Recent research around volcanic vents has found tiny organisms that breathe iron. |
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We keep all of the tiny wage they pay me, but its enough to stop us going up the wall. |
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Now he could look right through the tiny window over the roof, on to the tree-tops aback of the house. |
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Kokhi's parents' place is a tiny top-floor walk-up in one of the slummy blocks that line Hebron Road on its way out of town. |
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Only a tiny part of the pattern need be printed at a time, and by looking at it you can tell where it's from. |
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They are a tiny bit smaller than the eggs of a bee hummingbird and they certainly look like wall lizard eggs. |
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Houdini relied on great skill, low cunning, and keeping tiny metal picklocks concealed about his person. |
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Stranded in a tiny village without amenities, he eagerly accepts an offer of shelter in a local abode. |
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A tiny arched drawbridge spanned the channel, wide enough for two people to walk abreast. |
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You can still buy factory loaded.38 Special wadcutters from the major makers, but it's a tiny trickle compared to ten years ago. |
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If the particles are not tiny enough, they will have an abrasive effect on the skin. |
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Like a little aardvark discovering a termite mound, her tiny nose twitched ecstatically. |
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My absolute favorite place was a tiny casino in the Royal Haitian Hotel in Port Au Prince, Haiti. |
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Marching stiffly across the room he performed a perfect about-turn before slapping his tiny sandalled foot on the clay floor and saluting. |
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The fabric was printed with a simple design, and the full skirt accentuated her tiny waist. |
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Alarmingly, I have experienced a number of electrical shocks whilst performing my morning ablutions close by to the tiny bulbs. |
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Enceladus, a tiny moon orbiting Saturn, appears to be venting water into space from a series of fractures over its south pole. |
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We came across men in loose djellabas riding tiny donkeys, and others scything by hand, leaving piles of barley under olive trees. |
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Has the tiny nation of Burundi become ground zero for a new global black-market trade in human remains? |
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Mr. Bachner found it by wandering through the market and identified a craftsmen here who works in a tiny booth. |
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Given this tiny pool of survivors, a skeptic might ask why the story of the Mandans should matter to the contemporary reader? |
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Unlike its famous neighbor Rwanda, the tiny landlocked country of Burundi is difficult to locate on a map. |
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Everybody making pinot noir lives in the shadow of one tiny vineyard in Burgundy, the 4.4 acres of La Romanee-Conti. |
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In anaerobic digesters, organic material is mixed on a huge pot with massive quantities of tiny bacteria. |
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The children teased my parents about their budding romance and my parents, in turn, fell in love with their tiny wards. |
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But Nicole claims that she's always been a tiny bony little waif, and during season one of The Simple Life, she was going through a rare chubby period. |
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Once a tiny, flitting waif, she had become a graceful, full-figured woman. |
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As a boy in alamo, a tiny Mormon ranching community in Lincoln County 90 miles north of Las Vegas, Lamb was one of 11 children. |
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His tiny Texas aggie brain froze when he tried to repeat his talking point about the three federal agencies he would close. |
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When her bra was cut from her body, the assassin or assassins also cut off the tab on which the tiny metal clasp was affixed. |
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The coroner would also note the tiny hemorrhages that accompany strangulation. |
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The tiny creature contributes to its ecosystem in ways we are only just beginning to appreciate. |
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Many of these microscopic devices must be interconnected by metal wires, which are made by filling tiny trenches in the surface of the semiconductor wafer. |
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That means Chariklo likely has one or more tiny shepherd moons itself, making the centaur a miniature solar system. |
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Close enough to see the tiny scar on his eyelid that looks like a birthmark. |
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A tiny sliver of the population has celiac disease or medically diagnosed gluten sensitivity. |
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Leeds University scientists have calculated the birds, including tiny quail weighing mere grammes, are five times fitter than our Olympic athletes. |
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One of the most interesting spaces to open recently is the South African-run Axis Gallery, located on the top floor of a tiny walk-up at 453 West 17th Street. |
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In the tiny seaside town of Yacahts, Oregon, buck Henderson is ready to die. |
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Coconut charcoal is charcoal from coconut shells that has been altered with oxygen to create lots of tiny pores. |
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As on the fish serving fork, the terminal of the fork is formed by a thick quahog clamshell with a tiny crab on it, and the stem is lavishly encrusted with marine elements. |
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As she maneuvered her walker to the elevator, I provided a visual description of her tiny room, including the eyelet sheets that had been hung on her window. |
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Cannons were fired in the heart of the tiny principality, which is no bigger than Central Park, to celebrate the news. |
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No more hunting for the tiny little arrow with your big fat finger, in other words. |
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For the best that Barcelona has to offer, belly up to Pinotxo Bar, a tiny place with a gracious host. |
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The next evening, Romero was saying mass in the chapel at the hospice where he lived in a tiny room near the infirm and the dying. |
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Made with a tiny budget in a mere three years, Glodell has achieved the near-impossible with bellflower. |
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This particular form of tailoring is tight and tiny, cut with soft, rounded shoulders, open necklines and small waists which are sometimes belted. |
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Whatever the reason, Burton was committed enough to leave tiny Bunker Hill to seek out her beau. |
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Infrared cameras placed throughout a test-flying area communicate with tiny sensors on the quadrotors, feeding into a computer-based navigation system. |
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Adults are found in summer on newly fallen or recently felled trees chewing tiny slits in the bark in which they lay eggs. |
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The eggs hatch in about 2 weeks, and the tiny larvae tunnel to the wood and score its surface with their feeding channels. |
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Glacier ice is slightly less dense than ice formed from frozen water because it contains tiny trapped air bubbles. |
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Caernarfon is described as having neither drainage or fresh water and the inmates housed in tiny windowless cells. |
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Wild salmon get these carotenoids from eating krill and other tiny shellfish. |
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They also feed on zooplankton, tiny animals found in oceanic surface waters, and small fish and fish larvae. |
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Copepods and other tiny crustaceans are the most common zooplankton eaten by herring. |
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In fact, the known association of seabirds with land was instrumental in allowing the Polynesians to locate tiny landmasses in the Pacific. |
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Here it was sucked from tiny one-shot bottles wrapped in coarse paper, taken between drafts of good East German beer. |
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Another subtype is an island or bar formed by deposition of tiny rocks where water current loses some of its carrying capacity. |
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In most species of caridean shrimp, the females lay 50,000 to 1 million eggs, which hatch after some 24 hours into tiny nauplii. |
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At this stage, the myses already begin to appear like tiny versions of fully developed adults and feed on algae and zooplankton. |
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Bony amber owes its cloudy opacity to numerous tiny bubbles inside the resin. |
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The bulk of French armour was scattered along the front in tiny formations. |
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The steamboat was destroyed, the cargo was lost, and the tiny Union escort was run off. |
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Only a tiny fraction of wild species has been investigated for medical potential. |
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After several months of growth and development, these sprout limbs and undergo metamorphosis into tiny toads. |
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They are pardalotes, tiny little feathered jewels with stubby bills and stubby tails, giving an oddly ladybird-like silhouette. |
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The drain plug was then very slowly removed, and tiny pieces of floating wood were used to observe rotation. |
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In very deep mixed layers, the tiny marine plants known as phytoplankton are unable to get enough light to maintain their metabolism. |
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In order to preserve eggs, a tiny hole was pierced and the contents extracted. |
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This is because only a tiny percentage of animals ever fossilize, and most of these remain buried in the earth. |
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The tiny specimens have been suggested to be juveniles and the larger ones adults. |
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Avoid stepping on rope, as this might force tiny pieces of rock through the sheath, which can eventually deteriorate the core of the rope. |
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Ukraine has a large number of political parties, many of which have tiny memberships and are unknown to the general public. |
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A dispute with Spain in 2002 over the tiny island of Perejil revived the issue of the sovereignty of Melilla and Ceuta. |
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Using tiny print to state the origin of blended oil is used as a legal loophole by manufacturers of adulterated and mixed olive oil. |
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In the 2010 census 18,185 Mexicans reported belonging to an Eastern religion, a category which includes a tiny Buddhist population. |
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A few shots fired from a machine gun on Siar over the heads of the tiny German garrison at Lorengau were the last shots fired in the battle. |
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My favorite prestidigitation was when he pulled the live dove out of that tiny scarf. |
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Around the city there are tiny placards on the walls noting where the flood waters reached at their highest point. |
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A brief rainshower falling on the smooth surface of fine-grained sediment spatters it with tiny crater-like pittings known as rain prints. |
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The whole bell had to be recast although it had only one tiny, hardly visible crack. |
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The Southeys made their home at Greta Hall, Keswick, in the Lake District, living on his tiny income. |
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Halfway along the ridge is Innominate Tarn, a popular beauty spot with an indented rocky shore and a line of tiny islets. |
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Some varieties include feldspathic greywacke, which is rich in feldspar, and lithic greywacke, which is rich in tiny rock fragments. |
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The ovary is superior and develops into a dehiscent seed capsule bearing numerous tiny seeds. |
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A few spindly trees cling to the sides of the gorge, but their roothold on the tiny patches of soil gathered in cracks is precarious. |
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To trace out to its marshy source every runlet that has cast in its tiny pitcherful with the rest. |
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Tending the tiny Yin Yang Desktop Zen Garden Terrarium reminds you to pause daily. |
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I wish we could go outside instead of stifling in this tiny room. |
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In shape it is a tiny square box of silver, studded outside with eight small balas-rubies. |
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She turned off the bed-head light in this tiny, low-ceiled rolling home of hers, raised the curtain and watched the specks of light streak by. |
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Bones put the tiny crimson speck between his slides, blobbed a drop of oil on top, and focused the microscope. |
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Anyone looking for a kitten should consider that it is a tiny bundle of energy. |
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Women now resembled well-rounded cabbages from which protruded a tiny head crushed beneath a Charlotte hat covered with plumes and gew-gaws. |
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Lou Brent rolled from his cot, got to his feet on the floor of the tiny coop. |
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The tiny mouth is uttering the most satisfied of crowings, and her eyes have that pure, soft expression never seen except in baby eyes. |
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The buccal wall is near its base surrounded by a vestigial ectocingulid, which ends mesially in a tiny tuberculid. |
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He smiled again, easily, dimples creasing his cheeks, and a tiny fanwork of lines crinkled the corners of his dark eyes. |
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It wasn't quite as feelsome as the Palm V, because one could only roll a thumbwheel and type on its tiny keyboard. |
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I have a tiny bit of respect of Angelina for adopting an orphan instead of populating the world with another flesh loaf. |
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She laughs, not a funny ha-ha laugh but rather a tiny self-inflicted chuckle of disgust. |
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I always supposed he was called Goog because the tiny flattened ears did nothing to interrupt the goog-like sweep from crown to jaw. |
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He was a tiny wiry-haired fellow with a pale, sharp-featured face and restless movements. |
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These were painted with tiny sable brushes and evoke Early Netherlandish painting. |
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These tiny organisms are crucial elements of the food chain supporting many species of fish. |
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Up the block at Nananom, a tiny music and sundries store, all the hiplife CDs were sold out. |
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Through his life, he always stood out from the crowd with his tiny frame and hornrimmed glasses. |
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The tiny tesserae allowed very fine detail, and an approach to the illusionism of painting. |
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The size of the burhs ranged from tiny outposts such as Pilton to large fortifications in established towns, the largest being at Winchester. |
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After taking hostages from the leading men of the city, on 24 September the Norwegians moved east to the tiny village of Stamford Bridge. |
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They wanted to watch the game on TV, but there was too much interference to even make out the score on the tiny screen. |
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What a tiny little schooner! But is it not bold to spread both sails? And see, now that we have come round to the wind, how the skiff keels over. |
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The City is now only a tiny part of the metropolis of London, though it remains a notable part of central London. |
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However this causes only a tiny portion of the masses of other subatomic particles, such as protons and neutrons. |
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Lindwyrms are wingless dragons that look like huge snakes. Some lindwyrms have two tiny feet that are almost useless. |
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These speciality beers have a tiny proportion of the market, but are of interest to connoisseurs worldwide. |
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Gravity does not move through matter in waves, nor is it composed of tiny specks of matterlike photons. |
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Wallington was a tiny village 35 miles north of London, and the cottage had almost no modern facilities. |
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Mary Norton wrote The Borrowers, featuring tiny people who borrow from humans. |
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He sailed the last fifty miles with a tiny sailplan to keep the boat upright. |
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Reattaching his severed finger required microsurgery to suture together the tiny blood vessels. |
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The Labour Party under Harold Wilson won the October 1974 election by a tiny majority of only three seats. |
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And in the centre was Charles Edward Stuart's tiny escort made up of Fitzjames's Horse and Lifeguards. |
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The official Liberals found themselves a tiny minority within a government committed to protectionism. |
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Their distinctive, flattened tests and tiny spines were adapted to life on or under loose sand. |
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I shoehorned his dozen burgeoning bags into the backseat of my tiny car, and off we went. |
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Chicago was home to the reinvention of the harmonica from tiny dime store toy to amplified and distorted Mississippi sax. |
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Into Devon and Cornwall, the coastline becomes more rocky and steep, with numerous cliffs and tiny fishing villages along the coastline. |
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Apart from the main island of Anguilla itself, the territory includes a number of other smaller islands and cays, mostly tiny and uninhabited. |
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Mossack Fonseca approached Niue in 1996 and offered to help set up a tax haven on the tiny South Sea island. |
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In it he provided a conceptual model for electromagnetic induction, consisting of tiny spinning cells of magnetic flux. |
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A tiny, upright figure on muleback, she wore a hat of deep red, her auburn hair falling down about her shoulders. |
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The Thomas family lived on a tiny income and lacked the comforts of modern life, largely through their own choice. |
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The body was covered with what appeared to be tiny pills, while one outstretched hand held a glass. |
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The passport's critical information is stored on a tiny RFID computer chip, much like information stored on smartcards. |
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Historically, they constituted only a tiny fraction of the whole Indonesian population and continue to do so today. |
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The region is peppered with tiny Inuit fishing communities, of which Cartwright is the largest. |
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I'm about a foot taller than Doris, so I look down on her tiny curls, each one a perfect rosette of blue icing under a saranwrap tent. |
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When you start scrambling eggs, look first for tiny pieces of eggshell that might have fallen in. |
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The tiny restaurant usually got by with three workers on that shift, but found itself shorthanded when the tour bus pulled in. |
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I slaved away in my tiny kitchen, gradually developing my own techniques in my quest for perfect results. |
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Spiritlings are tiny fey creatures no bigger than half an inch across that inhabit various wild places throughout Norrath. |
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Rather than squishing everything into a tiny window, I have shown only part of my app. |
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Roxy was knitting tiny finger-puppet monsters. The Gem was peppered with balls of wool and potentially stabby knitting needles. |
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Down there on the stage Furtado twizzled her shiny jet ringlets around her tiny digits and wobbled off stage in her stilty white stilettos. |
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The swampy pools, such as the jungle abounds in, seem to be her ideal. The eggs in due course of time hatch out into tiny tadpolish larvae. |
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Near the schoolhouse was a tholtan, a tiny, half-ruined cottage with sagging thatch and the door off its hinges. |
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Half an hour due east of Marfa is the tiny college town of alpine. |
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Soon the rocket was out of sight, and the flame was only seen as a tiny twinkle of light. |
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She would make a tiny pocket in an undershift. Even boys wore undershifts, though theirs were shorter than the knee-length ones girls wore. |
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When the carpet layers came in and removed the carpet she said there were millions of black eggs and tiny worms crawling under the carpet. |
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Flat, unspankable buttocks. Large aureoles on tiny breasts. Unlike his gold engagement ring, she isn't made to measure. |
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The reason being, is that the bitter cold kills the hemlock's adversary, the hemlock woolly adelgid, a tiny insect pest. |
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This tiny Creature is the Whale's Guide, and therefore protected by him, while all the finny Race besides are his Prey. |
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Ten-year-old Aron Anderson is the only pupil left at his school on a tiny island, after older students moved on to secondary earlier this year. |
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They then travelled to Greenland and hitched a lift across the iceberg-covered waters of Baffin Bay in a tiny boat. |
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But baby wallabies are born so tiny and undeveloped, they immediately crawl into their mothers' ' pouches to continue to develop. |
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The tiny mammal, yet to be named, is the first Parma Wallaby to be born at the Pembrokeshire attraction as part of a European breeding programme. |
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I would spend weeks trying to write notes on tiny scraps of paper that could be hidden under my watchstrap. |
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High ground for bedding is just tiny, isolated wax myrtle and saw palmetto islands. |
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Smoggy pollutants get through even tiny gaps in windows, Morrison notes, especially ones that haven't been weatherproofed. |
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It retains the hatchback's wedgy rising beltline, with the result that the side windows to the rear of the car are really quite tiny. |
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They are tiny parasitic wasps which lay their eggs in the whitefly scale, killing it. |
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In a tiny, remote Chinese village, an ancient Roman bloodline may live on. |
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Sir David Attenborough looks at African wild dogs in Zambia, chimps in the Sahara and tiny tropical hermit crabs searching for shells. |
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Ahistoric, atmospheric farmhouse in the tiny hamlet of Suvay in the Abondance Valley, near the classic French ski resort of Chatel. |
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Come harvest time, it was run over by a winnower or combine, and hundreds of tiny body parts were spread across the field. |
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These guides supported tape on a film of air supplied by tiny air holes in the smooth surface and connected to a small air pump. |
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These range from the tiny money spiders to the more sinisterly named rustic wolf spider. |
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The only figure with a hint of colour is the person with the dog, to which I added a tiny touch of weak Alizarin crimson. |
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For secure storage, a tiny Allen screw in the top right of the frame can lock the safety in on-safe position. |
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Snow Creek is a tiny village off of Highway 111 near I-10 nestled on an alluvial fan at the foot of the San Jacinto Mountains. |
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In fact, a combination of tiny amounts of these xenoestrogens is many times more harmful than any one of them alone. |
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Via bikes, boats and a tiny plane, they headed into the forest to meet the Yanomami, a tribe who didn't yet know the Becks effect. |
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The spiral disk of the Andromeda galaxy, the Milky Way's neighbor, is just a tiny part of a much larger entity. |
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Skeletal feldspar grains contain ankerite rhombs, and tiny sphalerite, galena, barite, and siderite crystals. |
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The dream surf park is a 2-acre wave pool capable of generating anything from tiny beginner ripples to 10-foot barrels every minute, with every wave the same. |
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Smoking was difficult, I had to have perfect timing, sticking my head as far out the tiny porthole as I could, and timing my puffs to the inhalings and exhalings of the ship. |
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However, as with terrestrial archaeology what survives to be investigated by modern archaeologists can often be a tiny fraction of the material originally deposited. |
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Many potentially toxic chemicals adhere to tiny particles which are then taken up by plankton and benthic animals, most of which are either deposit feeders or filter feeders. |
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I started to look at our valley, and at our incy-wincy bit of settlement in its tuck of green, like a tiny leaf had fallen. And everything was flat. |
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Even this tiny residue was further diminished in the decades that followed, the elimination of native landholding being most complete in southern parts of the country. |
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The female anglerfish releases pheromones to attract tiny males. |
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Most sedimentary rocks incorporate tiny amounts of iron rich minerals, whose orientation is influenced by the ambient magnetic field at the time at which they formed. |
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The details of how birds interpret the magnetic data are not fully understood, but tiny crystals of magnetite around the eye are involved in detecting the field. |
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But on the filmsetting machine, the matrix case, which on the hot-metal caster had contained metal matrices, now contained tiny photographic negatives of each character. |
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There was a great big furry fuzzy Papa Bear, and a middle-sized fuzzy furry Mama Bear, and a tiny little Baby Bear with fur as soft and feelsome as velvet. |
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The tiny rooms are fitted with a burgundy leather chair, an end table stacked with phone books, and an ugly orange payphone common here in Australia. |
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A tiny, feisty woman who always spoke her mind, Charlotte was an eccentric in the wonderful way that some women from the last century were natural eccentrics. |
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Another possibility is camelina, which produces a tiny, mustardlike seed from which oil can be extracted, It does not require extensive fertilization. |
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Still fluffy with down, she often attacks the other birds, cacking and flashing her wings, or threatens me as I watch through the tiny peephole of the near box. |
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Sometimes he relies on the tiny blippy noises for percussion, but in places he uses a drummer as well, playing thrashing solos over the electronics. |
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Moreover, the Navigation Acts further increased economic dependence on England by limiting Scotland's shipping, and the Royal Scots Navy was tiny. |
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You may have vada'd one of our tiny bijou masterpiecettes, heartface. |
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Cameron himself was killed in a clash with government forces at Airds Moss in July 1680, but his followers, now a tiny part of the Covenanter movement, continued to exist. |
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But researchers at the CERN lab near Geneva claim they have recorded neutrinos, a type of tiny particle, travelling faster than the barrier of 186,282 miles per second. |
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You walk up fifty-seven marble stairs. You open these big brass doors, and there in this sanctum santorum, this holy of holies, is this little tiny cabin. |
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It was dedicated to her father, creating the bird house as a tiny home for my dad and Emin thought of the works' title from the idea of nature and nurture. |
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He flies around the Galaxy all alone in just a little tiny scoutcraft? |
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The warm needles of water acted like tiny acupressures on his face. |
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They lived in a tiny apartment, with some old, shabby furniture. |
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He was wearing tiny ankle socks and it made it look ridiculous. |
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Why do you always have to make such a big deal of tiny punctuation errors? |
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Hagfishes lack a true vertebral column, and are therefore not properly considered vertebrates, but a few tiny neural arches are present in the tail. |
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What distinguished the atomists from their opponents was not the belief in tiny particles that make up matter, but the question of what separated them. |
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The king of creation would not have curved his palm into the likeness of a Hindu mudra in an attempt to protect the tiny launching pad on his thumbnail from the dank wind. |
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Others of the new ships were manned by Free French, Norwegian and Dutch crews, but these were a tiny minority of the total number, and directly under British command. |
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When a barista steams the milk for a cappuccino, microfoam is created by introducing very tiny bubbles of air into the milk, giving the milk a velvety texture and sweetness. |
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Dirk Bogarde wrote about his start at tiny Amersham rep in 1939, and Sir Michael Caine recounts his time spent at Horsham rep in the early fifties. |
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But even thriving microfinanciers are tiny by banking business standards. |
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The resulting strings are dipped in oil or molten wax, which seeps into the tiny holes of the material and allows for the smooth writing ability of the pencil. |
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The tiny black seeds germinate in response to moisture and light, while seeds of temperate species also require cold, damp, stratification to germinate. |
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This technique allowed him to find tiny islands in the Pacific. |
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I blow it up until it's tight as a tick. Just below the skirt through which the lanyard passes, a tiny mouth whistles a single-note tune until the balloon's lungs are emptied. |
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A single tiny treelet broke the plain just at the skyline of the rise. |
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In essence, the sound was captured by a microphone and translated into light waves via a light valve, a thin ribbon of sensitive metal over a tiny slit. |
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The limited intelligence of man can only take in tiny portions of this order and can experience only partial truths, hence man must rely on hope which then leads into faith. |
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Magnetic resonance force microscopy employs an ultrasmall cantilever arm as a platform for specimens that are then moved in and out of proximity to a tiny magnet. |
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Developed in 1948, nodular or ductile cast iron has its graphite in the form of very tiny nodules with the graphite in the form of concentric layers forming the nodules. |
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These images, tiny at the bottom of the market, often crudely coloured, were sold in thousands but are now extremely rare, most having been pasted to walls. |
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Another notable aspect of the Gospels are tiny drops of red lead, which create backgrounds, outlines, and patterns, but never appear on the carpet pages. |
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Similarly isolated are speakers of Mober in the middle Yobe Valley and a tiny group of Affade speakers on the River El Beid. There are only two other languages in this area. |
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The giantess fetish, whether it's macrophilia or microphilia, is a pretty unique one. What y'all want is to be made to feel tiny by a bigger, stronger, superior woman. |
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However, by 1670 the sea had encroached upon the town, destroying the port and swallowing up all but a few houses so that nothing was left but a tiny village. |
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Fresh leaves had been stripped from a bush and a tiny fragment or two indicated that the Ojibway had torn a piece from his deerskin waistcloth to fasten over the leaves. |
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Thus Newton gave a justification, otherwise lacking, for applying the inverse square law to large spherical planetary masses as if they were tiny particles. |
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My class was wearing butter-yellow pique dresses, and Momma launched out on mine. She smocked the yoke into tiny crisscrossing puckers, then shirred the rest of the bodice. |
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The passing of the bore causes a churning of the water, and the myriads of tiny bubbles popping contributes much of the roaring sound made by the bore. |
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They followed her at a rapid tiny waddle, crying queep-queep-queep. |
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Only a few years before his birth on May 18, 1824, in the baronial castle, the tiny but largely autonomous knightdom had been annexed by Bavaria during the Napoleonic wars. |
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Phil used a stillwater waggler rig, baiting a tiny 18s hook with luncheon meat cut into squares no bigger than one-eighth of an inch, plus hempseed as groundbait. |
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In July 1806, Napoleon formed the Confederation of the Rhine out of the many tiny German states which constituted the Rhineland and most other western parts of Germany. |
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Alan Shepard, the first American in space, famously relieved himself inside his silver pressure suit while waiting out the countdown in his tiny Mercury capsule. |
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The backup team would be crouched in some tiny broom closet, with sweat rolling down their faces and their backs growing stiffer, and the jackrollers would just walk by. |
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The feathers lack the tiny hooks that lock together the smooth external feathers of flying birds, and so are soft and fluffy and serve as insulation. |
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