But Turkey would make a separate EU strike force much more feasible by providing cheap, brave cannon fodder. |
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Rice straw is used to make strawboards, for thatching and braiding and as an animal fodder. |
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There are several interesting and highly nutritious root crops that can be used for animal feed, such as turnips, fodder beets and rutabagas. |
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The lower level is used to house livestock, fodder, food, and firewood, while the upper story holds the living quarters. |
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Most likely we will see a lot of guns blazing, ridiculously incredible jumping stunts and other Hollywood's Best Stuntmen TV show fodder. |
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Silage and haymaking have proved impossible, leaving farmers in some areas facing a real fodder problem this winter. |
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But much more fertile land is required to grow food and fodder for their livestock. |
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In winter, cattle eat fodder which lacks the pigment and dairy products are naturally paler. |
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Also, she continues, weeds are fodder for livestock and a large source of leafy greens in a rural family's diet. |
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Both research and practical experience support the use of muka as a fodder supplement. |
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Widgety bushes and mulga were the main fodder trees, but new plants of these species had no chance of getting beyond the seedling stage. |
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His lyrics are unfailingly clever, turning pliable platitudes into weightier fodder. |
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The horse chestnut seed is poisonous to humans if eaten as a food, though the seeds are sometimes fed to horses and cattle as fodder. |
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Equally white in The Sow's Litter, five well-rounded piglets enjoy their dam's bounty as she inspects her neat pail and trough of fodder. |
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Tractors cannot be used on land to convey fodder to feeding sites and farmers have to carry in hay or silage on their backs. |
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All of this translates into interesting fodder for newsy features or even hard news. |
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He is hoping people will donate fodder and hay for a convoy for those struggling to feed their stock. |
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He advised farmers with surplus stock and a fodder shortage to purchase concentrate feed rather than hay. |
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They live in very deep waters, at about 500 metres and below, and provide fodder for the sperm whale. |
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Snow depth and hardness are major factors influencing winter fodder resources. |
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Being so far north he says that his winter lasts 7 months and that he has 5 months to grow enough fodder for seven months' feeding. |
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Also, on hearing of the crush at the cattle camps, the Collector, B. Rajashekar, moved to stagger the fodder hours. |
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Nothing is yet known of the impact on animal health when oilcake from biotech cotton or fodder from biotech corn is consumed as cattle feed. |
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I was a prime example, a fledgling member, of the brotherhood of benighted working class cannon fodder the US is so famous for. |
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Why should we be good enough to be cannon fodder but not good enough to serve at home? |
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All that land has been occupied by this company and none of the crops which are grown on that land are useful as fodder for livestock. |
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Bank Top are unbeaten in Division Five but were regarded by many as mere cannon fodder against Holmfirth-based Division Three side Rangers. |
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There is a huge loss of livestock on account of shortage of fodder and water. |
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The target of the campaign is not to investigate but to provide fodder for the gutter press. |
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Soon after the breakfast, she goes back to her enclosure where she is provided with green grass, fodder and occasionally sugarcane. |
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Thousands of unemployed rural youth have been used as cannon fodder for the war. |
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I was dubious about claims of Scots being used as cannon fodder in past wars. |
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The drying up of food, fodder and feed will eventually affect milk production. |
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Shrubbery and tree branches are used as sawdust and fodder for fires that generate steam for energy and land has been set aside for ecotourism. |
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Cllr McCarthy expressed the view that the Irish, Australians and Canadians were used as cannon fodder without a care. |
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Maybe it's better to be a competitive force in the junior ranks than cannon fodder in the higher echelons. |
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With early farmers came seeds, some imported intentionally but others carried over unwittingly in animal fodder and packing. |
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There's additional fodder on the ship that will be offloaded for the sheep as well. |
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Livestock is also important and some land is used to grow fodder crops for these animals. |
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An eccentric rock star and his beautiful sister on a ranch in the middle of nowhere is irresistible fodder for the gossipmongers. |
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Current costs consisted of provender, i.e. fodder and bedding, the pay of the workers who looked after the horses, and shoeing. |
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Seema was not interested in undertaking the additional work of removing gobar, milking her and providing fodder. |
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What are gaping emotional wounds if not fodder for tragic and pretty folk songs? |
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Farmers need a helping hand with assistance for the transport of fodder, livestock and water. |
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The value of acorns as fodder and the tree as timber was significant in the agrarian economy. |
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It was hilarious nightmare fodder on a grand scale, the kind of misguided kiddy show that startled more pre-adolescents than it satisfied. |
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In a stilt house, the shed under the living floor serves as shelter for livestock and storage for fodder. |
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Of course, a Laloo or two might deal with straw meant as fodder for cattle, but he is definitely no man of straw! |
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Cattle farming required a more intensive cultivation of fodder crops such as maize, potatoes, turnips, and mangels. |
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Several important crops are members of these families, with amaranth probably one of the most promising unexploited food and fodder crops. |
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The trees inhibited the growth of fodder for livestock, and many peasants destroyed or crippled the oaks in their fields. |
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There's enough fodder for a whole thesis on journalistic pragmatics lurking in those memos. |
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Either of these would make excellent narrative fodder, but I fear exposure through specific disclosure and the spectre of losing my job. |
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And, at one level, it's hard to blame workers because they were disposable fodder for employers for long enough. |
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The increased availability of fuelwood and tree leaves for fodder are key benefits of forest regeneration. |
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A thoroughly good time was had by all, and the waiter will have therapy fodder for years. |
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So is all of this media attention just summertime fodder for news-starved journalists? |
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With these forest resources close by, people do not grow any trees expressly for fodder or fuelwood on their own cropland. |
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They intend to secure ongoing involvement, not simply to be voting fodder for the front-bench team. |
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Research shows that fodder maize can cross-pollinate plants up to 800m away and that under certain conditions, can travel miles. |
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The massive use of fertilizers and industrial fodder for livestock also contributed to the increase in productivity per head. |
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She ties things together in ways that haven't yet become conversational fodder. |
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An important discussion of forage and fodder distinguishes practices in different regions. |
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The reason is the huge quantity of water needed to grow fodder, which can be used to grow foodgrains. |
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She plinks away with butterfly amino for practice and rifle familiarity with full-throttle fodder for big game only. |
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If they'll agree not to throw us to the lions we promise not to provide any more fodder for bad movies. |
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This is a complicated, compelling book with countless strands that would provide fodder for a plethora of novels or histories. |
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Curtains around the lower bunk provide fodder for endless hours of peekaboo, play-acting, and fort-building. |
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Tree crops supply shade, fodder, leaf or bark mulch, firewood, shelter, soil protection and fencing. |
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These sharp, panoramic, full-color pictures provided fodder for a third Nature report. |
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The most commonly cultivated crops are grains, fodder, sugar beets, rape, potatoes, and hops. |
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There is more to one of Scotland's top comedians than reality-TV fodder and tabloid headlines. |
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It will also grow and package mushrooms and sweet beet, mostly to be used as fodder in its piggery. |
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This would also provide tremendous fodder for analysis of the social networks implicit in links. |
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The report went on to note that livestock was collectivized without adequate preparation, and with no thought given to shelter or fodder. |
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The actor is slightly built, with a face carved from granite, and his minor lisp will be the fodder for a hundred would-be future impersonators. |
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The vowels of the stressed syllables in such words as father and fodder are generally identical. |
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Surely at the Somme and other such battles you were ordered by those in charge to go over the top to provide cannon fodder? |
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One had only to turn elsewhere in the Times to find the kind of news that is fodder for editorial writers. |
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Wines produced on the shores of Lake Garda are often regarded as tourist fodder by lovers of serious Italian rossi. |
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Failure to appear has tripled her posted bail, made them issue another warrant for her arrest, and gave even more cannon fodder to the media. |
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Since when had Jaws, the film that inaugurated the summer blockbuster, been regarded as cult fodder? |
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The area produces cereals, sugar beet, vegetables and animal fodder and supports intensive pig and poultry farms. |
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Talk of renegotiations, third ways and so on is no more than mere election fodder for the grim-faced electorate of North Antrim and beyond. |
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Landowners created new meadows and pastures by lowering the water level of lakes, thereby somewhat improving the availability of fodder. |
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This was due to the development of fodder crops such as turnips and clover, and to selective breeding. |
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The self-contained chalets are private and overlook a deep harbour but there's a restaurant offering basic hearty fodder if you need it. |
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Apple manipulates several narratives to continue to make its products interesting fodder for journalists. |
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Putting my actual weight and bad eating habits out there for my entire high-school senior class as fodder for our next reunion. |
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In her mind, slave markets were merely fodder for tales designed to shock defiant little girls into greater obedience. |
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Maize and beet are widely grown in the Park by organic and non-organic farmers as livestock fodder crops. |
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On an energy basis 4.0 kg sugar beet or potatoes or 4.5kg fodder beet can replace 1kg barley. |
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There's also a desperate need to help people have their livestock survive by getting fodder to them. |
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Milk yield of milch cattle has been severely affected because of scarcity of fodder. |
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Similarly, fodder shortages which cause a decline in household milch cattle can have negative nutritional consequences. |
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Are the shock jock fodder really pretending that Australia could not cope with thousands more refugees? |
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Heavy horse carts with rubber tires haul sacks of corn, piles of fodder, and other freight. |
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He said the worries of the farmers facing the shortage of green fodder for their cattle may soon be over. |
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They left Adelaide on 12 November 1879 with four wagons, four drays, two express wagons, 40 men with portable troughs and a year's supply of fodder. |
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Even reality-TV shows such as The apprentice and Survivor are fodder for the modern college student. |
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They also suspected that they might be used simply as cannon fodder by the Americans. |
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If that meant a quarter million or so jobs had to go in the process, well, in every war there is cannon fodder. |
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Precisely why football matters to Americans is fodder for a book. |
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But the need for fresh cannon fodder apparently trumps common sense. |
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Working as a jillaroo and rural journalist proved to be great fodder for her first novel Jillaroo, which is taking both country and city readers by storm. |
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Consequently, it provides excellent fodder for a blockbuster action movie. |
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A project in the Himalayas diverts 6 million litres of sewage per day that would otherwise be dumped into the Ganges and uses it to raise fodder crops. |
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Many of the unemployed youth who were recruited into the army as cannon fodder in its vicious war against the country's Tamil minority have deserted. |
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The Astros and White Sox worked hard to get to the series, but their rosters surely don't offer up fodder for grandfatherly reminiscence down the road. |
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What better fodder for movie makers or military strategists? |
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I appear to be fairly gainfully self employed in the website design lark, at least for a bit, and while that's great it doesn't exactly make for good weblog fodder. |
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The fodder is brought to the animal in the zero-grazing unit. |
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So, after toiling away for two decades, Elba has finally crossed over from critically acclaimed actor to bona fide tabloid fodder. |
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But, hey, at least Brody gave us one of those TV moments that served as fodder for endless parody! |
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It was fodder for all the industry-watchers who recognize the significant revenue stream and sizable audience at stake. |
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The problem is not without solution, for if trees are lopped methodically, they can still give a large quantity of fodder, and yet not become weak and scraggy. |
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Only in Flanders and a few contiguous districts was grain rotated with soil-restoring fodder crops, such as clover, lucerne, and sainfoin, and fallow thus eliminated. |
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It's little wonder such communities are fodder for the satirists, offering a manageably small cast of characters with convoluted interactions running toward high comedy. |
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It's the age of celebrities in Britain, where showbiz weddings, bad hair days and fashion faux pas have become weekly fodder for glossy magazines. |
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His subsequent horror at his own insensitivity, of course, provided fodder for a column! |
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They were strictly herbivorous and had wide semicircular, or rectangular cropping jaws packed with spoon-shaped teeth for taking big mouthfuls of fodder. |
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They were not to be felled or damaged because acorns and beechnuts were important pig fodder, and therefore constituted a source of income for the state. |
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Will the next few hours be both didactic and entertaining, providing us with ample high and lowbrow cocktail party fodder? |
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These miniscule declines should not provide fodder for people who want to gut the program. |
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All this law has provided ample fodder for late-night comedians, who regale us with the latest legal idiocy. |
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The heavily damaged eastern arcade of courtyard XXV with the limestone mortarium on the left and the trough for animal fodder under the right arcade. |
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Her job is so much fun, she said, and time-consuming, too, that she has postponed ending her days as a singleton, also fodder for the cynicism and suspicion of others. |
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I remember visits to the resettlement sites, where land was uncultivable, water salty, fodder for domestic animals unavailable and communities fragmented. |
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Yes, the holiday season is here complete with kiddie fodder that is virtually unwatchable for anyone over the age of 10 and mawkish slush about the joy of the family. |
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The modern soldier with his modern equipment is not mere cannon fodder. |
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Also, the Russian commanders had no wish to be used as cannon fodder and tried to discuss ways in which all anti-communist forces might unite against Stalin. |
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Wars are lost when the leadership regards its soldiers as cannon fodder. |
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Eastern Conference Still regarded as the weaker of the two conferences, an open field will contend to provide cannon fodder for the Western champion next summer. |
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Jonas Bjorkman served notice to his first-round opponent at Wimbledon, Lleyton Hewitt, that he has no intention of acting as cannon fodder for the top seed. |
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Like the kids in today's army, I was just another poor boy sucked into the machine and told how honorable and patriotic it was to offer myself as cannon fodder. |
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I wouldn't mind serving my time in such a humanitarian force, as opposed to spending 10 to 13 months being trained to be cannon fodder and wear camouflage. |
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Contrary to the usual gig fodder of a support act and headliners, these legends of the indie scene have decided to do something different and head out on a joint tour. |
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After turning Uriah the Hittite into canon fodder in order to have his way with the man's wife, Bathsheba, David thinks that he has gotten away with murder. |
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The farmer says the Holstein's fodder must be of high quality. |
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Morocco attacked from the start only to discover that the Congolese had no intention of being cannon fodder and the North Africans resorted to long-range shots. |
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I'm staggered by Arndt's apparent argument that education should be about preparing young people to be pliable media fodder in sporting and entertainment fields. |
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Lisa didn't intend for Marcy's troubles to become fodder for caf convos. |
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Neither do flowers provide food for the family and fodder for the cattle. |
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Vast acreages of soybeans are grown as fodder for cattle and pigs. |
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Where possible avoid purchasing fodder from other livestock farms. |
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Meanwhile, I am glad that I am fodder for computational linguists. |
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It was fodder for water cooler and schoolyard discussions and dissections. |
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There is a long history of the mammary glands as comedy fodder. |
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His antics always make good fodder for the gossip columnists. |
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It became more difficult to raise barley, the primary cereal crop, and livestock required additional fodder to survive longer and colder winters. |
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In nomadic pastoralism, herds of livestock are moved from place to place in search of pasture, fodder, and water. |
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Elms also have a long history of cultivation for fodder, with the leafy branches cut to feed livestock. |
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Thus armies, with their exorbitant needs for food, ammunition and fodder, were tied to the river valleys throughout the ages. |
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Organized caravans, visible by the 2nd millennium BCE, could carry goods across a large distance as fodder was mostly available along the way. |
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The leaves and stalks of the alfalfa, millet and maize produced in Aden were generally used as fodder. |
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The sheep for fodder follow the shepherd, the shepherd for food follows not the sheep. |
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The Cabinet were mistaken, as most of the fodder was for the horses, donkeys and mules, which the BEF used to move supplies and heavy equipment. |
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The government was concerned at the volume of shipping space being used for fodder and wanted to cut the number of cavalry divisions. |
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Once fodder for science fiction movies and pulp magazine stories, the computer has become a fundamental force in modern society. |
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Thank providence that such negligence of our cannon fodder wouldn't be tolerated so much with today's compensation culture. |
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Trees can be planted in pastures for nuts, fruit, or even animal fodder in the case of honey locust and its nutritious pods. |
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Crops grown as fodder for dairy cows and other livestock are also pollinated by bees. |
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On the downside, it rewards them with fodder for nightmares. |
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Old man saltbush is a halophyte favoured by many farmers as a source of fodder on saline discharge areas. |
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Uncontrolled burning, turf extraction and overgrazing by sheep is responsible for the loss of fodder. |
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This land degradation reduces the production of fodder for livestock, which causes low milk yields. |
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When Aden had become a crown colony in 1937, the main landward imports were qat, firewood and fodder. |
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She informed that 19387 flour bags, 11415 bags of fodder and 1226 cauldrons had been distributed uptill now. |
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The ES plots contain a wider range of seeds including kale, linseed, millet, barley and fodder radish. |
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Are we the electorate deemed to be only useful at an election, used as cannon fodder and then ignored? |
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He added also that the Sultanate can play a pivotal role in the production of fish fodder as it has large quantities of lantern fish. |
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But they are cannon fodder who are not clever, competent or keen enough to accomplish their mission. |
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AaAaAa The dam, whose storage capacity will amount to 14 million m3, will rev up arboriculture, greenhouse cultivation and fodder. |
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Meetings of campfire folk and glitchy electronica can sometimes yield yawnsome coffee table fodder. |
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Karne Hesketh's 84th-minute try clinched the win for a side usually used as cannon fodder. |
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The potato was also used extensively as a fodder crop for livestock immediately prior to the famine. |
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It provides enough fresh fodder to supplement our goats, sheep, chickens and dairy cows at the same time. |
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The conditions of dairy farming in the USA suited the ensiling of green corn fodder, and was soon adopted by New England farmers. |
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The leaves are used as fodder during lean period and bedding for livestock. |
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In its God-like prime, The Simpsons attacked well-worn satirical fodder from unexpected angles, finding fresh laughs in the hoariest of subjects. |
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How closely the fodder is packed determines the nature of the resulting silage by regulating the chemical reactions that occur in the stack. |
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My great-grandfather left Ukraine in 1906, where he could foresee no future except as cannon fodder for either the czars or the Bolshevists. |
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She often used her friends' problems as fodder for her novels. |
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The worst fodder for a President is not poppy and mandragora, but strychnine and adrenalin. |
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Although straw is also used as fodder, particularly as a source of dietary fiber, it has lower nutritional value than hay. |
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Look out for seed of Italian ryegrass, mustard, fodder radish, buckwheat, fenugreek, field beans, vetch and Phacelia. |
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Those once were fighting words, fodder for the culture wars. |
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Sugarcane is a cash crop, but it is also used as livestock fodder. |
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Existentially ghosts lie between fact and fiction, between the orbits of believer and nonbeliever, and provide bounteous fodder for storytelling, literature, and film. |
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But others who attended his speech came away with the feeling that he had badly misspoken and used phrases that could provide fodder for Iran's critics in the Arab world. |
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These are the cannon fodder that keep our court rooms filled and even The Bill in its day would have struggled to get much drama out of their pathetic endeavours. |
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Mangcorn is utilized partly as human food, and partly as fodder for cattle, especially for fattening swine, for which purpose it is considered peculiarly adapted. |
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There's a big nod to the set-text fodder, where Paul Woodson's excellent Duncan breaks the fourth wall to read out a page of Brodie's notes to illustrate the action. |
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Would But I'm a Cheerleader magically turn into Oscar fodder were it chopped into a dozen frames, re-mastered for Sensurround, and accompanied by scratch-and-sniff cards? |
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House of Wax Competent update remake of the 50s horror as the usual bunch of teenage bodybag fodder get bumped off by a sicko killer who turns his victims into wax models. |
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This activity offers one way to teach students about macroevolution by demonstrating that variation in the development of individuals is fodder for large changes in shape. |
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All fodder for a zealous psychologist, I'd imagine, because I realised that the absence of that resiny smell was nothing less than a metaphor for the end of my childhood. |
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The high impact derives from the farmstock fodder grown with chemicals, transport fuels, and the potent greenhouse gas methane from belching cattle and sheep. |
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Videos that were once YouTube fodder of Weezy sitting around the studio, drinking sizzurp and getting baked out of his mind now find their way onto his releases. |
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An investigation showed that the camels had been poisoned by fodder contaminated with an antibiotic called salinomycin, often added to chicken feed but poisonous to camels. |
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Pasture is typically grazed throughout the summer, in contrast to meadow which is ungrazed or used for grazing only after being mown to make hay for animal fodder. |
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Using the same technique as the process for making sauerkraut, green fodder was preserved for animals in parts of Germany since the start of the 19th century. |
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In some areas, dried leafy branches are stored as winter fodder for stock. |
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However, this schedule is more for the convenience of humans, as most grazing animals on pasture naturally consume fodder in multiple feedings throughout the day. |
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Maize is a major source of both grain feed and fodder for livestock. |
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Horses took over from oxen as the main providers of traction, new ideas on crop rotation were developed and the growing of crops for winter fodder gained ground. |
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Other thistles that nominally are weeds are important honey plants, both as bee fodder in general, and as sources of luxury monofloral honey products. |
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Hydroponically grown fodder has been common for years in Australia. |
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Calvin's views regarding the heliocentric theory of Copernicus have provided much controversy and fodder for the claim of anti-science on the part of the reformers. |
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