As stars began to appear and dot the night sky, she decided to take up her books and move to the Library. |
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One pound of seed spaced at the above recommendation should take up one-tenth of an acre. |
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They are walking eight abreast, so that they take up all of the narrow pavement and spill out for several yards into the road. |
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To take up the offer to meet with her please contact the home to arrange a suitable time. |
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He does not use it as a corporate aircraft, but did take up a customer who was considering buying his own warbird. |
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Look a little sideways occasionally, but most of all remember accommodation to darkness may take up to a half an hour. |
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This year, between games and tinkering in the garage, he also found time to take up water polo and volleyball. |
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She decides that she'll have to take up some sort of activity, like quilting. |
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When the universe expands, the particles of matter dilute, or take up less space in a given volume. |
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For most workers, quitting a job to take up a better offer doesn't generally require a public explanation. |
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Since he quit Labour in 1997 he has been working in public relations and will take a significant cut in income to take up the new job. |
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Their quotes and epigrams take up a sometimes shocking amount of space in columns and essays. |
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If the council doesn't act in the near future, the action group will ask the government to take up the case. |
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After returning from a summer vacation, I decided to take up weightlifting. |
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They were adamant that they would not allow the council to carry out work on the house nor the family to take up residence. |
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This is the same encyclopedia, with multimedia additions, that used to take up a huge bookshelf. |
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The company says it will take up to a week to clear the track and repair damaged rails. |
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But he also admitted responsibility for the problem as they stopped short of garbage disposal and did not take up environmental issues. |
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Still, artists saw little action by city officials, who failed to take up the rallying cry. |
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The club is continuing to expand the junior section and welcomes young people who would like to take up the game. |
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Lose a spouse and find another, lose a job and retrain for another, give up mountaineering and take up rambling. |
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Passion requires that you own up whatever you take up, no matter how small or seemingly unimportant. |
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If I hadn't been so good at the family business I would take up cattle ranching. |
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In this year he returned to America with the rank of lieutenant colonel to take up a staff position. |
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I mean who else is there to take up the slack for them, when their fifteen minutes of fame is running out. |
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At last, he has been allowed to take up his office in the House of Commons, where he has raised the Irish flag. |
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People in a residential colony are encouraged to take up group activity such as walking or jogging or aerobic exercises. |
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The club affords the opportunity to people of all ages, male and female, to take up this healthy sport. |
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Doubts resolved, he is now committed, eager and ready to take up the challenge. |
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The machine is supposed to take up to eight attempts to hit the spot, so I'll give it another couple of goes before writing it off. |
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While we don't think she should take up an agony aunt column any time soon, her advice wasn't the worst in the world. |
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He was recently announced as the next Chief of Defence Force, a position he will take up on July 4, on promotion to air chief marshal. |
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Each unit costs a different amount and they also take up a certain amount of space in the cargo hold of the ship. |
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Navigating and communicating with air traffic control take up a lot of our time. |
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I've seen with my own eyes people take up four seats, the entire aisle and the toilet cubile by strategic placement of a few cases. |
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Cashing a check can take up to 45 minutes because of the multiple book entries, checks, and rechecks that a battery of clerks perform manually. |
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Not content with cooing and pooing from the rafters, a few of them decided to take up permanent residence in the foyer. |
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Winners breed a winning mentality and their success can encourage others to take up the sport. |
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The event is aimed to support those already involved and encourage any woman wishing to take up the sport. |
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Old women are better off, and take up managerial responsibilities in directing other women's work. |
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Glass-topped dining tables may appear to take up less space, but can look ugly when guests are seated. |
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Governor Rick Perry has ordered a special legislative session on June 30 to take up redistricting. |
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This vacuum not only holds products in place, it also compacts the package size, reducing the amount of space they take up in cartons. |
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Anglers often have long rods and when they have caught something take up the whole path reeling something in. |
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The recapture of this specimen suggests that wreckfish take up a demersal life at a total length of about 50 cm. |
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Wouldn't it be fantastic if they could be encouraged to take up reading and writing as well? |
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Despite her fevered imagination, he had no wish to take up her lacrosse stick and bludgeon the president to a pulp. |
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But annual league guides and almanacs take up more space on your bookshelves and credit cards than they are worth. |
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They take up valuable space upon shelves and inside almirahs, but no one has the heart to throw them away. |
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And if salaries and remuneration take up the bulk of the money, then how is the remainder allocated? |
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The reason for this is that getting a phone line installed in this area can take up to two years. |
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By 2008, I'm hoping that their contribution to the household economy will have been to renounce reading and take up computer games, instead. |
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Fishing used to strike me as a last-resort sport, a pastime I might take up later in life, along with quilting. |
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I have been very busy lately and the ongoing project will take up about a few more weeks. |
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In fact, it was his father who advised him to study law and take up the legal profession. |
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Scrapping no-win no-fee deals where solicitors take up cases which previously would have been settled without going to law. |
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Suddenly, bishops called upon their pacifist communities to take up swords and defend the Empire. |
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Now living and working in New York, she decided to take up running because other sports were so expensive. |
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Jay decided that he was out of shape and that maybe he should take up running. |
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It's important to take it steadily when you first decide to take up any sport and running is no different. |
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Of course I still had to take up residency in Florida while the process was going on. |
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The main aim of the nationwide workshop programme is to encourage young people to take up angling as a recreational sport. |
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Aretmis was to proceed at best speed to Glory, resupply there and then take up position in the Wurtuy system. |
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Since the provinces won't, the federal government should take up the students' case. |
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Similarly, rap music does not of itself make people take up drive-by shootings as a hobby or turn young men into misogynists. |
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In 1850, he returned to Ireland to take up an appointment as Archbishop of Armagh. |
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They prepared the way for the Romantics to take up poetry as prophecy, the poet as prophet. |
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On leaving the College he decided to take up a military career and, when war broke out with Spain he joined the army. |
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Certainly, Colombo residents Kumudini Samuel and Chandragupta Thenuwara are more likely to join an anti-war protest than to take up arms. |
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Some of the others managed to take up arms and a battle began between those who only hours earlier had been allies. |
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The organist at the centre of a long-running row at a Yorkshire church is set to leave the area and take up a new post in Germany. |
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Despite the long odds, she's hoping someone in the unemployment lines will take up the challenge. |
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We are reliably informed that the Senate may take up the bill in its rump session, scheduled to start Tuesday. |
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At one stage he thought he might give up tennis and take up football instead. |
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How are we ever going to produce top-class athletes if we leave it to children to take up sports themselves. |
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Encouraged by his father to take up to athletics, he took to it like a duck taking to water. |
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It'll be just his luck for Stephen to take up poker, though, and beat him every year in the World Poker Final. |
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Therefore many take up temporary unpaid observer attachments in the hope of transferring to a training post. |
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Another risk posed by big clients is that they take up staff time at the expense of other, smaller clients. |
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Having tabbed browsing makes it much easier to manage all these, since they don't take up space in my program bar anymore. |
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She audaciously leaves home to take up a job as an assistant on a literary magazine in New Delhi. |
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Lifting tackle can take up scenery and properties weighing a ton through a trap door in the roof to the second floor, 25 feet above. |
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Climbers sell all their gear and take up sailboarding, skiers move to Florida. |
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The Rann, a vast expanse of tidal mud flats and salt marshes, take up much of Kachch. |
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Will she win the title, or will she quit and take up an even more lucrative career as a chicken sexer? |
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There are important autonomist networks in many countries, but these ideas have a wider take up because of cynicism about the old left. |
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No, this international model will not be sashaying down the ramp, but will take up a one-year course in Hindi. |
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While some mango trees take up to five years to fruit, others start fruiting very young. |
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Achilles tendonitis is common when persons first take up athletic activities. |
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There his private income enabled him to take up the new science of geology. |
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If the manspreading campaign has taught us anything, it's that men can take up a lot of space. |
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Joe and about 70 other Maoris arrived in Sydney from New Zealand to take up jobs for the Olympics. |
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That zone now belongs to the hordes of zealots invited there personally to take up maracas and other such percussion. |
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The arguments centred on the ability of terrestrial vegetation to take up CO2, and retain it in the form of wood, roots and soil carbon. |
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From our experience, the process may take up to two weeks, and adding fresh food scraps to the new bin will encourage the migration. |
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I understand that he has an offer to be a ballboy at Wimbledon, but I do not think he is quick enough on his feet to take up that one. |
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Joanne is busy applying to grant-awarding bodies to try to scrape the cash together so she can take up her place on the three-year course. |
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I don't know what I would do after going up Everest, I certainly wouldn't want to take up ballooning. |
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If the battle of the sexes is over and these girls have won, it's time to take up long-distance ballooning. |
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Startled onlookers saw officers arm themselves and take up positions in front of the house. |
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As I had done a course in company secretaryship, I decided to take up the project. |
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The final move sees operations manager King take up the post of Brentford's general manager. |
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Can you advise me on how I can persuade him to take up a real instrument like say the bass trombone? |
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Also, babies under a year don't really take up that much space other than their furniture. |
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Their father was a great loss but we were all delighted when Elaine and John decided to take up the baton. |
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This is a Government initiative and Bradford is happy to take up the baton. |
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Younger people are needed to take up the baton and continue to fight for Bingley, but there seems to be little interest. |
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But, the birds can be brought back, if the authorities take up the planting of suitable varieties of plants, trees bearing berries and fruit. |
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In this paper I want to take up certain Hindu formulations of the rasa theory which bear on aesthetic experiences, for several reasons. |
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If so did they take up the entire mess hall seating, or could you just have moved to a part of the mess hall away from the function? |
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The climber will tie into one end of the rope and the belayer will take up slack from the other end using his belaying device. |
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I recall that the Claimant was keen to take up this post otherwise he would not have specifically requested this posting. |
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Other general banking branches will also take up personal banking services through their existing set-up. |
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We don't take up much room and don't have any amplifiers or microphones to encumber us. |
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I protect the cord with three layers of sheathing, a fluid bath to take up shock, plus a bony housing. |
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According to the will of the Creator, wisdom, as the divine Shekinah, will take up a dwelling place in Jacob. |
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The plot, such as it is, doesn't take up much time, so Tarantino pads his scenes out, sometimes effectively, sometimes less so. |
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These disposable nappies end up in landfill sites where they can take up to 500 years to biodegrade. |
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The Corporation is, in fact, contemplating of slapping fines on those who refuse to take up the rainwater harvesting. |
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If that Vallee fellow had a shred of dignity, he'd discard his ukulele and take up the foghorn. |
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Banding is cheaper because shrink-wrap machines not only take up a lot of space but they provide a lot of waste, too. |
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Staff turnover has dropped dramatically, as fewer consultants leave to take up new jobs. |
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My hope is that scholars and students will take up Tate's challenge to explore monographic and biographical subjects suggested by Frontier Army. |
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Colourful shirts and blazers adorn the chambers of the Johannesburg city council as youthful faces take up their seats. |
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For example, a pine or fast-growing hardwood like silver maple doesn't take up as much carbon for its size as oaks do. |
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Mennonites, Ukrainians, Polish people and western Europeans came to take up land and build homes and communities. |
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The Bangalore City Corporation will now take up 28 more skywalks in the city to help pedestrians cross busy roads and junctions. |
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As the rain persists and reservoirs back up, homes, businesses and roads take up the slack. |
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The key to breaking the cycle is to boost demand and take up the slack in the economy. |
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The Instructor gave her a slap on the rump and then proceeded to take up the slack on the rope. |
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Frankly, I had not the temperament to take up a musicological career, even as a secondary pursuit. |
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The idea of something as modern and unremarkable as an unlabelled videotape containing a terrible curse is enough to make you take up reading. |
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The 58-year-old Bostonian moved from Washington to take up a five-year post at the authority last month. |
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Those with a scientific background of botany should take up a detailed study of endangered plant species to determine why they are dying out. |
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I have too many piles of unread paper comics to read, and they make me feel guilty by being things that take up space on the floor in boxes. |
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We would agree to a number of cabs to take up any untaken demand but they have turned it into a free-for-all. |
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I try to be aware of the space I take up, of the prejudice that I carry, and the privilege that is the albatross around my neck. |
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Amongst his academic duties, Dane intends to take up rugby, the school's main sporting bread and butter. |
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For virtual reality applications, the nanobots will take up positions next to every nerve fiber coming from all five of our senses. |
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The post fell vacant following Stuart Gulliver's decision to take up a new academic position. |
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Jumping bristletails moult 8 to 10 times before reaching sexual maturity, which may take up to two years. |
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The first 31 of 50 Nile crocodiles have arrived at the Johannesburg Zoo to take up residence in a newly created enclosure, Crocodile Country. |
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Games of other sorts take up three or four pages of advertising space in the local free weeklies. |
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The vicarage will become the home of the new Archdeacon of Wiltshire, who is due to take up the post in September. |
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Perfectly reusable building materials and fixtures then take up space in landfills. |
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A spiral staircase might be a good choice, as you don't have a lot of room, and a spiral stair will take up less room. |
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Players were sold to try to take up some of the slack, increasing the spiral of disaster. |
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Avoid cruel and violent people, as they tend to take up cudgels with you on non-issues. |
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But, I also understand that motorists don't like the busway because its lanes take up space on the main roads. |
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She rolled her eyes and fell back into her bunk, spread eagle, so she would take up all the room. |
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I hope to take up athletics and would like to compete in either the 100 metre or 200 metre sprint. |
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He habilitated in 1928, the year that Heidegger moved back to Freiburg to take up his former teacher's chair. |
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Indeed, it may be the fear of nothingness, of simply blinking out of existence which motivates many to take up their faiths. |
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Youngsters will take up new technology, but old dogs like me will continue to take their daily paper out of sheer force of habit. |
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He appealed to the business community and other stakeholders to take up the responsibility of developing the area. |
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When a parent dies, older children may be expected to take up paid employment and care for younger siblings. |
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The Senate's decision to have another Senate inquiry was enough for the Prime Minister to take up his usual cry about Senate obstructionism. |
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Although their commitments to Hull meant they were unable to take up an active role with York, Stabler remains a staunch supporter of the Wasps. |
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He says that many younger women take up knitting when they get pregnant and want hand-knitted baby clothes. |
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Today, children are more apt to gather around the television or computer than to take up a game of kick-the-can or capture-the-flag. |
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If the image is adequate, it is downloaded onto digital imaging software that can organize the photographs more efficiently than paper binders and take up only virtual space. |
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Also, summer squashes take up less room then do the winter squash. |
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He must take up the mission of ensuring the nation's security in a rapidly changing international scene, while reinvigorating the economy and stabilizing society. |
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People who don't like committees, seating plans and being told what colour of shoes to wear would be well advised to take up tennis, beach volleyball or snowboarding. |
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He said that to provide a satisfactory visibility splay the access would have to protrude into and take up virtually half the width of Wilcot Road. |
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Certified small sites can take up to five caravans, motor caravans or trailer tents at any one time and are for the exclusive use of Caravan Club members. |
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Gilmour is said to be set to take up his studies at BYU in provo, following in the footsteps of his bride. |
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This process uses slide-in connectors to offer the compatibility for the different connections without using adapters, which often take up un-needed room in your case. |
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Very quickly it all began to get out of hand and we came to a group decision that it was time to knock the whole business on the head and take up some new enthusiasm. |
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Novels, even spy thrillers, don't have to take up questions like this. |
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Mrs Bond is pleased with the response so far, with some people saying they have not knitted in years but will now take up their needles in a good cause. |
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Of course, this was the late 1960s and Laura had yet to marry a man named George and take up the mantle of First Lady of the United States of America. |
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However, to everyone's surprise, he almost won a seat in the election by running on a radical platform the Democratic Party had been unwilling to take up. |
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If you're weekending by car, it won't take up much room in the trunk. |
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Disillusioned dairy farmers in Yorkshire could soon be turning cowboys and switching their flat caps for Stetsons if they take up an offer to relocate to South Dakota. |
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Fishing lines which contain plastic such as nylon can take up to 600 years to decompose, and during degradation become microparticles or microplastics. |
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The US government said on Wednesday that it could take up to 90 days to restore production at offshore drilling platforms that were destroyed by Hurricane Ivan. |
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The eight writers will take up their residencies in January. |
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Not to be harsh to the retrenched worker, the reform process provides for safety nets and reskilling of the workers so that they can take up other activities. |
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In Europe, the take up rate is an unenthusiastic 10 per cent. |
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If it takes something the size of a can of tuna to hold a farad, then 10,080 farads is going to take up a LOT more space than a single AA battery! |
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The town is a favorite nesting-place for the leggy birds, who take up residence here on the old Roman aqueduct, disused minarets and any other safe perch, in the Summers. |
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A few weeks ago, as I read things, there were occasional and tepid signals that the House would not take up the Senate bill. |
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No one was surprised when he joined the brain drain to take up a research fellowship at the Mayo Clinic in Minnesota with Dr Earl Wood, a leading heart physiologist. |
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You were a fast bowler before you decided to take up wicketkeeping. |
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Other handy bits and pieces like plasters, handkerchief, aftersun and a needle and thread can also come in handy, and don't take up too much room. |
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Paul took up the post of County Accountant in the mid-Seventies, leaving for a short spell, only to return to take up the post of Finance Officer. |
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The would-be spaceman took his 37 ft-high Starchaser rocket to Stockport Grammar School to encourage youngsters to follow his lead and take up engineering. |
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Oliguric or anuric renal failure is the result in the most severe cases and, although permanent renal failure is rare, recovery of renal function may take up to two months. |
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I'd learn to sew properly, and I'd take up Afro-Caribbean drumming again. |
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A belayer holds the end of the rope, hooked to his or her karabiner and through the belay device, to take up rope slack as the climber ascends the wall. |
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Insiders suggest it could take up to three fiscal years and a senatorial act to overhaul the current clearance system. |
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The legal answer to your question is that parents whose children pass the 11-plus are under no obligation to take up a place they have been offered in a comprehensive school. |
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Britain's champion apprentice rider two years ago, he will take up a new post as a stable-jockey near Thirsk when the Flat turf season kicks into gear in March. |
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This method is also utilized in a tandoor and in old-fashioned bread ovens, whose linings take up heat from fires lit inside, and radiate it back to the food being cooked. |
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Before she was grown, she would take up flute, violin, ballet, ice-skating, tap dance and French, and she would skip the first and seventh grades. |
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Remus speaks English and Lithuanian fluently, and didn't have to take up Irish because he was over the age of 10 when he joined Rockfield national school. |
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Middle ages men who take up running subsequently have affairs. |
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I was forced to compact a six-shelf collection of boxes for my impending move and my collection would take up a lot less weight and room if this was implemented sooner. |
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In 1560 he took holy orders, and the following year resigned his post at Ely Cathedral in order to take up a living at Doddington in the Isle of Ely. |
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This makes it a perfect issue for the anti-abortion lobby to take up. |
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Within 5 years, it will probably only take up a quarter or a fifth. |
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Politics seems to assail Carvalho, forcing him to take up former cudgels and defend his corner. |
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And those who take up weapons and kill large numbers of people in furtherance of that ideology? |
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More than a year ago, the Red Skull appeared in a video on the Web urging fighters to take up arms against Maliki. |
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She will take up a music scholarship at Marlborough College in September and will begin studying for A levels in music, business studies, religious studies and maths. |
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What it means is that we do not take up arms to attack others. |
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To many Britons, including government politicians, they are traitors, willing to take up arms to fight the armed forces of the country they grew up in. |
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Please be aware that orders can take up to 6 weeks to come through so if you want something in time for the start of the season you'd best get a shift on! |
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Solnit can take up a thought and follow its meander into as-yet unrevealed territory. |
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This property allows the lambda to take up no space and to slide into the center of a nucleus, where its strong binding energy pulls the other nucleons closer together. |
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Thus, Eccleston is still considered to be the Ninth Doctor since he is the ninth incarnation to take up that name. |
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As a result, longboats which could once take up to eight tourists were being forced to take only 4-5 passengers to prevent the boats scraping against the riverbed. |
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At the time, the Kurdish Peshmerga did take up positions in the oil-rich city of Kirkuk, where they remain to this day. |
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As they once again invade the safety of the prison that the group calls home, Rick is forced to take up the proverbial sword. |
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There's a short, sharp thrill about it, and we only have a band on for half an hour, so it doesn't take up a large chunk of the night if people don't like it. |
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When he came to take up his position he was asked to sign a code of conduct which bound him to agreeing in public to any decision taken by the board. |
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An expert in computational biology is moving to Canada to take up a new chair in biocomputing, specializing in bioinformatics, at Wilfrid Laurier University. |
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When the pastoralists pushed north, looking for grazing land and runs for their sheep, Thomas Elder was one of them to take up large leases in the Beltana area. |
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In foreign countries, sportspersons take up rowing as a profession. |
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With very few exceptions the patriots of this country are all timid adventurers led by ambitious intriguers, avid speculators who never dared to take up arms in our favour. |
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The captain of the trireme, the trierarch, was not a specialist, but a wealthy citizen who had volunteered or been appointed to take up this prestigious position. |
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We don't need any more mockney, has-been Hollywood castoffs in London, they just take up precious space and claim all the freebies so there's none left for us. |
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The warriors suffered no discernible casualties and managed to take up positions on a small elevation only a few hundred yards to the south. |
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Children from non-smoking homes are much less likely to take up the habit. |
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An elderly heart attack victim cannot use his emergency alarm because BT engineers told him it could take up to a week to mend a broken phone line. |
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With media attention hitting fever pitch, a strangely lupine man called Wolf decides to take up the hunt, interrupting Dusty's incompetent press conference. |
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People who fail to take up the offer will face firm action, which may include legal proceedings or recovery of the debt from their accounts or other income sources. |
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Few of us sit down every day, as they do across much of Europe, for a relaxing family meal that could take up to three hours of fun-filled banter and merrymaking to consume. |
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In just a few minutes, a medical team comes together, and doctors and paramedics take up their stations as the patient is wheeled into the operation theatre. |
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They have done experiments to see whether kale and turnip plants could possibly take up the excess that sometimes builds up in drainage water from irrigation operations. |
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Following a rigorous round of auditions and interviews Tony was chosen ahead of hundreds of others a fortnight ago to take up the one year course. |
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Mr Pande said governments should formulate laws and plans for the advancement of local entrepreneurs to take up the running of the tourism sector. |
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Most are peaceful, but some Salafis have turned radical and take up arms, just as there were violent Lutheran peasant rebellions in early modern Europe. |
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When the rule of law and political transition fail to bring about change, disenfranchised and marginalized groups take up arms. |
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The terrestrial biosphere is, indeed, a vast natural carbon store, but its capacity to take up substantially increased quantities of CO2 is severely limited. |
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Now, after juggling a three-year teaching degree course with the care of her daughter, she is set to take up her position at the front of the class. |
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The pair have the disease''s G551D mutation, and have to take up to 50 tablets a day and endure frequent nebuliser and physiotherapy sessions. |
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In these animals, the leptospira take up residence in their kidneys and are voided in the urine. |
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However this can take up to one day for every hour the clock is shifted, resulting in several days of fatigue and discombobulation. |
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Why then has Doris Kearns Goodwin chosen to take up the story again? |
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The second new club, the Silver Striders, gives people over the age of 50 the opportunity to take up running. |
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Even after jaw wiring or these expensive operations, people get around it by liquidising food to take up less room and move through more quickly. |
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In the city of Nizhny Novgorod, top officials were commanded to take up volleyball and swimming. |
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After a careful analysis of the situation, they motivated the native populace to take up arms against the colonisers. |
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In the HerpeSelect tests, individuals who were seronegative before may take up to 3 weeks to seroconvert. |
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Conventional serological tests are done based on the presence of antibodies and they take up to two to six weeks to give the correct result. |
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Surgical facelifts can take up to 18 months for all the muscles and nerves to heal properly. |
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Now, orthorexics take up such a significant proportion experts say they should be treated separately. |
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There's been research done that says it can take up to 18 months to get over an osteitis pubis problem. |
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The yeast seems to take up some of the malolactic bug by-products, especially diacetyl, and therefore reduces that butterscotchy aroma. |
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Blake shocked everyone by chucking in his job, selling his flat and returning home to take up the flagging reins of the family company. |
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The contributors to this collection take up this challenge in mapping a feminist cyberscape. |
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Most of our ingenious young men take up some cry'd-up English poet for their model. |
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Healthy lunch selections mean you would have no need for things such as fryolators that take up space and cost a lot to run. |
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I take up the shovel and hold it aloft like a gidgee, but the centipede has disappeared. |
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Indeed, the Viking army did withdraw from Reading in the autumn of 871 to take up winter quarters in Mercian London. |
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Some appear to have been reluctant to take up lands in a kingdom that did not always appear pacified. |
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The price for all this chutzpah was that Malraux then had to take up the cause of the colonial indigenes as if it really mattered to him. |
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The king had a steady income from crown lands, and could also take up substantial loans from Italian and domestic financiers. |
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From 1648 Charles Louis was able to take up his position as Elector of the Palatinate on the Rhine, as a consequence of the Peace of Westphalia. |
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Travel across the Atlantic used to take up to 5 weeks in the 18th century, but around the time of the 20th century it took a mere 8 days. |
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In 2014, 60 pupils were made offers by Oxford or Cambridge, with 56 eventually going on to take up their places. |
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Legionaries were quartered in a peripheral zone inside the intervallum, which they could rapidly cross to take up position on the vallum. |
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This process can take up to eighteen hours, depending on the intensity of the flavour desired. |
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Another 12 years had passed when an act of piracy caused him to take up Esther once again. |
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And any billionaire who's worried about losing that megapenny really ought to take up a hobby, like maybe horse riding. |
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Principal photography started on 11 January 1966 and was scheduled to take up to 26 weeks. |
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The dormouse scolds Alice and tells her she has no right to grow at such a rapid pace and take up all the air. |
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The 2009 Six Nations also saw former England Captain Martin Johnson take up the job of head coach. |
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He would additionally take up a coaching role with the academy, as well as a strength and conditioning role with the first team. |
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Great Britain's men's and women's handball teams were allowed to take up host places at the 2012 Olympics. |
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Jourdan instructed his generals to take up positions in the Black Forest, and he himself established a base at Hornberg. |
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Good people, if you're ever short of a job, don't take up monking for a living. |
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No, saw M ordering Bond to leave his Beretta behind and take up the Walther PPK, which the film Bond used in eighteen films. |
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Abandoning his office job, he decided to instead take up both writing and illustrating his own comics. |
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Following a campaign of protest in New York he felt unable to take up the appointment. |
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Barbirolli refused invitations to take up more prestigious and lucrative conductorships. |
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When her husband Francis II died in 1560, Mary, now 19, elected to return to Scotland to take up the government. |
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In the previous year on 1 November 1555, the congregation in Geneva had elected Knox as their minister and he decided to take up the post. |
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William diplomatically waited until both Guala and Ranulf had requested him to take up the post before assuming power. |
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In 2012 Dame Rosemary Butler AM launched a campaign to address the need for more women to apply for and take up public roles and appointments. |
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Sheridan resigned on 13 January 2016 after just 14 league games to take up the manager's job at Oldham Athletic. |
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This period of preparation can take up to two hours, including the resting time for the bread mixture. |
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These droplets may take up over half of the volume of their bodies in polar species. |
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The submarines were to leave to take up their positions on 26 August, while Keyes would travel on the destroyer Lurcher. |
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Males take up nesting sites before the breeding season, by frequently calling beside them. |
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The turtles can take up dissolved oxygen from the water using these papillae, in much the same way that fish use gills to respire. |
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After the campaign the French soon abandoned the Stuarts entirely, withdrawing their support, and forcing them to take up a new home in Rome. |
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In May 2011, it was announced that Gould would take up the role of General Manager with the Penrith Panthers. |
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He was nominated as first viceroy of Portuguese India in 1504, but could not take up this post owing to temporary blindness. |
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Texel is known for its wildlife, particularly in winter, when birds of prey and geese take up residence. |
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Roosevelt expected that the United Nations would take up the problem of decolonization. |
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Before he could take up his post there was strong opposition from a minority of bishops and he was persuaded to not proceed with the appointment. |
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Bush had preliminary talks with Blair to ask him to take up the envoy role. |
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The tension band adds an adjustable amount of drag to the bobbin and thereby increases the yarn take up force. |
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On the return, the roving is clamped and the spindles reversed to take up the newly spun thread. |
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Apparently, Rawlinson, the founder of the Backbarrow Iron Company in Furness, did not take up the offer. |
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Young nonsmokers who see tobacco advertisements are more likely to take up smoking. |
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One concern with hay grown on human sewage sludge is that the hay can take up heavy metals, which are then consumed by animals. |
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