Like other elasmobranchs, skates are vulnerable to overfishing because they mature late. |
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He explained that power lines were particularly vulnerable to wet snow driven by high winds clinging to cables and bringing them down. |
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They all have complex supply chains, sourcing materials from across the industry and making them vulnerable to the big drug companies. |
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Desert woodrats are vulnerable to predation by coyotes, raccoons, owls, gopher and rattlesnakes, and hawks. |
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By vocalizing your overconfidence, you leave your squad vulnerable to all kinds of bad karma, curses and jinxes. |
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They are vulnerable to racketeers, and their children are permanent targets for kidnappers. |
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However, they may leave scrub areas vulnerable to invasion by exotic and weedy species. |
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New concerns tonight that our nation's railroads and subways could be vulnerable to terrorist attack. |
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The city's distinct terrain makes it particularly vulnerable to the storm surges, heavy rains and high winds of a hurricane. |
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By the 1970s, they were thought to be vulnerable to Soviet missiles and were supplemented by converted civil airliners, now 747 jumbo jets. |
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Asustek is best known for producing good products at top whack, but this leaves it vulnerable to lower-price, bigger volume rivals. |
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Police today offered advice on how van owners can make themselves less vulnerable to the gang. |
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Are all persons equally reactive or vulnerable to negative interpersonal events? |
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Too few troops on the ground going in left the heartland unconquered and rearguard supply troops vulnerable to attack. |
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Our reading efforts were communal, and thus vulnerable to the attention-seeking wisecracks of this or that child. |
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Bronchial asthma is a respiratory system condition in which the air tubes to the lungs become especially vulnerable to constriction. |
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A survey shows that these people are more vulnerable to diseases linked to excessive fat. |
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Like other large breeds, the Komondor is vulnerable to hip dysplasia as well as bloat and skin problems. |
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Hong Kong's re-export trade was also vulnerable to any weakness in China's exports, he said. |
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The time it takes to climb a rope or scale a ladder leaves soldiers highly vulnerable to attack. |
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Certain files on your hard drive, such as spreadsheets and databases, may be vulnerable to Y2K problems. |
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Young people are especially vulnerable to psychiatric abuse and involuntary incarceration because as minors their legal rights are limited. |
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The report documented why babies and children are uniquely vulnerable to fetal and developmental effects from exposure to certain pesticides. |
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Private security analysts observe the mansion is still very vulnerable to attack in a country awash with guns. |
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This, I think, is where fast food chains remain vulnerable to class action lawsuits. |
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The shadow banking system is particularly vulnerable to runs commercial paper investors refusing to re-up when their paper matures. |
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Politicians in Birmingham have warned that areas with large first-generation immigrant populations are particularly vulnerable to intimidation. |
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Women in those situations are particularly vulnerable to a predator and a manipulator like Ben. |
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In my view, ATM operators are highly vulnerable to competition from rivals. |
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For this reason, the arapaima tends to float near the surface of the water and is vulnerable to harpoon and spear fishing. |
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And more and more Americans are living dangerously, moving to regions in this country highly vulnerable to natural disasters. |
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Their handiwork exacerbated run-off and made homeowners more vulnerable to floods and landslides. |
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Cole believes it's the stress that shy people constantly experience which leaves them more vulnerable to disease. |
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With esteem levels at a January low, people are particularly vulnerable to be mis-sold miracles. |
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So to neglect the problem means that we are vulnerable to asteroid collisions. |
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Hereford was, by contrast, vulnerable to the Welsh, who sacked the cathedral in 1055 and killed the bishop, Leofgar. |
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Emotions are also more vulnerable to manipulation by marketers, since they are attuned to respond to novelty, and visual stimulus. |
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Limited water for washing leaves people vulnerable to skin diseases like scabies and surviving animals can spread diseases. |
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Small sloops and schooners were particularly vulnerable to the attentions of privateers. |
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On that day I bare my soul, make myself vulnerable to friends and family by expressing my feelings. |
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Individuals with rosacea or seborrheic dermatitis of the scalp and face are especially vulnerable to this posterior form. |
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After several years of drought, which may be related to global warming, pine trees have become vulnerable to the bark beetle. |
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The Government has already identified areas that are vulnerable to earthquake based on seismic activity. |
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Redwing are among the least robust of thrushes and vulnerable to mass mortality when overcome by cold spells. |
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We were vulnerable to one another, having changed roles and forms countless times in previous existences. |
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Carrier battlegroups had long been vulnerable to submarines, but the Catharsis specialized in destroying other submarines. |
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Our focus concentrated on those clutch sizes thought to be vulnerable to the spread of siblicidal behavior. |
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A positive skin test result may mean the individual is more vulnerable to asthma, hay fever, and eczema. |
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The vigor of Atlantic meridional overturning circulation is thought to be vulnerable to global warming. |
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He said he was not inclined to provide a portable toilet which could be vulnerable to vandalism. |
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If the teeth are not cleaned properly they may be vulnerable to tooth decay causing cavities, or to gum disease. |
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The cheapest forms of housing have proven most vulnerable to the high winds of tornadoes and hurricanes. |
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Shallow springs and poorly constructed wells also are vulnerable to protozoa infection. |
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The emotional nature of feelings about morality makes it especially vulnerable to being shanghaied by baser instincts. |
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During these long migrations they are extremely vulnerable to attack by predators. |
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With so much cash on hand, the company would be vulnerable to a takeover bid if the family didn't control so much stock. |
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It says bigeye tuna is slow-growing and more vulnerable to exploitation than skipjack and yellowfin tuna. |
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Elderly shop-owners are especially vulnerable to being duped by realistic guns. |
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Alienation among unemployed youths will swell the ranks of those vulnerable to terrorist recruitment. |
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The Tudor dynasty's right to the throne was vulnerable to contestation, and the theaters were thought able to influence public opinion. |
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But the gash makes Luna more vulnerable to blowdown because redwoods have shallow roots. |
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The second superstition was that the skimmer would perform poorly and was vulnerable to misfortune when only one of the twins was aboard. |
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From managements' perspective, ungeared companies become potentially more vulnerable to predators. |
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Looking down at the landscape, he saw unguarded storage tanks, refineries and chemical plants, all open and starkly vulnerable to attack. |
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This is not a good idea because an unlocked door leaves people vulnerable to burglary. |
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He has a good chin and is an excellent inside fighter, but he will prove vulnerable to the slugger. |
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The Stryker Brigade is especially vulnerable to long lines of communication, unoccupied battlespace, and bypassed enemy forces. |
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But does smart grid technology make the nation more vulnerable to cyber-terrorists? |
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No wonder that those who felt vulnerable to such a drastic fiscal reform lashed out, often unreasoningly, to the threat. |
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Hundreds of thousands of people lack the basic necessities of life and are vulnerable to disease and possibly starvation. |
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Every hurt, angry, upwardly mobile divorcing person is vulnerable to such fantasies. |
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The hollow or tubular structures of the urinary system are vulnerable to infection by coliform bacteria. |
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The scientists say the rain forests are made vulnerable to clear-cutting by the networks of access roads left behind by logging operations. |
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With row after row of cacao trees vulnerable to attack, plantations provide ample breeding grounds for pathogens. |
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We have always felt somewhat vulnerable to the vagaries of political change. |
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I have been in particularly reflective and sombre mood recently, feeling vulnerable to the vagaries of city life. |
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Doesn't that make you more vulnerable to the vagaries of government budgets? |
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Saturn points to all the open sores and cherished old wounds where we feel vulnerable to attack. |
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This leaves the unsupported spade rudder quite vulnerable to damage should it be grounded even in a soft bottom. |
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The authors warn that US networks are very vulnerable to attack by hackers or spies looking for intelligence. |
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The strain on the world supply system has left it more vulnerable to supply disruptions and increased the likelihood of price spikes. |
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Children are especially vulnerable to disease and malnutrition and need urgent care and supplies to help them survive. |
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The price is also vulnerable to any deterioration in the security situation in the Middle East. |
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But if your ego is vulnerable to start off with, it will bruise harder and for longer. |
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These are testing times for America and for an economy vulnerable to a sudden fall in confidence. |
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Analysts will want to hear if the business could be vulnerable to the economic slowdown. |
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Cash is also the most vulnerable to theft, and most travel policies only cover a few hundred pounds. |
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It may have failed in its bid for NatWest, but Bank of Scotland is far from vulnerable to a takeover. |
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Children are particularly vulnerable to teasing, which can cause great distress. |
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There is an issue as to the extent to which he remains vulnerable to drug abuse and self harm. |
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Young children are particularly vulnerable to the health impact of passive smoking. |
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The inmates say the new prisons leave them isolated and vulnerable to abuse by guards. |
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In some ways we're even more vulnerable to a flu pandemic than we were back then. |
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Its ice masses have been particularly vulnerable to the advance of global warming. |
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The economy is vulnerable to a rise in the euro exchange rate or in interest rates. |
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Normandy was his homeland and far more vulnerable to sudden attack than was his island kingdom. |
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In the moment before data is re-encrypted, it is left vulnerable to a hack. |
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The shells of marine creatures are made of calcium carbonate, the same substance as chalk, which is vulnerable to acidity. |
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All of which just goes to show that such a venture is extremely vulnerable to vulgar human error. |
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We must re-examine all that we do and redesign our many and complex systems to make them less vulnerable to human error. |
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The very nature of the disclosure process makes it prone to human error and vulnerable to attack. |
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Every state and government in the world is now vulnerable to the caprices and blackmails of financial markets. |
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If the bleed water gets finished back in, the hardened concrete surface may be weak, porous, and vulnerable to abrasion and salt scaling. |
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Articular cartilage is vulnerable to injury and has poor potential for repair so damage can lead to arthritis many years after injury. |
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Having heat exhaustion or heatstroke makes you more vulnerable to hot conditions for about a week afterwards. |
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Evidence is emerging that children may be particularly vulnerable to the effects of organophosphates. |
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There are no reliable figures yet but the quake has probably orphaned thousands of girls who are vulnerable to exploitation. |
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He also reminded householders that garden tools and power tools kept in sheds and outbuildings were valuable and therefore vulnerable to thieves. |
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Using a bank card at a hole in the wall makes the elderly vulnerable to mugging. |
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Ripening apples are vulnerable to sun scald, which causes bronzed or bleached spots on the fruit's skin. |
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After experiencing a panic attack, a person becomes more vulnerable to additional attacks. |
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Some key commodities, however, look vulnerable to shortages and possible panic buying. |
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If Ebay, which has a virtual monopoly on classifieds is so hostile to decentralization, perhaps Ebay is vulnerable to the syndication model? |
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The swineherd is responsible for many swine, which are vulnerable to thieves. |
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It is possible that factors in patients' diet or lifestyle may make them more vulnerable to hypersensitivity reactions to some herbs. |
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Why, he asks, are the identity politics of gender or race not vulnerable to the same sort of anti-essentialist critique? |
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Children are the most vulnerable to this menace, but their health will not even be considered in this penny-pinching exercise. |
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These presumably cometary bodies, which reach several hundred kilometers in size, are vulnerable to severe perturbations by these planets. |
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Pure theory is too vulnerable to corruption and perversion at the hands of opportunists. |
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This could make the inspiratory muscles vulnerable to the development of muscle fatigue. |
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They are vulnerable to physical assault, sexual harassment, and rape, and their experiences and fears have tended not to be taken seriously. |
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When the chicks hatch, their thin, featherless skin is extremely vulnerable to the direct rays of the sun. |
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Young children, infants and fetuses are particularly vulnerable to lead poisoning. |
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Though the Queen is the strongest piece, it is vulnerable to attack by weaker enemy units. |
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Like their social inferiors, however, the middling group was also highly vulnerable to new taxes, economic dislocations and other pressures. |
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They have revealed fears that the information stored on blank discs is vulnerable to being lost within a decade. |
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The penguins ingest the oil as they preen their feathers, which changes the birds' immune systems, making them more vulnerable to disease. |
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Good con artists invest a lot of time figuring out which kinds of people are most vulnerable to which kinds of scams. |
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Altering a gene in order to treat one condition may leave the patient vulnerable to other problems. |
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They went down the pit and were vulnerable to explosions of firedamp and coal dust, to rock falls and inrushes of clay, sand and water. |
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Many of these systems have insecure password management and are vulnerable to account spoofing and denial-of-service attacks. |
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Island populations and insular endemics thus appear to be especially vulnerable to extinction due to genetic factors. |
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Students are particularly vulnerable to dangerous practices such as plagiarism. |
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Motor transport is also relatively vulnerable to the effects of weather and enemy interdiction. |
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The hardware maker is fast at work on a fix for a bug that leaves multiple devices vulnerable to exploits. |
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Inmates say the new structure leaves them isolated and vulnerable to abuse by guards. |
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Among island birds, flightlessness made them especially vulnerable to introduced predators. |
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Quammen emphasizes how the placement of predators at the top of the food pyramid makes them especially vulnerable to habitat destruction. |
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Some states that feel vulnerable to forest fires are actually offering to pay power companies to harvest more wood for fuel. |
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They are highly adapted for cursorial life, their offspring are vulnerable to predation, and adequate den sites are limited. |
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Those vulnerable to infection perhaps need to understand that this is not just fusty old adults trying to stop their fun. |
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Subsequently, the muscle is also more vulnerable to rupture during an eccentric contraction. |
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With no parental care the eggs are vulnerable to predators such as cray fish, predacious insects and small fish. |
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Smoothies are a profitable niche product with growing market opportunities but are vulnerable to attack by competitors with deep pockets. |
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The market is vulnerable to any kind of shock or semi-shock because there is hardly any give in the supply. |
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In the event of an oil spill, sea ducks are more vulnerable to contact oil than surface-feeding species, such as glaucous gulls. |
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Low standards of education have left citizens vulnerable to exploitation by extremists and terrorist propagandists. |
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These are the girls who are vulnerable to getting caught in crime, delinquency and early sexuality. |
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Now they have no protection, and their houses are vulnerable to catching fire in the heat and high winds. |
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Low trust bureaucratic states are extremely vulnerable to electronic psychological warfare using this emerging technology. |
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They're worried that they're vulnerable to another attack while officials sit behind desks writing reports. |
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Crude punts into the home penalty box caused unbelievable problems and the Minstermen always looked vulnerable to counter-attacks. |
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The urban propensity to dress babies with fancy clothes makes them more vulnerable to malaria. |
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Note that fixed passwords remain vulnerable to guessing, dictionary attacks and social engineering, as already indicated by Morris and Thompson. |
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They believe the optic nerve in short sighted eyes might be more vulnerable to computer stress. |
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Places vulnerable to casual damage or vandalism will need plants which, if broken, will grow again, such as willow, alder, shrub roses and elder. |
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That's because children were vulnerable to infectious diseases such as scarlet fever, diphtheria, whooping cough and measles. |
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But such a belief is hard to maintain and is hence vulnerable to disconfirmation in various ways. |
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This would see much of the rest of the company, which is subsidized by the printing revenue, looking highly vulnerable to dismemberment. |
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Some fear falling membership has left political parties vulnerable to entryism. |
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Blade sharpening is important, too, because dull edges will rip the grass open and leave vascular tissue vulnerable to disease. |
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The report also notes that the U.S. has relatively detailed and transparent laws, and thus is relatively vulnerable to documentable complaints. |
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More than a third of companies are vulnerable to the kind of domain name system problems that made Microsoft's web sites unavailable this week. |
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On many issues, Latin Americans continue to be highly vulnerable to exogenous events, trends and decisions. |
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For the first time the civilian population throughout Britain and not just those in exposed coastal locations were vulnerable to attack. |
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Beyond that, there lurk the problems of a slender majority, vulnerable to prima donnas, by-elections and downright blackmailers. |
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Companies are downsizing and closing, leaving workers vulnerable to poverty. |
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Workers who depend on the good graces of their employers are ultimately vulnerable to economic downswings and outright exploitation. |
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Educators say they're worried that dropout factories are becoming vulnerable to privatization. |
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The council also said the narrowness of the slots in the drain gratings, which had been designed for pedestrian safety, were vulnerable to blocking by litter and debris. |
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The trouble was that, with stability restored, and the Tudor dynasty apparently secure, England had started to become vulnerable to a mounting release of forces. |
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As Samoa showed earlier in the pool stages, the tournament favourites can be vulnerable to unstructured, off-the-cuff teams prepared to run the ball at them. |
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This borrowing by financial and non-financial entities was largely unhedged and short-term leaving them highly vulnerable to exchange rate and maturity mismatch risks. |
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Perrier's sifaka of Madagascar and the Tana River red colobus of Kenya are now restricted to tiny patches of tropical forest, leaving them vulnerable to rapid eradication. |
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Deep-sea creatures such as orange roughy and Chilean sea bass have slower life cycles than those in the shallows, and have proven especially vulnerable to over fishing. |
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According to the proponents of the silvicultural hypothesis, several processes combined to make forests increasingly vulnerable to budworm outbreaks. |
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Unless the loan is reinvested in the home, borrowing against the free mortgageable value makes households more vulnerable to falling property prices. |
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Acrylic paints become soft and vulnerable to damage and dirt retention at high temperatures and humidities or brittle and friable at low temperatures. |
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The NHTSA released a guide of people vulnerable to the airbags, as well as the makes of vehicles that have been affected. |
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Their synthesis is thoughtful and worthy of study by anyone with administrative responsibility for helpers vulnerable to secondary PTSD and compassion fatigue. |
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These two phenomena leave Apple vulnerable to cheaper, aggressive competitors. |
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Many European countries are more vulnerable to Russian retaliation due to their dependence on Russia for their natural gas. |
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Women are three times more vulnerable to HIV infection than men. |
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If left to their own devices, pieces made of rock crystal will last forever, but they are of course unusually vulnerable to breakage and destruction. |
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Unless he acts, allies insist, he will be painted as an impotent puppet, thwarted by London Labour, and vulnerable to the opposition leader's bombast. |
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So, that's the good news and we're even learning more so that perhaps in the future we get better at predicting who's most vulnerable to going and suiciding. |
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In other words, you can win with a base mobilization strategy, but it leaves you vulnerable to demography. |
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Consequently, older borrowers are less vulnerable to external income and expense shocks because they tend to have more assets available for liquidation. |
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The masterpiece is huge, but structurally flawed and terribly vulnerable to seismic activity. |
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This remorseless pressure drove a great number of peasants to the edge of subsistence, making them deeply vulnerable to periodic shocks in the agrarian cycle. |
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Lion cubs, if left alone, can be vulnerable to other large predators. |
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They became slaves to impulse, began to hallucinate, and, in a hypnotic trance, became completely vulnerable to the suggestions of leaders who might be thrown up. |
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For example, Himalayan snowcocks, a bird that feeds on grasses, forbs, and sedges, are more vulnerable to raptorial predators in areas where they can forage most efficiently. |
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If the law is repealed, VW could be vulnerable to outside pressure. |
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The vaccination is seen as a way to achieve herd immunity as it stops the spread of the illness from children to others that are vulnerable to flu. |
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Interviewees reported that shy students were more vulnerable to teasing. |
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Because warships mounted almost all their guns on the broadside, and were vulnerable to fire from ahead or astern, actions were usually fought in line ahead. |
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Small-stock, particularly the lambs and kids, are vulnerable to these types of near-frost conditions and the chill factor of a southwesterly or southerly breeze. |
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But these challenges pale in comparison to a coercive and centralized system that is vulnerable to abuse. |
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Weakness of the expiratory muscles and ankle dorsiflexors was equivalent, suggesting that these muscle groups are vulnerable to some factor that does not affect the diaphragm. |
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If getting good results is somewhat random, then all those professors are very vulnerable to a string of bad luck. |
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Because of their bovine family ties, cattle and buffalo turn out to be vulnerable to many of the same pathogens, such as foot-and-mouth disease and bovine tuberculosis. |
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But Predators are vulnerable to even the most obsolete surface-to-air missiles or air-to-air fighter aircraft. |
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At the same time, the women allege that they were left completely vulnerable to sexual harassment at mandatory unpaid events. |
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The removal of the thick, oxidized varnish was complicated by Turner's use of megilp, which renders the paint surface especially vulnerable to solvents. |
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The American coastline is similarly vulnerable to the underwater predators. |
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Must we just tag along to the daily chores of a stringent society, which has turned itself so vulnerable to the traditional boundaries of a foregone age? |
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Every protocol and application is vulnerable to malformed data and irregularities inadvertently introduced by the designers and coders of the associated software. |
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Still, with just this scant amount of evidence, that one news source made it sound like your car might be vulnerable to viruses passed on from passing cars. |
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Caught primarily for their unfertilized eggs, which are processed to yield caviar, sturgeons and paddlefishes are particularly vulnerable to overfishing. |
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Those on the streets are vulnerable to marauding soldiers and criminals. |
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In general, the disabled folks are vulnerable to exploitation, in part because of the nature of their impairment. |
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People of all nations and faiths know that we are all vulnerable to terror, which by its nature is careless of its targets and indifferent to human life. |
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An unvoiced sob now hovered behind her words, making her sound intolerably vulnerable to this new enemy, but there was nothing she could do about it. |
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Burnett says young pheasants are especially vulnerable to buzzard attacks. |
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You may be particularly vulnerable to anesthetization at the moment. |
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A person like myself whose sole goal is good government is vulnerable to subterfuge and concerted efforts by a disloyal colleague like Dan to remove me from the Parliament. |
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State and local jurisdictions are more vulnerable to tax competition than the national government, and state and local taxes are more regressive than federal taxes. |
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If the writers win, the publishers fear they'll be vulnerable to lawsuits by ink-stained wretches and so will be forced to excise freelance articles from their databases. |
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They should know that all of us are pliable and suggestible to some degree, but that children are especially vulnerable to suggestive and leading questioning. |
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Another is that Iraq is going to be vulnerable to its neighbors for a long time, and a big concentration of American troops is good insurance against that. |
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Housing associations fear however, that if their asset base is that vulnerable to forced cut-price sales, financiers will be less than willing to help with further loans. |
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The new chip and PIN credit card system could leave local businesses and retailers vulnerable to fraud bills because millions of customers still do not have their new cards. |
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And being an Etonian MP, I was vulnerable to being made fun of. |
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Young seedlings are the most vulnerable to the psyllids ' attack, but the insects can also stunt growth of bigger trees and reduce flowering and seed production. |
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In cartoons she often appeared vulnerable to foreign threats, or as the daughter of John Bull, balancing a continuing filial duty to Britain with a growing independence. |
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Of course, that designation would be vulnerable to manipulation. |
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The kakapo, a flightless bird, was particularly vulnerable to predators. |
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Far from strengthening Australian capitalism, the global integration of production has left it highly vulnerable to the instabilities of world economy. |
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These larvae will also metamorphose into adults sooner than their long-armed brethren and thus are vulnerable to planktonic predators for a shorter period of time. |
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Many children with clefts are especially vulnerable to otitis media because their Eustachian tubes don't drain fluid properly from the middle ear into the throat. |
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Their tendency to roost in tight flocks and be easily attracted to decoys may have made them vulnerable to market hunters, who had a significant impact on the population. |
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Since the political system validates the commercial order, the oligarchy is vulnerable to a reassertion of control by the owners of public institutions. |
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India is a fellow democracy, and, like Japan, feels acutely vulnerable to Chinese territorial and economic expansionism. |
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Male children are believed to be particularly vulnerable to the evil eye. |
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Moreover, the habit of rolling over debt every two years leaves us vulnerable to a rollover crisis. |
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Seabirds like pelicans, penguins, and cormorants are highly vulnerable to oil, which can cover their feathers with a gluelike substance that can immobilize the animals. |
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In eutrophic Lake Hiidenvesi, we studied the possibility that water quality indirectly affects mysids by forcing them to habitats where they are vulnerable to fish predation. |
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Dynamic pages that are vulnerable to this hack include search results, error messages and Web-form results pages that echo data entered by the user. |
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They become unsafe with power tools, lawnmowers, snowblowers, cars, medications, propane tanks, and vulnerable to unscrupulous individuals and scams very early in the disease. |
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He also said pilots and co-pilots were extremely vulnerable to an attack. |
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Such packs have little genetic diversity and are vulnerable to inbreeding. |
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Siti said babies and children were most vulnerable to lung infections, malaria, diarrheal diseases, cholera and measles, which usually emerge after floods. |
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The police had expressed concerns about the amount of glass used in the building and its location near a road that could leave it vulnerable to a car bomb. |
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It is an everyplace, thoroughly Irish but perilously vulnerable to changes in the prevailing global winds. |
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If more of us could demonstrate the same depth of compassion and understanding, we would be better equipped to help those vulnerable to heroin's promise of a quick fix. |
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In other words, we are not as vulnerable to the whims of sheiks, mullahs, and deranged holy men as we once were. |
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This trait ennobles the U.S. military, but also makes it highly vulnerable to taking on undoable tasks. |
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Antigua and Barbuda remains a substantial offshore center which continues to be vulnerable to money laundering and other financial crimes. |
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Unnaturally high water levels soak sparrow nests, make eggs vulnerable to rice rats and snakes, or otherwise halt nesting. |
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When unsubmerged, at least, plastics are photodegradable, or vulnerable to ultraviolet radiation. |
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Vegetation-index models predict areas vulnerable to purple loosestrife invasion in Kansas. |
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All Cisco devices running Cisco IOS software and configured to process Internet Protocol version four packets are vulnerable to this attack. |
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After the seed coat has cracked open, the plant is even more vulnerable to the uneven availability of water. |
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He said that FDA's objective is to keep the germs vulnerable to enrofloxacin and other antibiotics in the class known as fluoroquinolones. |
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In regard to threats from within the group, the Arab sheikhdoms felt vulnerable to domestic political upheavals. |
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The fund may also be vulnerable to redemptions keeping in view highly concentrated unit holding pattern. |
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Home computers are 10 times more vulnerable to viruses than machines in the workplace, researchers found. |
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This leaves the person vulnerable to a very fast, abnormal heart rhythm, known as torsade de pointes. |
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Some patients become vulnerable to a very fast heart rhythm, known as torsade de pointes. |
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When is an NGC most likely to be vulnerable to takeover by a non-cooperative firm? |
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We know both adolescent boys and girls with TBI are vulnerable to the co-occurrence of harmful psychological and behavioural conditions. |
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The Blues' bold tactics left them vulnerable to constant rapid counter-attacks from an Arsenal side who eventually ran out 4-1 winners. |
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Like many other female rituals, however, the period of upsitting and lying in was vulnerable to ridicule and suspicion. |
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Without this class of compounds, crucifers would be more vulnerable to disease from a much wider variety of bacteria. |
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They were individuals who were vulnerable to being recruited. |
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Many have criticized Bowen for decertifying electronic voting systems in 39 counties after she concluded they were vulnerable to hacking. |
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Relative to clickwrap, browsewrap is easily ignored by consumers, leaving them more vulnerable to exploitation. |
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Therefore, they are more vulnerable to mosquito bites than others because mosquitoes are both exophilic and endophilic in Dielmo. |
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Children employed at glassworks were regularly burned and blinded, and those working at potteries were vulnerable to poisonous clay dust. |
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In such cases, the Vikings were extremely vulnerable to pursuit by the king's joint military forces. |
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The older idea that informationlessness was to be equated with uniform distributions is vulnerable to the transformational paradoxes. |
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The disease bypassed some areas, and the most isolated areas were less vulnerable to contagion. |
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Here the IPMs show us that the most vulnerable to the disease were infants and the elderly. |
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The British had anticipated the change in strategy and dispersed its production facilities, making them less vulnerable to a concentrated attack. |
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The entire state is vulnerable to a tornado strike, with the extreme southern portion of the state slightly less so than the rest of the state. |
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Groundwater is vulnerable to surface pollution, especially in highly urbanised areas. |
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The shales are friable and easily attacked by frost and form areas that are vulnerable to landslides, as on Mam Tor. |
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Their product lines becoming vulnerable to the new economic conditions, and resulted in the industry's decline. |
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The south coast was vulnerable to Danish Viking invasions during the 8th and 9th centuries. |
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Many of the seeds remain on the surface where they is vulnerable to being eaten by birds or carried away on the wind. |
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Bangladesh is now widely recognised to be one of the countries most vulnerable to climate change. |
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Children in some regions of the world, such as parts of Africa, are also vulnerable to violence related to witchcraft accusations. |
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These weapons were vulnerable to fire from the castle as they had a short range and were large machines. |
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A few more lands might make it less vulnerable to manascrew but still relatively undiluted in its effectiveness. |
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Back bends cause the back to pinch, making the spine vulnerable to injuries such as spasms and pinched nerves. |
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Ethiopia has a large number of species listed as critically endangered, endangered, and vulnerable to global extinction. |
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This lack of natural drainage makes places within the city vulnerable to landslides during the rainy season. |
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This practice strengthened royal influence but it also made the Church vulnerable to criticisms of venality and nepotism. |
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Women were often vulnerable to exploitation and abuse, especially teenage girls who were indentured servants and lacking male protectors. |
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Stoats are vulnerable to ectoparasites associated with their prey and the nests of other animals on which they do not prey. |
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Submarines were very vulnerable to attack during launch, and a fully or partially fueled missile on deck was a serious hazard. |
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However, there are still thousands of smaller buildings that remain vulnerable to quake damage. |
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Because of their height, steeples can also be vulnerable to lightning, which can start fires within steeples. |
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In this stage of DT, countries are vulnerable to become failed states in the absence of progressive governments. |
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In Turkey, their eggs are vulnerable to predation by red foxes and golden jackals. |
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The Arctic is especially vulnerable to the effects of any climate change, as has become apparent with the reduction of sea ice in recent years. |
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Due to the fact they are not fully adapted to Arctic conditions, they are more vulnerable to predators, most notably polar bears. |
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Species that live in polar habitats are vulnerable to the effects of recent and ongoing climate change, particularly declines in sea ice. |
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Wetlands, salt marshes, mangroves and adjacent fresh water wetlands are particularly vulnerable to such a squeeze. |
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