help them cool down. |
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Small rocks were found in the abomasa of 26 of the 31 caribou whose stomachs were examined. |
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Travellers' tales of upset stomachs are all too common in this part of the world for those foolish enough to risk salads or the local water. |
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It was a dish I thought adults and kids would eat, even if their stomachs were upset from worry or illness or life. |
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Well over half of the expedition were evacuated with insect bites and upset stomachs during the four months it took to get the vehicles through. |
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The spokesman said that visitors can also be asked not to take fruit on to the ward if patients are suffering from upset stomachs. |
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He dumped 33 cattle stomachs on the side of the road, earning him a court appearance and press coverage. |
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With butterflies fluttering in their stomachs, pupils flocked to their schools to find out if all their hard work had paid off. |
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They pointed at the team on the field and laughed and cackled and rolled around on the floor clutching their stomachs. |
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The data are already being used to change standard sizes to give more room for larger stomachs, necks and upper arms. |
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The most familiar sources of methane are bacteria that live in bogs, lakes and the stomachs of ruminants like cows. |
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Bizarre honey-pot ants, whose distended stomachs are full of honey, also provide a sweet treat. |
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The turtles hatch and churn around in the nest for up to three days, drying out and straightening out their stomachs. |
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Like they hadn't noticed that even a calf, which has four stomachs, stops drinking milk after about eight weeks. |
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Hope all is well and that my mugshot has not caused too many upturned stomachs out there. |
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Coaches tell players to make sure they land on their stomachs to ensure a speedy play on the ball. |
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Imagine letting patients out into the fresh air after one day, having just cut a whacking great hole into their stomachs. |
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After a while, a low grumbling in our stomachs indicated it was time to hit the curry house. |
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Even if they decide to borrow books and continue schooling, it is not easy when the rattling sound of empty stomachs hurts them. |
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Seahorses have no stomachs or teeth and are therefore unable to store large meals or chew their food. |
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Most students find their stomachs aflutter with nerves during the first days and even weeks of school. |
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A good backstroker knows how many strokes to take when they see the flags before flipping over onto their stomachs for the flip turn. |
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Despite the grumblings of everyone's stomachs, several minutes were then spent in effusive praise for the number of dishes. |
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Popular restaurants and fast food outlets have stalls dotted all over the show, all doing roaring trade as they fill hungry stomachs. |
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The smell of cooking drifted up the stairs and we descended with stomachs grumbling to the traditionally decorated restaurant. |
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Recent reported cheetah deaths suggest that some of the cats had their stomachs ripped open by hidden branches. |
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Men turned up at dawn to get a place in the labour queue, their stomachs rumbling or cramping with hunger after a dingo's breakfast. |
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Rabbits groom themselves just like cats, and consequently do get fur balls in their stomachs just like puss. |
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The stomachs of sheep and pigs provide round casings for haggis and hog puddings, and for their equivalents in other countries. |
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Neat salicylic acid is too tough on stomachs, so scientists had to find a way to buffer it. |
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Cats will groom themselves and this allows loose hair to come off the pet and end up in the stomachs. |
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Their stomachs are ripped out, their chests crushed, their throats ripped open. |
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They're naturally gifted with strong stomachs and a powerful resistance to viral and bacterial agents. |
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The prey, often of almost equal size to the anglerfish, fit neatly into the anglerfish's expandable stomachs, Drazen said. |
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They're all anti-bloating medicines, antacids, digestive aids, all things to put out the fire in our stomachs from the poison we call lunch. |
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They then folded their hands together in front of their stomachs and stood there like statues. |
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Their stomachs are unusual, long and folded and with a unique gastric gland. |
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Microbes in the animals' stomachs help ferment grass and other foods into a digestible state, producing the offending gases. |
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While these crisis shares could provide rich pickings, those tempted require strong stomachs. |
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In these studies, stomachs from 4th instar A. aegypti larvae were examined using both transmission and scanning electron microscopy. |
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Later, strapped into our positions we descend through the cloud, our stomachs bouncing as we hit the turbulence. |
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We found this out when their stomachs proved to contain nothing but fish tails. |
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The chain plans to take on its arch-rival in a bitter street-by-street fight for British stomachs. |
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They possess no beard on their good-natured faces and their stomachs are usually rounded. |
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They also needed something to eat and all their stomachs rumbled from hunger. |
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Their pockets were virtually empty and their stomachs were rumbling with hunger. |
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It wouldn't be much of a gourmet meal, but it would satisfy their rumbling stomachs. |
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But when some of the eels were caught, their stomachs turned out to be full of shrimp. |
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When they are brought up from the depths, gases in their bladders expand, popping the fish's stomachs and making their eyes bug out. |
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Their stomachs are the most acidic recorded for any vertebrate, allowing them to digest even the bones and shells of prey animals. |
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We hung around, goofed around and laughed till our stomachs threatened to split. |
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By now, more substantial refreshments were being served in the hope that satiated stomachs would be conducive to reasoned arguments. |
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Unlike mammals, chicks do not feed on milk formula as their stomachs cannot digest it. |
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The researchers also found the same beetles in the stomachs of the Pitohui and Ifrita bird species. |
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Anyone in their right mind would have stormed out in protest, holding their stomachs. |
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I would stay away from the clovers, since they can be harder for the fussy stomachs of horses. |
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Butterflies flew through everyone's stomachs as the curtain rose on the stage. |
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With four stomachs, you're traveling scenic routes all the way through the highway transpiration system of scrumptiousness. |
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I bit my tongue, and mashed a cup of tea to silence the rumbling of our stomachs. |
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But Cassidy just turns stomachs every time she so much as flumps into The Laundrette. |
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In addition, rennet from the stomachs of intersexual animals is rubbed on sheep to increase their growth and milk production. |
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The whalers often discovered giant squid beaks inside the stomachs of these whales. |
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The stories filtering out of rugby league and Aussie Rules clubs would turn the stomachs of readers of even the most hardcore top-shelf magazine. |
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The royal family are shown with elongated skulls and pear-shaped bodies with skinny torsos and arms but fuller hips, stomachs and thighs. |
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And beef is a source of trans fat because cows hydrogenate fat in their stomachs. |
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Belemnite hooks are commonly found in the fossilized stomachs of marine reptiles that preyed upon them, such as ichthyosaurs. |
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More advanced artiodactyls, the ruminants, have evolved complex stomachs with three or four chambers. |
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Having plucked and trussed these long beaked birds, leaving the remaining entrails undisturbed, pull out the stomachs and intestines. |
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After leaving our transport vehicles we slithered on our stomachs through fields, passing a number of cows lying down chewing their cud. |
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There's too much wastage. People have eyes bigger than their stomachs. |
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There were stomachs, taut and flat, but also undulating bellies, soft and bloated from the breakfast buffet. |
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Food studies indicated that more than 90 percent of the identifiable items found in the stomachs of jack mackerel are crustaceans and small, free swimming mollusks. |
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Stan waited until the stomachs were full and the audience well oiled before selling the raffle tickets that brought in a bundle for the local Boys Orphanage. |
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The wildcraft of mushroom hunting is directly related to our stomachs. |
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Eventually, the robbers left the bank with nothing more than their very queasy stomachs after having eaten a number of bowls of this wretched vanilla pudding. |
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After a decadent weekend in the company of friends, I found myself in a dodgy hotel flanked by eager minds and stomachs. |
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In 1990, the FDA approved the first bioengineered enzyme, rennin, which traditionally has been extracted from calves' stomachs for use in making cheese. |
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Easily digestible, they fill the stomachs of those who can afford little else, and they fall into the ranks of those restorative foods called analeptics. |
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William was pleased that he had not been sick, although a few of the prisoners had spent most of the journey with their head over the side retching their empty stomachs out. |
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Often they marched with bare feet, their stomachs aching with hunger. |
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He was interested in improving digestive processes within the rumen, the first of the four stomachs of ruminant animals, where cellulose is broken down by bacteria. |
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Another trick used by chimps is to swallow bristly leaves whole, which irritate their stomachs and induce diarrhoea, flushing out tapeworms and other gut parasites. |
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The worst were the stories about three dead abductees found in a river in Sloviansk with their stomachs cut open. |
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The exhibition begins with a photo of two mermaids posed side-by-side on their stomachs with their tails sticking up in the air. |
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Thirty-two are being force-fed, a brutal process that involves Ensure being pumped through a tube snaked into their stomachs. |
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I am against terrorism in all its forms, but when a government is so barefaced in its terror of innocent civilians it sickens those who want peace to the pit of our stomachs! |
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Over the years whalers have reported finding a high number of large squid beaks in the mammals' stomachs, pegging sperm whales as primary predators of large squid. |
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And while the liquor eases the bloated, fibre-induced discomfort of our stomachs, we start thinking of running back into the strong, loving embrace of a veal shank. |
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Oh, I've known Kimberly since we were in our mommies' stomachs. |
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For multiple grumbling stomachs, here are five ways to nosh that will suit every type of holiday snacker. |
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That the punishment of lazy or untidy people should involve unswept dust or refuse makes sense, but why should the refuse be put into their stomachs? |
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Its carminative action helps relieve wind and spasm in the bowel, and its gentle action is particularly suited for children and those with delicate stomachs. |
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Because cows are ruminants and ruminants have several stomachs. |
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To a small extent, this can also happen in the stomachs of ruminant animals, such as cows and sheep, but without the same detrimental effect as the man-made variety. |
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Both syphilis and Lyme disease are caused by these bacteria, and other species are important symbionts in the stomachs of cows and other ruminants. |
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Small perch caught near the upstream edge of the salinity wedge in Richibucto Estuary had more copepods in their stomachs than larger perch caught further downriver. |
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By midnight, shirts, inhibitions and the contents of many stomachs have been shed on the main drag and pavement couches have begun to beckon to the over-refreshed. |
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The pair's sunken stomachs signal bodies ravaged by disease. |
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Haggis traditionally contains sheep innards such as lungs and hearts, and this dish is clearly not for those whose stomachs are of a delicate disposition. |
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They then measured the production of gastric juices in their stomachs. |
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So we can glug Southern Comfort until our stomachs are pumped but we might need a prohibition on cod liver oil as we can't be trusted not to go wild on the stuff. |
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Their stomachs can't digest other foods properly until this age. |
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Sperm whales have occasionally been found with pieces of plastic in their stomachs. |
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The citrate is the most efficient as an alkali, but irritates some stomachs, the liquor the most anodyne, the acetate the most diuretic. |
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They are notable for their ability to use stones to break open shellfish on their stomachs. |
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Beatings, shootings and eviscerations abound but, for those with strong stomachs, this is certainly the best movie I've seen this year. |
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Only 1 out of the 20 stomachs examined contained halfbeaks and none in the Clupeidae family were identified. |
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Polychaetes, crangonid shrimp, pea crab, and clams were the most frequently found prey items in Pacific cod stomachs. |
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And there's no need to worry about gippy stomachs here, although food poisoning was once the curse of the Dominican Republic. |
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With their very muscular stomachs, gizzard stones function like a mill and break needles and buds into small particles. |
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Pubic hair trailing up stomachs and around thighs, discoloured skin and areas of excess flesh. |
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They're not regressing to childhood, their stomachs fluttering at the nostalgic prospect of soaking in the fuggy warmth of Bovril and linament. |
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The spicy nature can put off Brits with more sensitive stomachs and we can exclusively reveal it divides opinion more than Marmite. |
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They are ruminants, which regurgitate food and acid from their stomachs and chew on the cud for up to eight hours a day. |
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Early humans made the first sausages by stuffing roasted intestines into stomachs. |
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He flipped the two women onto their stomachs, flex-cuffing their wrists. |
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I treated them with two lots of milk of magnesia and something to settle their stomachs, and it seems to have done the trick. |
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Although crustacean parts are common in king crab stomachs, evidence of cannibalism is scarce in studies of wild feeding. |
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Here is the smorgasbord of life, and our unfocused eyes are even bigger than our stomachs. |
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Although human remains and jewelry have been found in their stomachs, gavials are not as fierce as many alligators and crocodiles. |
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Eating excessive quantities of bracken can cause beriberi, especially in creatures with simple stomachs. |
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And they found no evidence of salmonid juveniles in the stomachs of the fish examined. |
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They have small, unspecialized stomachs by ruminant standards, and high nutrition requirements. |
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They are usually large to very large, and have relatively simple stomachs and a large middle toe. |
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That large body of the working men who were not counted as citizens and had not so much as a vote to serve as an anodyne to their stomachs. |
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The camp mother managed to keep the stomachs full and the beds in tip-top shape. |
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Traditionally, sausage casings were made of the cleaned intestines, or stomachs in the case of haggis and other traditional puddings. |
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A bowel adjoins the stomachs, whose individual sections can only be distinguished histologically. |
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And the team found algal cells in samples from three-toed sloth stomachs. |
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In the stomachs of both species, crustaceans and teleosts were the dominant prey items, and molluscs, polychaetes, echinoderms, and sipunculids were found in lower abundance. |
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From sunstroke to skin allergies, grass seeds in paws, upset stomachs and lungworm, the number of pets needing treatment rises with the temperature. |
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Unlike human stomachs, rumens contain symbiotic bacteria that enable grazing animals such as sheep, goats, deer, and cattle to digest grass and other fibrous plant matter. |
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My banket is to close our stomachs up After our great good cheer. |
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Noting that ruminants had multiple stomachs and weak teeth, he supposed the first was to compensate for the latter, with Nature trying to preserve a type of balance. |
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Frequency of arthropods in stomachs of tropical hummingbirds. |
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Evidence suggests that crocodiles also feed upon fruits, based on the discovery of seeds in stools and stomachs from many subjects as well as accounts of them feeding. |
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Seal tissue has been observed in fairly significant proportion of walrus stomachs in the Pacific, but the importance of seals in the walrus diet is under debate. |
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Lawrence estuary had large numbers of nematodes and oligochaetes within their stomachs, which would indicate that these habitats are feeding areas. |
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Empty stomachs lead to acidity and leave a sour taste in the mouth. |
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In wild canids like foxes and coyotes, mom and dad bring food in their stomachs in a semi-digested form and regurgitate it for the pups from the fifth week on. |
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