The Supertram network has been accused of increasing the dangers of roads in the area, particularly in wet weather. |
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Sea-water wet their feet, wind tossed their hair, excitement quivered in every fibre of their aliveness. |
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Within Mediterranean climate regimes, the wet season occurs during the winter. |
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They can propel themselves over wet grass and dig through wet sand to reach upstream headwaters and ponds, thus colonising the continent. |
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In July, some individuals mature and migrate back towards the sea, crossing wet grasslands at night to reach rivers that lead to the sea. |
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Eels are extremely mobile and may access habitats that appear unavailable to them, using small watercourses or moving through wet grasses. |
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Areas with wet seasons are dispersed across portions of the tropics and subtropics. |
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Savanna climates and areas with monsoon regimes have wet summers and dry winters. |
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Tropical rainforests technically do not have dry or wet seasons, since their rainfall is equally distributed through the year. |
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When the wet season occurs during the warm season, or summer, rain falls mainly during the late afternoon and early evening hours. |
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The wet season is a time when air quality improves, freshwater quality improves, and vegetation grows significantly. |
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The previous dry season leads to food shortages into the wet season, as the crops have yet to mature. |
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Drought can kill crops and increase erosion, while overly wet weather can cause harmful fungus growth. |
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In areas with wet and dry seasons, soil nutrients diminish and erosion increases during the wet season. |
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It can move slightly offshore, bringing a wet snow south of Boston to Richmond, Virginia, or even parts of the Carolinas. |
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Many springs and summers were cold and wet but with great variability between years and groups of years. |
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The peels are removed mostly with wet peelers, using lye solutions or high-pressure steam. |
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Exeter has mild wet winters and warm changeable summers with hot and cooler rainy spells. |
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She had pewter-coloured hair set in a ruthless permanent, a hard beak and large moist eyes with the sympathetic expression of wet stones. |
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A steam box is excellent for making planks easier to bend although hot wet rags are a messy, but easy substitute. |
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In boat building lots of sanding requires using either dry sandpaper, or wet and dry paper, to achieve a reasonable paint or varnish finish. |
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Further, wet or anaerobic soils also lose nitrogen through denitrification, releasing the greenhouse gases nitric oxide and nitrous oxide. |
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These large concave hooves offer stable support on wet, soggy ground and on crusty snow. |
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The rain prevented them from using their bows because the sinew strings become slack when wet, and rendered them virtually defenseless. |
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The coastal part of Krasnodar Krai on the Black Sea, most notably in Sochi, possesses a humid subtropical climate with mild and wet winters. |
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The climate of Greece is primarily Mediterranean, featuring mild, wet winters and hot, dry summers. |
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In taking a plunge bath, always wet the head before getting the body under water then wet the chest, and then plunge in. |
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Northern Maluku has its wet monsoon from December to March in line with the rest of Indonesia. |
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As they gazed, a white face, wet with the sweat of fear, poked out and stared down upon them with eyes in which the late terror still lived. |
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Unusually, most of the rain falls in two distinct wet seasons, one centred on April and the other in October or November. |
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The Kingdom of Asturias was located in the Cantabrian Mountains, a wet and mountainous region in the north of the Iberian Peninsula. |
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Like most Mediterranean climates, Seville has a drier summer and wet winter. |
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The wet zone is a tropical evergreen forest with tall trees, broad foliage, and a dense undergrowth of vines and creepers. |
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The climate is equatorial monsoonal, wet, and in general typical for the Maluku Islands. |
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Summers are wet with high temperatures, high humidity, and a high heat index. |
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In the wet season, it rarely rains all day, but rainfall is very heavy during short periods. |
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The climate has a dry season from December to April and a wet season from May to November. |
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The hot and wet season extends from May through October, while the cool and dry season extends November through April. |
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The western third of Oregon is very wet in the winter, moderately to very wet during the spring and fall, and dry during the summer. |
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Much of the east is semiarid to arid like the rest of the Great Basin, though the Blue Mountains are wet enough to support extensive forests. |
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Many of these wetlands come into existence only during the wet season and support rare or uncommon plant communities. |
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The wet season, which runs from January to April, is characterized by heavy downpours on an almost daily basis. |
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When wet leaves are handled, nicotine from the leaves gets absorbed in the skin and causes nausea, vomiting, and dizziness. |
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The stems must be processed immediately after harvesting while the inner bark is still wet. |
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Rotifers also are present in the psammon, the sandy habitat along the wet reaches of shorelines. |
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He groaned loud with his mouth open. Then he wet himself. And then he rolled over on to his puku. |
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A few islands in the northwest, such as Guam, are susceptible to typhoons in the wet season. |
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Belize has a tropical climate with pronounced wet and dry seasons, although there are significant variations in weather patterns by region. |
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Even though the beavers had moved on, the silt remained as a deep, inviting, wet, and murky mass of quicksandlike mud. |
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The plough was extremely successful on wet, boggy soil, but soon was used on ordinary land. |
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Between 1873 and 1879 British agriculture suffered from wet summers that damaged grain crops. |
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It is widely produced with different methods, such as contact process, wet sulfuric acid process, lead chamber process and some other methods. |
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As a result, wet cement is strongly caustic, and can easily cause severe skin burns if not promptly washed off with water. |
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Additional common curing methods include wet burlap and plastic sheeting covering the fresh concrete. |
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The process involves printing the desired designs or text with an ink that remains wet, rather than drying on contact with the paper. |
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The wet ink and polymer bond and dry, resulting in a raised print surface similar to the result of an engraving process. |
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As darkness fell it began to rain, and the drivers, fearing for the safety of the trains in the dark and wet, slowed the train further. |
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If the weather is too wet, the cut hay may spoil in the field before it can be baled. |
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After harvest, hay also has to be stored in a manner to prevent it from getting wet. |
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If hay is baled while too moist or becomes wet while in storage, there is a significant risk of spontaneous combustion. |
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If hay is stacked with wet grass, the heat produced can be sufficient to ignite the hay causing a fire. |
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A consequence of the marine influence is a cloudy and wet climate with low sunshine hours. |
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Excess water is then removed and the wet mat of fibre laid on top of a damp cloth. |
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This stack of wet mats is then pressed in a hydraulic press very gently to ensure the fibre does not squeeze out. |
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A couch roller is pressed against the mould to smooth out the pulp, and picks the wet sheet off the mould. |
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The prairie round about is wet, at times almost marshy, especially at the borders of the great reedy slews. |
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The base of a lava flow may show evidence of hydrothermal activity if the lava flowed across moist or wet substrates. |
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Sundews generally grow in seasonally moist or more rarely constantly wet habitats with acidic soils and high levels of sunlight. |
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In general, though, sundews require high environmental moisture content, usually in the form of a constantly moist or wet soil substrate. |
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Butterworts need habitats that are almost constantly moist or wet, at least during their carnivorous growth stage. |
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On a small scale, this can be achieved by placing the plant in a wide saucer containing pebbles that are kept permanently wet. |
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These new collieries suffered many problems during the sinking of their shafts through wet sandstone and quicksand. |
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Due to the impermeable nature of the rock, blanket bogs and mires form, and drier areas have wet and dry heaths and acid grasslands. |
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Alexandra collapsed onto the leather couch in the library, feeling as if she were a horse who had just been ridden hard and put away wet. |
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The Oriskany had been ridden hard and put away wet at the end of the Vietnam War, without an overhaul or proper preservation. |
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They typically grow in cold or wet habitats, and in the tropics, are most common in montane environments. |
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The breeding habitat is marshes, bogs, tundra and wet meadows throughout northern Europe and northern Asia. |
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Only in the areas with distinct seasonal alternations between wet and dry conditions kaolinite was found. |
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She tried to do things for him, get his slippers, fetch his saafa, button his kurta, dry his wet hair after a bath. |
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Secco painting, or painting in secco, is painting on dry plaster, as distinguished from fresco painting, on wet or fresh plaster. |
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She wet her hands in a pan of brown water, then rubbed her palms together, a slurpy sound. |
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The temperature at noon had risen to 33 deg., and everything was more soakingly wet than ever, if that was possible. |
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Fraser was looking at the flat, wet countryside and thinking about the French policeman who had banjaxed him with the truncheon. |
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I fished carefully, used wet flies and dry, all that I had in my book, and even bemeaned myself by baiting a plain hook with a grasshopper. |
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That man who is now stepping from the wet logs to the bow-guards of the Marion, how can he ever cut down a tree? |
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Then the ferry-boat was delightful to the new traveller, with its long, white-ceiled passages, and its smell of wet timbers and tarred ropes. |
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The tobacco chawer is wiping his neck with a wet bandanna, his legs dangling off the bed of his vehicle. |
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The corpse of the freak, the child-fucker, the monster, slipped to the floor with a wet smack. |
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The people of the coffle spent the day in drying such articles as were wet, and in cleaning ten pairs of ornamented pistols with shea-butter. |
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If it be winter, or settled wet weather, the hen must, if possible, be kept indoors, or else be cooped under a dry shed or outhouse. |
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Therefore, it is important to study wet dedusting to achieve higher dust removal efficiency on the fully mechanized face. |
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The guinea hen, so nearly exsiccated a few days earlier, dangles limp once again, as wet as if it had been freshly slaughtered. |
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Folisols occur commonly in wet mountainous areas of coastal British Columbia. |
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Some things can go in the water, like my dolphin boots, but other things, like books, are not so good when they get wet. |
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With divers kinds of Riddance The smoaking Earth is wet, And all aflowe to seaward goe The Torrents wide of Sweat! |
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I got back to my motel tired, wet and hungry. Talking to Miss Maidie had deterred me from grabbing a quick greaseburger en route. |
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New mothers frequently complain that their partner won't get up to change a wet nappy or comfort a grizzling baby. |
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Rawlins leaned from the saddle and wet his hand in the river and tasted it. It's gypwater, he said. |
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It was a bird, a small hawkling. A baby. And as she watched, it began to stretch its wet, feeble wings. |
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Welsh weather is often cloudy, wet and windy, with warm summers and mild winters. |
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Winters tend to be fairly wet, but rainfall is rarely excessive and the temperature usually stays above freezing. |
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I know that in some quarters I am regarded as a kind of wet blanket, a Henny Penny predicting doom and gloom. |
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During the year, valleys typically experience 20 days with snow falling, a further 200 wet days, and 145 dry days. |
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The highest animals laid warm and wet creatures alive, the lowest bore theirs cold, dry, and in thick eggs. |
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The western part appears to have been very active, with wet basal conditions, while the eastern part was cold based. |
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This cool and wet summer climate is replicated throughout most of the northern coastline. |
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Don't drive too fast on wet roads or the car may hydroplane and cause you to lose control of the vehicle. |
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During the long, dreary, wet winter I amused myself by watching college and Pro basketball on the idiot box. |
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His wet nurse was Hodierna of St Albans, whom he gave a generous pension after he became king. |
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She gave birth to a son, believed to be named Damerei, who was given to a wet nurse at Durham House, but he died in October 1592 of plague. |
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In more elevated areas, fire is a natural process in the landscape, and has produced extensive areas of longleaf pine forest and wet savannas. |
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However, untreated sewage still regularly enters the Thames during wet weather. |
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The bedrock and more recent superficial deposits are covered in part by moorland which is supported by wet, acid soil. |
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Northern England has a cool, wet oceanic climate with small areas of subpolar oceanic climate in the uplands. |
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They commonly can accommodate both wet and dry soilage, a useful feature in industrial plants and manufacturing facilities. |
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Shale is fine-grained rock made of silt or wet mud that has been lithified by compaction and cementation. |
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The cause of the crash, which took place in wet foggy conditions close to a firework display, was investigated. |
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Sometimes I get wet right away, but other times I'm aroused but not very wet. |
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The wet climate and relatively poor soil of Cornwall make it unsuitable for growing many arable crops. |
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The majority of Southeast Asia has a wet and dry season caused by seasonal shift in winds or monsoon. |
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On a typical dark, wet Glasgow night, a bus driver coming off shift came in and ordered a chicken curry. |
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Returning to Sydney the third test was played again on a mudheap as Sydney was lashed by wet weather. |
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Hamilton held Vettel off and after they pitted for wet weather tyres as another shower he was fifth. |
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In Malaysia a misjudgement on the weather by his team in qualifying, left him on tyres that were unfavourable for the wet conditions. |
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In 1969, the team spent a lot of time experimenting with a gas turbine powered car, and, after four wet races in 1968, with four wheel drive. |
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Towards the end of the Brazilian Grand Prix Verstappen dropped to 14th after changing back to wet tyres. |
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Also, the climate of the West is quite unstable, as areas that are normally wet can be very dry for years and vice versa. |
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Four consecutive wet summers through 1879 had led to poor harvests in the United Kingdom. |
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It was later restricted to advancing the British Army onto the ridges around Ypres, as the unusually wet weather slowed British progress. |
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This means that the weather in Wales is in general mild, cloudy, wet and windy. |
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When working with wet photographic plates, Swan noticed that heat increased the sensitivity of the silver bromide emulsion. |
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Tierra del Fuego is extremely wet in the west, relatively damp in the south, and dry in the north and east. |
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We made sure to hang our wet clothes on the hook in the mudroom when we came in from the snow. |
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We made sure to hang our wet clothes on the hook in the mud room when we came in from the snow. |
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At the age of one, child Jonathan was taken by his wet nurse to her hometown of Whitehaven, England. |
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For most of Indonesia, the dry season falls between April and October with the wet season between November and March. |
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They usually ran downhill so that they included both wet and dry land, helping to offset some of the problems of extreme weather conditions. |
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The generally south slope and southern coast make for mild and wet climate, and there is a great deal of good pasture. |
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The area experiences relatively cool, wet summers and cold, wet winters, although snow in the area is not uncommon. |
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The area consists of high wet moorlands chiefly used for sheep grazing and forestry plantation. |
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In October the wet weather returned for the final attack towards Passchendaele. |
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The common Welsh Mountain sheep are hardy and thrive in the cold and wet conditions of the Welsh highlands. |
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Thus, the wet prominence of the highest summit of an ocean island or landmass is always equal to the summit's elevation. |
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The construction of the approach roads and toll plaza resulted in the permanent loss of some wet pastureland. |
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They wet very quickly, meaning that small changes in the content of water can produce large changes in workability. |
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Shorebirds is a blanket term used to refer to multiple species of birds that live in wet, coastal environments. |
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This dense plumage is better able to protect the bird from getting wet, and cold is kept out by a dense layer of down feathers. |
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A climatological low in the Gulf of Alaska keeps the southern coast wet and mild during the winter months. |
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The first wet dock in Britain was opened in Liverpool in 1715, and the town's population grew from some 6,000 to 80,000 during the 18th century. |
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These coolers have lower efficiency and higher energy consumption to drive fans, compared to a typical wet, evaporative cooling tower. |
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Sicily has a typical Mediterranean climate with mild and wet winters and hot, dry summers with very changeable intermediate seasons. |
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Rainfall has a Mediterranean distribution all over the island, with almost totally rainless summers and wet autumns, winters and springs. |
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Mothers were encouraged to breastfeed their children, as using a wet nurse would prevent a bond from forming between mother and child. |
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In the depressions between the raised flats are wet meadows and, where drainage is poor, bogs. |
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Because of its streamlined shell and strong foot, it can burrow in wet sand very quickly, and is also able to swim. |
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Between 100,000 and 170,000 wet tons of Macrocystis are harvested annually in New Mexico for alginate extraction and abalone feed. |
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Firstly, an OBO would be able to switch between the dry and wet bulk trades based on market conditions. |
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Generally a beach is wet during falling tide, because the sea sinks faster than the beach drains. |
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The westerlies explain why coastal North America tends to be wet, especially from Northern California to Alaska, during the winter. |
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Shortly after his birth, John was passed from Eleanor into the care of a wet nurse, a traditional practice for medieval noble families. |
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Local powers could disrupt the routes as could the wet season and road use was highly dependent on constant maintenance. |
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In wet weather, they cannot hunt and this may be disastrous during the breeding season. |
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It is largely found in forested areas with coniferous, deciduous and mixed woodland, especially in wet locations. |
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On a warm wet night they may continue moving all night but if it cools down, they may stop earlier. |
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These weather systems are formed by the collision of dry, cool air from Canada and wet, warm air from the Atlantic. |
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She turned away and cleared the parijat flowers from the stone edge of the pool with a wet hand. |
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Within savanna regimes in the subtropics, a wet season is seen annually during the summer, which is when most of the yearly rainfall falls. |
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When I came home, I found a common-looking person, all wet and muddy. |
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It was rumoured that she had been his ama, the wet nurse who then became part of the family, taking charge so effectively that she ruled the household. |
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Again as with Juan, shortly after the religious rite the children would be transferred to the care of wet nurses, or amas, who would take them into their individual homes. |
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It looks like rain, but let's go out anyway. At worst, we'll only get wet. |
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Steam locomotives are nearly always fitted with sandboxes from which sand can be delivered to the rails to improve traction and braking in wet or icy weather. |
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When we finally beached, the land was scarcely less wet than the sea. |
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But his left foot was caught in that blame noose in the end of the rope, so only his beardy head went underwater and he was dragged along like that for a few wet yards. |
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Compared to the fur of other animals, badger's hair is ideal for shaving brushes because it retains the hot water that needs to be applied to the skin while wet shaving. |
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The sanctuary's other habitats include forests of black cherry, red cedar, black locust, beech, and oak, with red maples and black gums in wet areas. |
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Unlike the dry summer Mediterranean climates, humid subtropical climates have a warm and wet flow from the tropics that creates warm and moist conditions in the summer months. |
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The streaker's wet dream was to be on TV butt-naked on a rainy day. |
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Then without a word she lay on her back in the bed, her dark blond pubic hair rising about her dark wet cave like dried brush about a hidden spring. |
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It has hot, muggy, moderately dry summers and mild to cool, wet winters. |
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This epoxy can be mixed chairside and applied to wet surfaces. |
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For example, in the Great Plains, it is estimated that soil loss due to wind erosion can be as much as 6100 times greater in drought years than in wet years. |
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An awful struggle for Primrose. Her chin stretched up above a mumpy neck. Sister Raymond put a wet cloth on her forehead, dribbled some water across her mouth. |
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Elm wood is also resistant to decay when permanently wet, and hollowed trunks were widely used as water pipes during the medieval period in Europe. |
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His brow and hair and the palms of his hands were wet, and there was a kind of nervous contraction of his muscles. They seemed to ripple and string tense. |
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Our wet fingers touched and we formed a circle like the corolla of a flower, floating into the silence of the desert dawn with the ancient sun on our bodies. |
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For wet races, the Dunlop SportMaxx BluResponse tyre is used. |
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I wet the rod and measured the stuff into the top and and by that time the water was steaming. I filled the lower half of the dingus and set it on the flame. |
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The dipcoat is sprayed with a coarse sand while it is still wet. |
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In addition, cherry trees are susceptible to bacterial canker, cytospora canker, brown rot of the fruit, root rot from overly wet soil, crown rot, and several viruses. |
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While the species that make up the Mentha genus are widely distributed and can be found in many environments, most grow best in wet environments and moist soils. |
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Why don't you try getting your feet wet on the beginner slopes. |
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Let the new hire do that project so she can get her feet wet. |
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By now he was sopping wet so there was no point in putting on his hat. |
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Miss Flax, the little thin sister, and Miss Gloria, the stout able-bodied sister, lifted up their hands and eyes in horror at the mere hint of a wet nurse. |
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The inner side of a machair is often wet or marshy, and may contain lochs. |
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The area immediately to the south of this range is the high plateau of the Hautes Plaines, with lakes in the wet season and salt flats in the dry. |
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The cold and wet summers help preserve the ancient glaciers. |
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The data shows Eskdalemuir to be a very wet, often cloudy place. |
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Manila has a distinct dry season from December through May, and a relatively lengthy wet season that covers the remaining period with slightly cooler temperatures. |
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He was initially looked after by a wet nurse called Ellen in the south of England, away from John's itinerant court, and probably had close ties to his mother. |
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A relatively wet concrete sample may slump as much as eight inches. |
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Tribes of the Pacific Northwest in the United States and Canada used mosses to clean salmon prior to drying, and packed wet moss into pit ovens for steaming camas bulbs. |
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The dry prominence of a summit is equal to its wet prominence unless the summit is the highest point of a landmass or island, or its key col is covered by snow or ice. |
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If its highest surface col is on water, snow, or ice, the dry prominence of that summit is equal to its wet prominence plus the depth of its highest submerged col. |
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This was later proven to be incorrect, as the climate in Tregaron is too wet for the European polecat, and it does not hold large frog populations. |
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A bison wallow is a shallow depression in the soil, either wet or dry. |
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They were often deposited in rivers and wet places like swamps. |
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The sheeting of water keeps the edges of the rock wet without eroding the soil, but in this precarious location no tree or large shrub can maintain a roothold. |
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The main settlements in the county are therefore situated at wet points. |
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Youth, strength, and health are not easily incommoded by wet garments! |
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The most important property of peat is retaining moisture in container soil when it is dry while preventing the excess of water from killing roots when it is wet. |
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But far more than the murmuring and insecty air of the moorland does the wet chirk-chirking of the living shore give one the idea of crowded and multitudinous life. |
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It is most frequent in sunny habitats with wet, acidic soils. |
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He wept very little, but when he wept he howled aloud, and jabbered wild abuse, threats and recriminations through the wet torrent of his howling. |
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The Aztecs had underestimated the shock value of the Spanish caballeros because all they had seen was the horses traveling on the wet paved streets of Tenochtitlan. |
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We all grabbed towels that belonged to whoever lived there, and we wet them down in the scuttlebutt and wrapped them around our faces to filter out as much smoke as possible. |
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Central and southern Maluku Islands experience the dry monsoon between October to March and the wet monsoon from May to August, which is the reverse of the rest of Indonesia. |
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This rainfall, which followed an exceptionally wet summer, led to disastrous flooding in Lynmouth with 34 dead and extensive damage to the small town. |
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If the person is carrying a wet umbrella, and he's wearing a wet rain coat, those observations are circumstantial evidence that it is raining outside. |
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Soon orders from wet mines all over England were coming in, and some have suggested that word of his achievement was spread through his Baptist connections. |
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Peperitic sills, intruded into wet sedimentary rocks, commonly do not bake upper margins and have upper and lower autobreccias, closely similar to lavas. |
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In Asia during the wet season, the flow of moist air into the Himalayas leads to some of the greatest rainfall amounts measured on Earth in northeast India. |
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The island of Madeira is wet in the northwest but dry in the southeast. |
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It was constantly necessary to remove this sand, as the addition of sea water would leave the conduits filled with wet sand which short circuited the supply. |
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The climate is characterized by hot, dry summers and cool, wet winters. |
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She tried to grab some branches of brush and pull her face forward into their wet rootiness, but the tongs grabbed her until she was numb, and she lolled over. |
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Squatting, Dewey Dell's wet dress shapes for the dead eyes of three blind men those mammalian ludicrosities which are the horizons and the valleys of the earth. |
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During the wet season, food is abundant and giraffes are more spread out, while during the dry season, they gather around the remaining evergreen trees and bushes. |
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When my father comes back with a dark wet spot on his pants, right in front, as if he has made in his pants, he starts eating his food in great shovelfuls. |
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The grand fountains and cascades were opened, again in the presence of the Queen, who got wet when a gust of wind swept mists of spray over the royal carriage. |
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Although wet curries play a smaller role in Gujarat than elsewhere, there are a number of vegetarian examples with gravies based on buttermilk or coconut milk. |
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When wet puddling, the formation of carbon dioxide due to reactions with the added iron oxide will cause bubbles to form that cause the mass to appear to boil. |
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Temperatures in Central America are highest just prior to the summer wet season, and are lowest during the winter dry season, when trade winds contribute to a cooler climate. |
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Despite an error in qualifying that saw him start fourth on the grid, Hamilton went on to win the British Grand Prix in difficult, wet conditions. |
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Retail fish markets, a type of wet market, often sell street food as well. |
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Learn to handle wet dough and avoid overdusting your work surface. |
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At the Brazilian Grand Prix, Button was hampered in qualifying by a poor choice of tyres in the wet weather and could achieve only fourteenth position. |
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Although it is grown mainly in wet, hot climates, it has been said to thrive in cold, hot, dry or wet conditions, meaning that it is an extremely versatile crop. |
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Like most lands in the region, Paraguay has only wet and dry periods. |
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The suspension is also 'softened' up somewhat for the wet weather. |
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The plants must be able to survive in wet mud with low oxygen levels. |
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She writhed her hands till her fingers were wet with sweat or blood! |
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There was a citadel in the old town surrounded by water and in 1940 on the east side, the moat was still wet but elsewhere had become a dry ditch. |
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A Enilla comes from the Germanic Auwja Auwa meaning wet meadow. |
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Hay that was too wet at cutting may develop rot and mold after being baled, creating the potential for toxins to form in the feed, which could make the animals sick. |
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Three very wet months meant that the winter was the wettest on record. |
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