However one Maori king has refused to meet the royals saying the 45-minute window he was allotted was not sufficiently respectful. |
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My wife caught her breakfast with both hands as it skipped on the table bound for the window. |
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Police say the bassist turned gunman stepped onto a third floor outcropping and fired through a window. |
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My girlfriend, Barbara, came to visit me and exposed her breast through the window. |
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As it was, The affair ended its first season last night with me contemplating hurling my television out of the window. |
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The prizes are impressive and give a window into just what sort of presents people give the pope. |
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I fall back into a dream and then suddenly there is a tapping on the window just above my bed. |
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The search for the remains of Flight 370 is not simply a case of binoculars out of the window, although they play a part. |
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Dice cracks a window so he can chain-smoke Marlboro Lights, using a glass of water as an ashtray. |
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The frozen Yukon River, snaking its way to the Bering Sea, was visible from my window on the Cessna. |
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He used some of the captives as human shields and forced others to hold a black flag with white Arabic writing against the window. |
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He shot an arrow from the Priory window, and where the arrow landed was to be the site of his grave. |
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One story tells that Van Dyck himself discovered Dobson when he noticed one of the young artist's pictures in a London shop window. |
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Why isn't this window maximizable? I keep having to scroll to see the full contents. |
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They have bright colour, but are like a broken stained glass window reassembled without design. |
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The window here, and there the door annoys, Then frequent repetitions tire the ear Of meanless speeches, dull and insincere. |
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In addition, the various segments of the mesotympanum, oval window, round window, and Eustachian tube were more visible via endoscopy. |
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This meant, I believed, that we were in a position to move things forward and complete the transaction in time for the January transfer window. |
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A window was open, and the crickets were stridulating at an ominous speed in the black motionless foliage. |
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An advertising poster on a transit shelter makes a better door than a window, when trying to spot oncoming traffic. |
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Traces of window glass have been found, as well as ironwork window grilles. |
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One major malfeature of many present day trimarans is too much exposed window area. |
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And, as always, an Indian close outside the window, a mali in this case, picking up sounds. |
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The east stained glass window is Victorian, and the oriel window to the north side of it was built by Henry VIII for Catherine of Aragon. |
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The style was geometrical at first and flowing in the later period, owing to the omission of the circles in the window tracery. |
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However, the west front is now Perpendicular, with its huge window filled with fragments of medieval glass. |
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It is also employed as a wall decoration in which arcade and window openings form part of the whole decorative surface. |
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The Tudor arch, placed over the oriel window, or a bay window supported on a bracket or corbel, was a striking window design of the Tudor period. |
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To open these large windows the sash window, already developed by the 1670s, became very widespread. |
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It is much like standard window screening, but heavier and with a more open weave. |
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A trim carpenter specializes in molding and trim, such as door and window casings, mantels, baseboards, and other types of ornamental work. |
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They can produce a great variety of glass objects, ranging from drinking cups to window glass. |
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He tears apart the unfinished female creature after he sees the Creature, who had indeed followed Victor, watching through a window. |
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If the client reparents the window away from root, the window is no longer a top-level window. |
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The power and data cables are fed into the car through the right rear passenger window. |
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The stained glass window on the east wall dates from 1845, while the south facing window is a memorial to a World War I soldier. |
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In Buttermere Church, there is a memorial to Wainwright, and one can look out of the window to Haystacks. |
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The stained glass window in the Little Church of St Francis Funtley, Fareham, Hampshire is reputed to have been designed by him. |
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Peter's Church Duntisbourne Abbots near Cirencester, the window depicts the Ascension and the Nativity. |
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A memorial stained glass window created by Christine Boyce can be found in St George's Church, Millom. |
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A Myrish crossbowman poked his head out a different window, got off a bolt, and ducked down to rewind. |
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Townspeople came to see the troublesome monk, and Tausen preached to them from the window of his cell. |
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Set in its window is a plaque commemorating 100 years of Steamtrain Hoorn Medemblik, a Dutch steam train. |
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They struck the doors with their riflebutts, and crept past the window with their pocket torches. |
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The motif appears in architectural wood carving, stone carving, window tracery and stained glass. |
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John Ridd and Lorna Doone are cast at the top of the window, not far from Carver Doone. |
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She was often to be seen sitting at her writing desk, beside her favourite window which provided the titles for three of her books. |
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Ruth stares out of her office window, across the courtyard towards the artificial lake, and thinks about the impending trip to the sea light. |
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The fogged window was only semitransparent and I could only dimly make out the figures. |
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I could see a silhouette of a figure looking out from the window, but I couldn't tell if it was a man or a woman. |
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When I saw the penny black missing from my collection in the shop window, I just went in and snapped it up. |
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And wouldn't it snazz up the entrance to have a stained-glass window replace the clear one over the front door? |
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Catalog on casement window hardware, including operators, sash hinges, casement and door snuggers, handles, etc. |
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I spiffed the turf over the edge and it went straight through the window and hit the officer. |
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Rather than squishing everything into a tiny window, I have shown only part of my app. |
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Outside the car window was a glaze of darkness stippled with the gold of infrequent mysterious lights. |
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At first he received visitors, but later he confined himself to his cell and opened his window only to give his blessing. |
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The pilgrim they laid in a large upper chamber, whose window opened toward the sunrising. |
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He would open that window again and dive straight out, Superman or superfool. |
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The broken window and overturned plant pots were a tip-off that something was wrong. |
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Before I had been standing at the window five minutes, they somehow conveyed to me that they were all toadies and humbugs. |
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This tour-goer stopped everyone in their tracks when she told of seeing a family in the attic window many times prior to this particular night. |
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The transtemporal window varies with each patient and the ability to penetrate the temporal bone varies with age, sex, and ethnicity. |
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Flies buzzed in circles round the ceiling, and the treacle papers and bundles of dried clover were pinned to the window curtains. |
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The round window niche was exposed through a posterior tympanotomy and mainly the anterior bony overhang of the round window niche was removed. |
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It is very important to remember to unsubclass the plug-in window when the plug-in is destroyed. |
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Unsubclassing the plug-in window ensures that Navigator can continue to function normally once the plug-in module is unloaded. |
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There was also a small window, wherethrough a prisoner might conceivably escape. |
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Why not try turning the handle in the other direction to see if that opens the window? |
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The old maple stump shot sickly pink switches from her roots, new switches every year. They crept yearningly toward the little square of window. |
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She had a black cat. It regarded me yellowly through the window screen when I rang her doorbell. |
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Enhanced distribution of window safety information through links on several other Atrium family brand websites. |
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When you click on a window it is brought to the top of the z-order so that you can see it. |
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The kids may be desperate but I'm just window shopping for one with a waggly tail. |
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My older brother Dougie used to fish from his bedroom window to avoid getting nabbed by the water bailiff for not having a licence. |
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Outside our kitchen window in Tanzania were some trees, and one day a beautiful Vitelline masked weaverbird came to build a nest. |
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Unlike a typical ad banner, this window is welcomed by the user and is large enough to display useful content. |
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I stood and looked out of my window onto this dark, autumnal night, The pavements glistened wetly, beneath the tall street light. |
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If you have a warm, sunny window site, begonias, geraniums or African violets are each reliable winter bloomers. |
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Daryl Wilkins hurled paint over the window and then trod it round her home after breaking in. |
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The Battle of Britain window in Westminster Abbey was also encouraged by the Air Ministry, Lords Trenchard and Dowding on its committee. |
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Plans for the Battle of Britain window in Westminster Abbey were begun during wartime, the committee chaired by Lords Trenchard and Dowding. |
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One historic example of tax avoidance still evident today was the payment of window tax. |
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The icon is a window, in the words of Paul Florensky, that actually participates in the glory of what it represents. |
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All that work, trust, and knowledge of each other would have been thrown out of the window and they'd have to start again. |
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By this time, Turner's drawings were being exhibited in his father's shop window and sold for a few shillings. |
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She incorporated stones and rocks which had been thrown through her window in a mixed media piece in her 2005 show. |
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Recently, more and more attention has been drawn to neurorestorative therapies, which possess far longer time window than acute neuroprotection. |
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This game covers the whole screen with a single, nondraggable window, but the menu bar is visible and events are processed. |
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The first message is displayed in a nonflashing window and stays displayed until the user closes the window. |
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A stained glass window exists to this day depicting the wedding of the Prince of Wales and Lady Eleanor. |
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These pollen granules are extremely small, and can easily pass through window screens. |
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The main railway station building includes a clock tower, imitation Tudor chimneys and carved heads in the frames of every window. |
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The room was quite dark. The oblong window showed the night sky pricked here and there with stars. |
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On leaving school, aged 14, he worked as a window dresser for the High Class Ladies' Wear store in Pontypridd. |
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Karen Aileron looks distractedly out the window, a tofuburger sizzling in the skillet on the stove. |
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After a couple of years without pruning, the shrub had grown overlarge and completely obscured the window. |
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In his native village, a memorial window and tablet were placed at Easton Royal Church. |
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Another perspective has also been put forward, which suggests the Germans could not have gained air superiority before the weather window closed. |
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During testing in Norway, the team blasted grit through a house window, set fire to a man and ran into a car hidden by snow. |
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Sent to a minimized window when the icon's background must be filled before it is painted. |
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As they read his writings he must have written toward the earlier years of the window. |
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These are, along with another window in the parish church of Little Malvern, Worcestershire, her only surviving memorials. |
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Two grey herons feature in a stained glass window of the church in Selborne, Hampshire. |
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The nest is a flimsy platform of straw and sticks, laid on a ledge, under cover, often on the window ledges of buildings. |
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These pollen grains are only 15 microns in size, and can easily pass through most window screens. |
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The work window may not come around again for as long as weeks or months and in the interim, the vessel will continue to deteriorate. |
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Furthermore, most studies did not examine periconception period as an exposure window. |
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As I sat by the window and read, I caught sight of the mailman in my peripheral. |
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He tried to escape from the castle in 1648, but was unable to get through the bars of his window. |
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The continuous tower with a wooden gallery from which a mullioned window with the emblem of Abbate can observe the south side of the country. |
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Eight corners of the building were set ablaze, and a Molotov cocktail was thrown at a window. |
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The bodyguard leaped out the window and told the Goths who was inside, but it was too late. |
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Polaroids are used as window screens to regulate the amount of light entering the room. |
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They can also be burned in front of a door, or open window as an offering to heaven, or the devas. |
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All was quiet for several minutes until the fog broke and a large oak tree passed outside my portside window. |
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Its wide harvesting window allows it to act as a famine reserve and is invaluable in managing labor schedules. |
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The bourgeoisie had transposed the wares of the shop window to the sitting room, where the clutter of display signalled bourgeois success. |
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In R v Faqir Mohammed a cultured Asian man caught a young man leaving his daughter's bedroom window. |
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Whilst taxpayers can take advantage of this opening of a window of opportunity, it is not likely that it will ever become available thereafter. |
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A large stained glass window in the City Hall displays the arms, where an explanation suggests that the seahorse and the ship refer to Belfast's significant maritime history. |
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To move a window, just point anywhere on the title bar and drag. |
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This type of arch, when employed as a window opening, lends itself to very wide spaces, decoratively filled with many narrow vertical mullions and horizontal transoms. |
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Although not actually an 'official' memorial to the Battle of Britain in the sense that government paid for it, the window and chapel have since been viewed as such. |
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The rimed window permitted only shades of the traffic outside. |
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One of the oldest depictions of Saint Piran's Flag can be seen in a stained glass window at Westminster Abbey, 1888, commemorating Richard Trevithick. |
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The window depicts St Michael at the top and nine Cornish saints, Piran, Petroc, Pinnock, Germanus, Julian, Cyriacus, Constantine, Nonna and Geraint in tiers below. |
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Pulling on a pair of trackie pants and a jumper, she quietly unclipped the flyscreen and pushed up the old window and climbed through, landing outside with a hollow thud. |
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Conor died in 1991, at the age of four and a half, when he fell out of an open bedroom window on the 53rd floor of a Manhattan apartment building. |
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Gloucester Cathedral, west front, window in form of a Tudor arch. |
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Everybody has their eyes closed except Jaime, who's staring out the window holding his wee-wee in his pants, listening to the roar of the lawn mower near the monkey bars. |
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Subjects were generally seated against plain backgrounds and lit with the soft light of an overhead window and whatever else could be reflected with mirrors. |
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A faint oystery light smudged the November sky outside the window. |
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They then share a drink and look out of the window in silence. |
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During the summer where there is no international tournament there are no editions of this feature and the transfer window highlights are in the daily Sports section. |
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He made good his escape by jumping from a second-story window. |
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Stores were set up by traders selling English manufactures such as cloth, iron utensils, and window glass, as well as West Indian products such as sugar and molasses. |
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We knocked on the door, and a nightcapped head appeared at the window. |
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It was a show flat. The living room windows have a heavy curtain. The bathroom does not have an outside window. There is no glass in the front door. |
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Among the buildings further damaged was the Christchurch Cathedral, which lost its iconic rose window, a factor reducing the likelihood of the cathedral being restored. |
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In violent temper he throws it sidewardly at the broken window. |
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I was alone, but for my reflection in the uncurtained window. |
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In the household they are used in carpeting, upholstered furnishings, window shades, towels, coverings for tables, beds, and other flat surfaces, and in art. |
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The statue is situated in a corner hardly visible to the public, except through a window from an outside maintenance area situated behind the building. |
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Jessamy looked round her in a puzzled way, but there was nothing to see but the pale oblong of what looked like a star-pierced sky behind the bars of the nursery window. |
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Beneath each window is a floral swag by Grinling Gibbons, constituting the finest stone carving on the building and some of the greatest architectural sculpture in England. |
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Artell had been released from his contact by Northampton Town after handing them a transfer request and not being taken up during the transfer window. |
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But to a child's vision at least those May Day sweeps did much to brighten the city dullness, and year by year I watched for them eagerly from the window. |
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The first safety lamp made by William Reid Clanny used a pair of bellows to pump air through water to a candle burning in a metal case with a glass window. |
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Scintillation detectors are generally preferred for hand held monitoring instruments, and are designed with a large detection window to make monitoring of large areas faster. |
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The bleaching of visual purple is limited to the area exposed to light, so that an optogram or image of the luminous object, such as a window, can be obtained. |
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Until 1854, the Dutch were Japan's sole window to the western world. |
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Only Peter was out of the picture. He was a strange, disconsolate figure, as he shifted about to ease his leg, or gazed incuriously from the window. |
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They're part a formal letter, part some type of dialogue. So, what are the rules? Is it okay to throw formality out the window? Does spelling matter? |
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It is a total, consuming quest to run for president of the United States, and to be president of the United States. You have to realize that privacy is out the window. |
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Since the XmDialogShell is not used here, managing and unmanaging the child of the shell will have no effect on whether the shell window itself is visible. |
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The technique of glassblowing, coupled with the cylinder and crown methods, was used to manufacture sheet or flat glass for window panes in the late 17th century. |
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George's Chapel, Windsor, east window in form of Tudor Arch. |
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The program always gets stuck when I have more than one window open. |
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A good convention for working with multiple subclasses is to only subclass the window procedure that is the first in the call chain and only unsubclass the one that is first. |
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The chamber was lighted by a glass window, and had six doors. |
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The building's facade features a large rose window, elaborate cornices, molded brick work and central gable, along with keyhole-shaped windows that accomodate stained glass. |
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They remained restless, sitting by the window the entire night. |
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King's College Chapel, Cambridge, window in form of a Tudor arch. |
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Decorated architecture is characterised by its window tracery. |
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The top-level window is parentless and forms the root of the hierarchy. |
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Folds of loose netting, much like a window drapery, snag on a fish's tail and fins and wrap the fish up in loose netting as it struggles to escape. |
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Offshore salvage may provide only a short window of opportunity for the salvage team due to unusually high tide or inclement weather for instance. |
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Last night, Collins left eight tickets at the will-call window, standard procedure since the lefty has had to limit the freebies to immediate family only. |
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Kate stood by the window, looking out drearily at the matinal sunlight. |
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I go to the window again in my terry-cloth robe, my heart pumping, a zizzy bee-sting quiver down my arms and legs, my bare feet cold on the floor planks. |
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