If the patient does not know of any tender area, make a very light survey of the four quadrants with your examining hand. |
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There are almost 10 different meats to sample, from thinly sliced sirloin to juicy pork to simple, tender lamb. |
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This is powerful, tender, big-hearted and dangerously exciting music that's fit to lift the spirits and raise parties from the dead. |
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Trigger-point therapy, or acupressure, stimulates tender points at the base of the skull, behind the neck. |
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She enrolled in nursing, not because of any influence from her mother, but because even at that tender age there was an inner force driving her. |
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There was still a tender spot there from when Henley had clocked him, but he couldn't remember where he'd gotten it. |
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A rack of lamb was like the best sort of outdoor barbecue, rosy, tender with deliciously charred bits that had to be gnawed off the bone. |
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Everybody said it took two weeks to train a new loom tender to tie a weaver's knot. |
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The fresh scallops and prawns were briefly cooked thus creating tender, juicy morsels of exquisite flavor. |
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Lay the waterblommetjies on the surface and allow to simmer for 15 to 30 mins till the waterblommetjies are tender, but firm. |
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It was tender, juicy and tasty, especially with the addition of the salty pork wrapping. |
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The pulled pork was served cold but was exceptionally tender, and the potato-like jicama was served very effectively in small slices. |
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I sampled a tender saddle of rabbit, wrapped in fatty Portuguese bacon and doused in a bubbly mustard emulsion. |
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But for the adventurous, it's served tender, prosciutto-thin, and heartily roasted with artichokes and radishes. |
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The luminous, newly sprouted grass fields reminded her of the paddies of tender rice shoots covering the lowland Kampuchean countryside. |
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The steak could have been more tender if we had asked for it to be medium rare, which would have been better. |
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Daisy, the unloved eight-year-old in a large family, becomes the willing acolyte to the tender and solicitous Theresa. |
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Ms Gordon explained that that house would be advertised for tender in the near future. |
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Add the sous-vide bag and poach the wax beans until tender, about five minutes. |
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He made a convincing transition from bored prince to a man in love, awakening his princess with an achingly tender kiss. |
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That had been less than a year ago, and Inger's tender heart ached for the child's obvious yearning for comfort. |
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One memory abides of when, at a very tender age and against the tide, he took up Irish dancing. |
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This will permit breeding cattle that ranchers will know are more likely to produce consistently tender offspring. |
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An enormous chunk of coal was balanced on the edge of the moving tender and released downhill as it passed. |
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When the tender is safely alongside the ship, climb aboard when the coxswain tells you to. |
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Their tender flesh was contrasted with the punchy crushed-peppercorn crust and well-matched with a light citrus sauce and the exquisitely sliced and grilled zucchini. |
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The reason I became a nurse was to provide tender loving care to patients. |
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The rich, tangy sauce is a perfect foil for the tender green stalks, which should be cooked until just al dente. |
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You'll get more tender meat, more juiciness and less shrinkage. |
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The substantial plate of rabbit was beautifully tender and came with the sort of gloriously rich sauce that you can feel furring up your arteries as you eat. |
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These quick tender biscuits go with just about any prairie meal. |
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In fifty-odd years as a deckhand, stock tender, able seaman, and now captain, I became increasingly alarmed by the growth in plastic debris I was seeing. |
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The rack of lamb, which I had at a subsequent visit, was four reasonable cutlets, again pink and tender, with a pleasant flavour imparted by the honey and mustard crust. |
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The stewed cabbage is insanely tender, vegetable-sweet, and more luxurious than cabbage has a right to be. |
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Here, as in the Kobe region of Japan, they come from the ancient Wagyu breed, which yields meat finely marbled with fat and therefore both tender and flavorful. |
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According to Swiss press reports, younger cats in the litter are the most tender and, as such, are the preferred cat cuts. |
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Place the pan in the oven and braise the brisket for five to six hours, at which point it should be fork tender. |
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These aren't stomping tunes, but tender and mournful folk songs, a bespoke genre. |
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The Gourock to Dunoon service was the subject of a separate tender, but no formal bids were made. |
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In 2005, the Scottish Executive put the collective Hebrides routes out to competitive tender, with the Dunoon route being a separate tender. |
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Following a European Commission decision to not subsidise a passenger and vehicle service, the route was again put out to tender. |
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The following decimal coins have been withdrawn from circulation and have ceased to be legal tender. |
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Although obsolete, this coin is still redeemable at banks and still legal tender on the Isle of Man. |
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Though they are legal tender in the UK, they are never encountered in circulation. |
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Blackhawk provided tender services for the larger ships operating as six divisions. |
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In high-altitude baking, you don't want as tender a cake because it will overrise, so be wary of cakes with a lot of added sugar and oil. |
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Vesuvius, a torpedo boat of 245 tons, was Vernon's experimental tender for the conduct of torpedo trials. |
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The leaves are edible, and if picked in spring when still young, are tender enough to be used in salads. |
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The Antarctican dollar, a souvenir item sold in the United States and Canada, is not legal tender. |
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Whose tender power Passes the strength of storms in their most desolate hour. |
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Chloe's the wonder of her sex, 'Tis well her heart is tender, How might such killing eyes perplex, With virtue to defend her. |
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Trev walked over and leaned down, dropping a tender kiss on her forehead where the skin was raw and scabbing from the cut. |
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They are milder in flavor than the bulbs, and are most often consumed while immature and still tender. |
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French lambs have been allowed to graze on lavender as it is alleged to make their meat more tender and fragrant. |
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Following the privatisation of British Rail, the rights to run services on the line were put out to tender as a franchise. |
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The currency is not recognised as legal tender by the international community, and it currently has no official exchange rate. |
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The meat becomes extremely tender and it is infused with spices and herbs before cooking to give it a very distinct taste. |
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However, modern bullion coins generally do not enter common circulation despite having legal tender status and a nominal face value. |
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It was tender and delicious, with a kind of porky taste you didn't often get from supermarket meats. |
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As the rainfall decreased, many of the cities farther away from Lake Titicaca began to tender fewer foodstuffs to the elites. |
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By the end of the growing season, the kernels dry out and become difficult to chew without cooking them tender first in boiling water. |
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The cupola tender observes the furnace through the sight glass or peep sight in the tuyeres. |
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The grounds were surrounded by high walls which served to keep out thieves and to aid the ripening of tender fruit. |
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Whilst young, preserve his tender mind from all impressions of spirits and goblins in the dark. |
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Half the coal was out of the tender, half the fire out of the box, half the trucks were off the track, so violent was the stopping. |
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Slow roasting is better for lean or not so tender cuts such as topside or whole bolar blade, which are not suitable to be cooked very pink. |
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Then she that saw him lying unsleek, unshorn, Gaunt as it were the skeleton of himself, Uttered a little tender dolorous cry. |
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This is important in a small tender which may be heavily laden with passengers, limiting the swing of the oars. |
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On further acquaintance I concluded that Mr. Spear's bruskness was assumed, and that beneath the tough husk there beats a very tender heart. |
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As soon as it has enten the tender and green portion of the grass, it rejects the remainder as unfit for camelopardine consumption. |
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There never was any heart truly great and generous, that was not also tender and compassionate. |
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Our wars with France have affected us in our most tender interests, and concerned us more than those with any other nation. |
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He feels a displacency at every offence against God, but only tender compassion to the offender. |
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By a complete summer fallow, land is rendered tender and mellow. The fallow gives it a better tilth than can be given by a fallow crop. |
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His most extraordinary variety has smooth, fuzzless skin like a plum, tender yellow flesh and a honey taste. |
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The moment has now come when we may tender in evidence an ancient document which professes to state the hidage of certain districts. |
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Generally, the largest locomotives are permanently coupled to a tender that carries the water and fuel. |
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It is in this section of the ribs that the tender Scotch fillet or rib-eye muscle is housed. |
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Danish currency is also legal tender and Denmark is responsible for the military defense. |
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Also, in England no other coinage was allowed, while on the continent other coinage was considered legal tender. |
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The superficial temporal artery may become exquisitely tender to the touch and visibly indurated. |
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Each is tender and juicy and seasoned to give it an enhancing kerwallop but not enough to overpower the flavorful meat. |
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For example, the gold sovereign was legal tender in Canada despite the use of the Canadian dollar. |
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During the American war of independence and Napoleonic wars, Bank of England notes were legal tender and their value floated relative to gold. |
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The gold standard was suspended at the outbreak of the war in 1914, with Bank of England and Treasury notes becoming legal tender. |
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Bank of England notes are legal tender for any amount in England and Wales, but not in Scotland or Northern Ireland. |
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Dean introduced a policy in 1895 of giving passenger tender locomotives both numbers and names. |
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Place crayfish and fresh pepper in a blender, add small water, liquefy and cook for 20 minutes or until tender. |
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These services, formerly provided by ambulance services are now awarded by competitive tender. |
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In Summer 2014 Transport for London issued a tender for up to 18 trains for the Jubilee line and up to 50 trains for the Northern line. |
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Unlike normal issues, these coins are not legal tender in all the eurozone. |
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This meat generally is more tender than that from older sheep and appears more often on tables in some Western countries. |
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The legal tender of French Polynesia is the CFP Franc which has a fixed exchange rate with the Euro. |
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As the world's 8th largest trading entity, its legal tender, the Hong Kong dollar, is the world's 13th most traded currency. |
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They are not legal tender within the UK but are legal currency backed by deposits at the Bank of England. |
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Every five or six years the coinage in circulation would cease to be legal tender and new coins were issued. |
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These banknotes are legal tender in Gibraltar alongside Bank of England banknotes. |
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In each case, personal access may only be used to tender advice on public affairs. |
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In those situations, the First Minister must tender their resignation and the resignation of their government to the monarch. |
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Treasury notes had full legal tender status and were not convertible for gold through the Bank of England. |
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During the early days of railroading, the crew simply stopped next to a stream and filled the tender using leather buckets. |
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It ran a competitive tender process to award leases to consortia of potential developers. |
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And so I say to you, tender the dead, as you would yourself be tendered, now, in what you would describe as your life. |
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The notes are no longer produced and usually not used as currency anymore, although they are still legal tender. |
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The ambitious programme ran into financial difficulties, and the service was again put out to tender. |
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But this is a time of domestic disagreements in the Walton household as I need a part of my wife's airing cupboard to house my tender sowings. |
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Place on a baking sheet and roast until just tender, about 45 minutes. |
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The HEWATT water tender is built to support the TFFT while providing supplementary fire suppression capabilities. |
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In the Santa Clarita Valley, staffing was boosted for four fire patrols and one water tender. |
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Two units of Newbridge fire brigade were called to the scene along with gardai, an emergency tender and a water tender. |
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The fire district will retrofit the truck into a water tender for use in fighting fires where no hydrants are available. |
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Initially, HS manifests with open comedones and tender subcutaneous acneiform papules. |
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The present tender is the completion of active ingredient or combination of active substances related gem agreements. |
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Braise the brisket for five to six hours, until the meat is fork tender. |
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Then he became more circumspect, joltingly so in fact for someone of his tender years. |
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Physical examination revealed normal vital signs, tender epigastrium without guarding or rebound tenderness. |
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As a tender young faglet, I had sense enough to cache my musty copies of International Male and Penthouse beneath the false bottom of my chest of drawers. |
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Now were there any one of so tender or cheverell a conscience, to whome no cure might seeme worthy of so extreame a remedy, I should prise or regard him no whit the lesse. |
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The civil authority should be tender of the honour of God and religion. |
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She could imagine the taste of the tender drumstick seeds on her tongue. |
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Tenders are invited for request for tender for the provision of aerodrome services for aerodromes located on the aran islands, inishbofin and cliften. |
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The Matrix is telling my brain this steak is tender, succulent, and juicy. |
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An invitation to tender has been launched for the supply of equipment, assembly, and start-up of an installation for the manufacture of concrete tubing in Douaouda. |
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Effeminate men and softlings cause the stout man to wax tender. |
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Freshwater eel was an extra generous cut of smoked and sweet-sauced wriggler, while the conch was simply fresh and sweet, somehow both tender and crunchy at once. |
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A Prime Minister who has lost the confidence of the House will conventionally either advise a dissolution of Parliament and new elections, or tender his resignation. |
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Yuca sticks Peel yuca and boil in water until tender, about 25 minutes. |
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Camel meat is reported to taste like coarse beef, but older camels can prove to be very tough, although camel meat becomes more tender the more it is cooked. |
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In 1984 Gloster Saro acquired the fire tender business of the Chubb group with the company merging in 1987 with Simon Engineering to form Simon Gloster Saro. |
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Demon screwed in his monocle, unclicked out of its special flat case a small pen-and-wash and said he thought that it was an unknown product of Parmigianino's tender art. |
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He kept all the things near the hearth where he had already put some greens, two sour otenga fruits and a bunch of tender curry leaves, along with some dry fire wood. |
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The use of florins and shillings as legal tender in this way ended in 1991 and 1993 when the 5p and 10p coins were replaced with smaller versions. |
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Decimal crowns are generally not found in circulation as their market value is likely to be higher than their face value, but they remain legal tender. |
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This service continued until 2008 when Calmac lost the tender. |
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National banknotes are generally legal tender, meaning that medium of payment is allowed by law or recognized by a legal system to be valid for meeting a financial obligation. |
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Their tender little nickerings would have moved a heart of stone. |
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Armpits are soft and tender and highly nickable. And sure, guys have a lot of face to shave, but that acreage doesn't compare to shaving two whole legs. |
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Airport crash tender crews are equipped for dealing with airfield accidents, crew and passenger extractions, and the hazards of highly flammable aviation fuel. |
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But this opportunity did little more for me, at so tender an age, than point, as I may say, or lead my enquiries, as I grew up, into the knowledge of female heart. |
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These engines had huge radiators in their tenders and instead of exhausting steam out of the funnel it was captured and passed back to the tender and condensed. |
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The source of this water is an unpressurised tank that is usually part of the locomotive's tender or is wrapped around the boiler in the case of a tank locomotive. |
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Shortly before the loan was granted, Arkady Rotenberg's company had been awarded the tender for the South Stream pipeline project, worth billions. |
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Mutton is meat from a sheep over two years old, and has less tender flesh. |
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After a tender process, Confetti College was awarded the licence. |
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I will crop off from the top of his young twigs a tender one. |
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Up above, the tender kept a sharp eye on the Koepanger paying out the air-pipe, while attending to the life-line himself and the management of the lugger. |
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After the outbreak of the American War of Independence Lowestoffe took several prizes, one of which was taken into Navy service as the tender Little Lucy. |
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Itchings, hitherto unknown, are felt all over the body, and render my skin sometimes painfully tender, sometimes quite benumbed, as if it were dead. |
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His characters become more complex and tender as he switches deftly between comic and serious scenes, prose and poetry, and achieves the narrative variety of his mature work. |
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I have formed many intimacies and friendships here, but I am afraid they are all of too tender a construction to bear carriage a hundred and fifty miles. |
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An ox will relish the tender flesh of kids with as much gust and appetite. |
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In this child, the presence of localized tender inguinal adenitis in the absence of an eschar, prompted us to treat the condition as bacterial adenitis. |
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It is this fat that gives his flesh a groundy taste. When the meat is freed of fat, it is both tender and delicious. It tastes not unlike dark meat of turkey. |
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The weakfish is also a member of the Sciaenidae family, and its name refers to the tender, easily torn membrane in the fish's mouth, not its fighting ability. |
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But please use tender young squash. The zuke someone overlooked in the garden until it was the size of a rolling pin will be too bitter for this casserole. |
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Unique Belgique uses an artisan style production to create sweet, tender waffles made of the finest ingredients on old-fashioned, gas-fired waffle irons. |
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The dancers become maenads, Valkyries, attacking their material with tremendous force while Daniel Bernard Roumain's score soared from wah-wah pedal guitar to tender violin. |
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Not that he weren't capable of a gentlesome word or a tender touch, but such as that come to him less natural than any living creature I ever seen. |
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A very flat bottom, with too many small blisters, usually goes with a very tender, flat cracker. A stronger flour or less fermentation are indicated. |
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Raya Holding Company decided to exit the Integrated Systems coalition, which has taken part in the government tender with investments worth EGP 2bn through the PPP scheme. |
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Cousins Will and Gavin Lindsay decided to fix up the bright red 1958 water tender after discovering it rusting in a garage in Haddington, East Lothian. |
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We should count her a very tender mother which should bear the pain twice, and fellowfeel the infant's strivings and wrestlings the second time, rather than want her child. |
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