The missile attacks came as allied warplanes streaked over mist and drizzle along the northern Saudi front lines. |
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With these data as a foundation, a lineation based simply on the 8- syllable, 3-stress lines has produced a poem of exactly 62 lines. |
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In doing so, he not only mistranslated the national motto e pluribus unum but also ignored the long history of American political divisions along racial and ethnic lines. |
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Excellent descriptive power and frequent brilliant lines in this adoxographic poem. |
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Common burn indicators include alligatoring, crazing, the depth of char, lines of demarcation, sagged furniture springs and spalling. |
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The footnotes ensure that the lines become more allusive and more polysemantic, vacillating between transubstantiation and ghostly intimations. |
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I was thinking along the lines of a vegetable garden, but I could be persuaded to include some perennials. |
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I was thinking along the lines of writing to the local paper, to see if we can get some reaction. |
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I was expecting the tearful ticking off, the girlish recriminations and all the rest of the bag of tricks along those lines. |
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The game is played out, the figures have melted away, the lines are frazzled, the board is mildewed. Everything has become barbarious again. |
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The plant had two batch assembly lines for packaging, as well as a continuous feed production line. |
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This result indicates that in fact, the three cell lines are responsive to this biolipid. |
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Charles also inherited the tradition of political and dynastic enmity between the royal and the Burgundian ducal lines of the Valois dynasty. |
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Draw two intersecting lines that divide the page into four quadrants. |
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The designers will preview their new lines at the fashion show. |
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These units are not very visible in daylight and are generally used in conjunction with traditionally painted lines. |
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When a speeding vehicle runs over the raised road lines, it produces a strong warning effect to remind the car driver of deviation from the lane. |
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In the same direction of traffic driving direction, they are mainly settled in the median strip, edge lines, and dangerous sections of the road. |
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The current trend for lane markings is to intersperse retroreflective paint lines with reflectors as seen on the majority of American highways. |
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Rugby station used to be served by lines which have now been closed, including lines to Leicester. |
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Early buses, known as trolleybuses, were powered by electricity supplied from overhead lines. |
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Buses and motor vehicles of other kinds are not allowed to travel along railway lines in Pakistan. |
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The Chicago 'L' has most of its lines converging on The Loop, the main business, financial, and cultural area. |
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Typical capacity lines allow 1,200 people per train, giving 36,000 people per hour. |
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Light metros are typically used as Feeder lines into the main rapid transit system. |
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By 1907 the District and Metropolitan Railways had electrified the underground sections of their lines. |
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Some lines are occasionally closed for scheduled engineering work at weekends. |
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The Underground runs a limited service on Christmas Eve with some lines closing early, and does not operate on Christmas Day. |
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On 23 May 2016 it was announced that the night service would launch on 19 August 2016 for the Central and Victoria lines. |
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In the same year, following a marketing agreement between the operators, a joint central area map that included all the lines was published. |
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The initial network opened between 1980 and 1984, using converted former railway lines, linked with new tunnel infrastructure. |
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The programme also includes overhauling infrastructure including communications, track and overhead power lines, structures and embankments. |
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Additional trains ran on these lines during peak hours to increase the frequency at the busier stations. |
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The Tyne and Wear Metro is electrified with overhead lines at at 1,500 V DC, it is now the only rail network in Britain to use this system. |
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The service commenced in 1994 and currently consists of three lines, named after colours. |
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The Sheffield Supertram network is organised around Park Square and comprises three lines. |
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Two small branches serving Malin Bridge, from Hillsborough Interchange, and Herdings Park branch out from two of the main lines. |
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All lines have inspection pits and line 8 possesses a Hegenscheidt wheel lathe. |
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High level access is provided on lines 9 and 10 for servicing of equipment boxes and pantographs. |
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Various other extensions, including entirely new lines, are currently under construction. |
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The bass lines most notably originate from sampled sources or synthesizers. |
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The early railways were a patchwork of local lines operated by small private railway companies. |
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Many lines closed by British Railways, including many closed during the Beeching cuts, have been restored and reopened as heritage railways. |
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The lines also tended to be busy enough to be beyond the capacity of a single track. |
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In the Nevada example, crossovers were constructed where the lines ran in close proximity to allow reverse movements. |
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This was necessary as at points the two tracks are several miles apart and some destinations can only be accessed from one of the lines. |
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In other cases, where the shared lines already run in close proximity, the two companies may share facilities. |
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Two double track lines along opposite sides of a river can operate as a quadruple track. |
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These lines allowed communities that did not merit a full railway service to connect to the mainline network at low cost. |
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As road competition increased, many existing lines fell into decline and few new railways were built. |
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In the 21st century a very few industrial and common carrier lines survive. |
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As a result, many of these lines passed from being common carriers and were preserved as heritage railways after their demise. |
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These are private lines or collections owned by individuals or small groups and generally not open to the public. |
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Thirty maniples arranged in three lines with supporting troops constituted a legion, totaling between 4,000 and 5,000 men. |
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In the 10th century, Dunstan brought Athelwold to Glastonbury, where the two of them set up a monastery on Benedictine lines. |
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There are about 30,000 surviving lines of Old English poetry and about ten times that much prose, and the majority of both is religious. |
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There are also a number of railway lines crossing over the area, which centre at Shrewsbury. |
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The architecture is along the lumpsome lines of Hamadan's Baber Taher tower but the site is peaceful and attractive. |
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There are connecting lines from Preston to Ormskirk and Bolton, and from Lancaster to Morecambe, Heysham and Skipton. |
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Elaborate Tilaka with lines may also identify a devotee of a particular denomination. |
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Note each palm leaf section was only several lines, written longitudinally across the leaf, and bound by twine to the other sections. |
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Only a few areas keep a formal grammar school system along the lines of the Tripartite System. |
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Education in the Republic of Ireland has traditionally been organised on denominational lines. |
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If, for example, the camp was built on an outcrop, it followed the lines of the outcrop. |
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English Gothic was to develop along lines that sometimes paralleled and sometimes diverged from those of continental Europe. |
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It was a work of pure modernism, with glass and concrete walls and clean, horizontal lines. |
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He also played a part in the organisation of diocese on lines closer to those in the rest of Western Europe. |
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Only a few lines of the poem have survived, but a prose retelling became popular and was later incorporated into two other romances. |
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As an ancestor figure, he compares to Dyfnwal Hen, who is likewise attributed with founding kingly lines in the Hen Ogledd. |
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This appears in the sky as a series of radial lines much like the legs of a spider. |
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The music generally features sparse, syncopated drum and percussion patterns with bass lines that contain prominent sub bass frequencies. |
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After large initials the following letters on the same line, or for some lines beyond, continue to be decorated at a smaller size. |
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Unlike earlier illuminated manuscripts, the first letter of the first word on the line, for every two lines then other lines, are capitalized. |
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If there is a break in the line of life at the same position as what could be a backup marriage line, the health lines take precedence. |
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But the loss of their marriage lines did not make writing to Mercy any easier, and he decided to write the letter to his mother first. |
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Then, after the usual Quaker custom, everyone present signed the marriage lines as a witness. |
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The longest at 3,182 lines, and the most important, is Beowulf, which appears in the damaged Nowell Codex. |
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Andreas is 1,722 lines long and is the closest of the surviving Old English poems to Beowulf in style and tone. |
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Chaucer used octosyllabic lines in House of Fame but eschewed iambic rhythm. |
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The Riverside edition constitutes 4,042 lines totaling 29,551 words, typically requiring over four hours to stage. |
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He was the chief tragedian of the Lord Chamberlain's Men, with a capacious memory for lines and a wide emotional range. |
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Yet another is to recite lines from The Merchant of Venice, thought to be a lucky play. |
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The first version, published in 1667, consisted of ten books with over ten thousand lines of verse. |
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He toyed with the idea of composing a patriotic epic in blank verse called Brutus, but only the opening lines survive. |
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Severn and Brown added their lines to the stone in protest at the critical reception of Keats's work. |
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Even phrases and lines of verse will reappear as much as forty years later. |
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In between terms behind the lines at Bouzincourt, he participated in the assaults on the Schwaben Redoubt and the Leipzig Salient. |
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However, Tolkien wrote that the Mount Doom scene exemplified lines from the Lord's Prayer. |
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It is alliterative, extending to almost 1,000 lines imitating the Old English Beowulf metre in Modern English. |
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It was characterized by greater use of instrumentation, multiple interweaving melodic lines, and the use of the first bass instruments. |
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During the Baroque era, professional musicians were expected to be accomplished improvisers of both solo melodic lines and accompaniment parts. |
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The work is in five movements, with wordless vocal lines for female chorus and solo soprano in the first and last movements. |
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Even grunge bands, following their break with success, began to create more independent sounding music, further blurring the lines. |
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Internally, the Circle seating was rebuilt in four weeks in June 1996 providing more leg room, better access and improved sight lines. |
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The public loved the film, with lines stretching outside of cinemas as people had to wait for the next showing. |
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Kubrick requested screenwriter Terry Southern to record in his natural accent a tape of Kong's lines. |
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London Underground's Charing Cross tube station on the Northern and Bakerloo lines has an exit in the square. |
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The outermost lines that make up the length are called the doubles sidelines. |
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The lines to the inside of the doubles sidelines are the singles sidelines and are used as boundaries in singles play. |
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A ball is out only if none of it has hit the line or the area inside the lines upon its first bounce. |
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Batters must run in straight lines between bases and fielders must not obstruct their way or stand on bases. |
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However, it is probable that fewer genetically unique mare lines existed than Lowe identified. |
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Roads, railway lines, and canals all split hunting countries, but at the same time they made hunting accessible to more people. |
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Thus, from what has been stated, we see that neither the white puncta nor the minute white branchwork of lines were ever tubular. |
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These candidates are then bucketed into a discretized version of the space of all possible lines. |
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The Canaries went ahead when the home defence failed to clear their lines and Pilkington was on hand to slide in his eighth goal of the campaign. |
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Also, scribe lines across the side panels to locate the dado for the bottom piece of the carcase. |
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In the colonial carve-up that followed, lines were drawn between the port cities of Mombasa and Dar es Salaam and the island of Zanzibar. |
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Fishermen drop lines from their cayucas, small wooden dugout boats with upturned prows. |
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It was a campaign of disruption, conceived and conducted along classic, Clausewitzian lines. |
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They told us to stay on the trail, but of course Bart never liked to color inside the lines. |
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Perhaps she should colour outside the lines more often. Not that icecream was much of a step over the lines. |
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Now individuals and teams need to be willing to colour outside the lines and not work only from inside a box, a silo, a discipline, and so on. |
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The columned great hall seemed smaller because there were no straight lines of sight not blocked by a column. |
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This chart compresses the entire audit report into a few lines on a single diagram. |
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I have drawn some lines of Linger's character, on purpose to place it in counterview or contrast with that of the other company. |
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The whaling craft consists of harpoons, lances, lines, and sealskin buoys, all of their own workmanship. |
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To achieve straight crossrows, you will need guide lines so that you can align the trees up and down the slope. |
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When West discarded a club, South could have won with dummy's ace and played on crossruff lines. |
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After she left, I ran away for a day, and hid myself, solitary, in a culvert under the railway lines. |
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I fear my Julia would not deign my lines, receiving them from such a worthless post. |
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The Civil War split between Virginia and West Virginia was a divorce based along cultural and economic as well as geographic lines. |
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Many customers live in upstairs flats, down narrow lanes, alongside double yellow lines or have steps to the front door. |
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A council has withdrawn a parking ticket issued after double yellow lines were painted under a parked car. |
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Wile they was still talking along these lines, the orchestra begin to drool a Perfect Day, so I ducked out on the porch for air. |
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The circumstance mentioned in the last two lines shows that it was usual to dye in the wool, as is sometimes done in England. |
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The englyn as we know it in Canu Llywarch Hen and Elegy on Cynddylan is characterized by three lines with end rhyme. |
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In most of the fables the length of the epimyth ranges between six and twelve lines. |
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You can see why compositors reflexively filled lines to be corrected with etaoin shrdlus. |
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And on the walls, strange paintings, of an exultating colouring, of paradoxical lines, since they showed freshness and an indefinable antiquity. |
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He had three lines running across his forehead, and a fanwork of them radiating from the corner of each eye. |
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He smiled again, easily, dimples creasing his cheeks, and a tiny fanwork of lines crinkled the corners of his dark eyes. |
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There is an agreeable freehandedness in the lines of the Pennsylvania table of unusual design at upper right. |
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The lines can be described as a sum of two gaussians, as typically done with observations. |
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Strictly straight lines through the point at infinity appear as straight lines but are regarded as generalised circles. |
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Others were small, only a few crossed lines, and reminded Leverett of cuneiform glyphics. |
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She'd give anything to be able to believe it, but she's a hard woman, and brooding along certain lines makes one groovy. |
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It was a gusty, rainy day, and the rolling white and grey clouds and the lines of haillike lances rode down the sky like a charge. |
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There are plans to reopen lines such as the Varsity Line between Oxford and Cambridge. |
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He had a hawky face with a high colour and eyes like slits of blue crystal, set in a web of fine lines. They were hard but not unkind. |
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When British Rail existed, many railway lines in Strathclyde were electrified. |
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The lines were built by up to 20,000 people, and were completed in under two months. |
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South London, particularly, has a high concentration of railways as it has fewer Underground lines. |
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Other important lines are the Liverpool to Manchester Lines and the North TransPennine which connects Liverpool to Manchester through Warrington. |
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Others find the deliberate discord, playing against the evident parallelism of the two lines, stimulating and intriguing. |
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The palaeodiet of the woolly rhinoceros has been reconstructed using several lines of evidence. |
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Contour ploughing mitigates soil erosion by ploughing across a slope, along elevation lines. |
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He also increased the number of Patricians by adding new families to the dwindling number of noble lines. |
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Expansions were infrequent, as the emperors, adopting a strategy of fixed lines of defense, had determined to maintain existing borders. |
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The Capsarii were mainly used as the front line care providers and bandagers, but also assisted the Medici behind the lines. |
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The three Viking ships afloat attempted to break through the English lines. |
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The isograms were typical of differences between two subspecies but also of those between different lines of japonicas or indicas. |
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Horace therefore, Juvenal, and Persius were no Prophets, although their lines did seem to indigitate and point at our times. |
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Richard first destroyed and looted the farms and lands surrounding the fortress, leaving its defenders no reinforcements or lines of retreat. |
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There is an innate light in every man, discovering to him the first lines of duty in the common notions of good and evil. |
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Many of these historical lines illustrate historical myth rather than realism. |
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Grant did not cease his efforts to interdict Lee's supply lines and break through the defenses. |
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These lines appear to serve as roadways or guides to any stragglers that may have hung back for some reason known only to an io. |
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It is often beautiful, but its sentences tend to start, pause, and finish at the end of lines, with the risk of monotony. |
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At times there would be two groups of three lines allowing one group to reload while the other group arranged themselves and fired. |
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In November 1672, he took his army to Maastricht to threaten the French supply lines. |
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Along with secular matters, readers also favoured an alphabetical ordering scheme over cumbersome works arranged along thematic lines. |
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Britain's railways were nationalised on 1 January 1948 and the lines were placed under the control of British Railways. |
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Heavy rail lines enter the city from all directions, the principal destination being Manchester Piccadilly station. |
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The Russians had lost around 210,000 men, but with their shorter supply lines, they soon replenished their armies. |
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A large French assault at the end of November broke the allied lines, forcing a general retreat towards Genoa. |
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After crossing the ford the infantry was reorganised into several lines and advanced against the Maratha infantry. |
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Black lines indicate the proportion of the nuclear volume contained by the daughter and mother immediately preceding karyofission. |
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Brassey took thousands of British engineers and mechanics across the globe to build new lines. |
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Germany responded by disarming Italian forces, seizing military control of Italian areas, and creating a series of defensive lines. |
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On 7 November, St Pancras, Kensal and Bricklayers' Arms stations were hit and several lines of Southern Rail were cut on 10 November. |
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Warehouses, rail lines and houses were destroyed and damaged, but the docks were largely untouched. |
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In the days when gentlemen carried swords, there were no lines in the Chamber. |
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The nearest London Underground station is Westminster, on the District, Circle and Jubilee lines. |
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The Knarr soon attracted the interest of local regatta sailors, who liked its lines and performance. |
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When two of those people are judges, the tension among two lines of precedent may be resolved as follows. |
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If the two courts are in separate, parallel jurisdictions, there is no conflict, and two lines of precedent may persist. |
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Served by many lines in the urban areas such as the West Coast Main Line and branches. |
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The black kurrajong has a fibrous bark that Aboriginal artefact-makers used as a raw material to make string for their lines and carry-bags. |
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Seven of the eleven London Underground lines run through the City, serving eleven stations. |
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The city's primary mainline station is Lime Street station, which acts as a terminus for several lines into the city. |
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Since summer 2007, Thomson cruise lines have included Newcastle as a departure port on its Norwegian and Fjords cruise. |
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The vertical lines are drill holes for explosives used during road construction. |
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Their product lines becoming vulnerable to the new economic conditions, and resulted in the industry's decline. |
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Some of this uplift was along old lines of weakness left from the Caledonian and Variscan Orogenies long before. |
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In the 19th century, transport infrastructure improved with stations on three different railway lines. |
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This line represents an average of the national poverty lines of the world's poorest countries, expressed in international dollars. |
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Mountain lines and distant horizons lend space and largeness to his compositions. |
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By 1991, it had disposed of all of the assets within these two business lines. |
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The Eurofighter Typhoon is unique in modern combat aircraft in that there are four separate assembly lines. |
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Preston once had lines to Southport and Longridge which closed to passengers in 1965 and 1930 respectively. |
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The city has several mainline railway stations that connect to London Waterloo amongst other lines in southern England. |
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I shall continue to work on it as long as I can and other people, I hope, will follow along such lines. |
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In 1880, Heaviside researched the skin effect in telegraph transmission lines. |
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Lineation is very much a matter of syntax, organizing the poem's grammar across its lines in ways significant and central to the poem's meaning. |
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Therefore, you could give an inline nonreplaced element a line-height of 1em and still have its background overlap the content of other lines. |
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Even before the LMR opened, connecting and other lines were planned, authorised or under construction, such as the Bolton and Leigh Railway. |
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Boulton greatly reduced the counterfeiting problem by adding lines to the coin edges, and striking slightly concave planchets. |
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When Watt returned to Britain, he began experiments along these lines with hopes of finding a commercially viable process. |
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Williams led a TRE development group working on CRT stores for radar applications, as an alternative to delay lines. |
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From the 1960s, several commercial lines were operated in Japan, without much success. |
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Worse still, as spectrographic technology improved, additional spectral lines in hydrogen were observed which Bohr's model couldn't explain. |
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The tangent line is a limit of secant lines just as the derivative is a limit of difference quotients. |
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There are, however, body languages that can transcend cultural lines. |
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Although it was initially only circulated privately, it was well received, and included lines of argumentation that were repeated a decade later in Leviathan. |
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The vicious guerrilla fighting in Spain, largely absent from the French campaigns in Central Europe, severely disrupted the French lines of supply and communication. |
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He bent down slowly and got so close to my face, I could see the lines in his glossy, unchapped lips and the stubbled hairs in the crack of his butt-chin. |
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It is also served by railway lines to Nuneaton via Bedworth. |
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For a legal serve, one of the server's feet must be in the service box, not touching any part of the service box lines, as the player strikes the ball. |
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Vincent, intercepting and destroying ships on the Spanish supply lines. |
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In some mountainous and high altitude rail lines, steam engines remain in use because they are less affected by reduced air pressure than diesel engines. |
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The reform movement soon split along certain doctrinal lines. |
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If a point be taken within a circle, and more than two equal straight lines fall from the point on the circle, the point taken is the centre of the circle. |
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The cheese box bridges two separate telephone lines. It is often used by bookmakers and bettors to place free calls for accepting or placing bets. |
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The Interregnum put a stop, or at least a caesura, to these lines of influence and allowed a seemingly fresh start for all forms of literature after the Restoration. |
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The French forces were to effectively gain control over the area between the French border and the German lines and were to probe the German defences. |
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For most of my life, I've watched my mother resist the urge to color outside the lines. Not because she didn't want to do it, but because some part of her wasn't free enough. |
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It comes from the fact that skaters are more likely, as you say, to color outside the lines, and that inclination frightens and confuses most people and institutions. |
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Five main rail lines were cut in London and rolling stock damaged. |
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In the nongilled mushrooms, the hymenium lines the inner surfaces of the tubes of boletes and polypores, or covers the teeth of spine fungi and the branches of corals. |
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Each rapid transit system consists of one or more lines, or circuits. |
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Notable lines closed were the Scarborough and Whitby Railway, Malton and Driffield Railway and the secondary main line between Northallerton and Harrogate via Ripon. |
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Plows, snowblowers and dump trucks have formed their winter conga lines, and most Montreal Island cities say they'll have streets and sidewalks cleared of snow by Thursday. |
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In his smaller poetic works, Johnson relied on short lines and filled his work with a feeling of empathy, which possibly influenced Housman's poetic style. |
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The vote again went down party lines, and Morrison was elected. |
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The graphic presentation may use straight lines and fixed angles, and often a fixed minimum distance between stations, to simplify the display of the transit network. |
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Each frame of the manuscript has about fourteen full lines of text. |
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I attempt to find emotional or rhetorical cruces and to connect these in as graceful a way as I can manage in roughly the same number of lines as Seneca used. |
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Back in the early 80's when Amtrak was CTCing the Northeast corridor the operators union notified Amtrak that only they could operate CTC on ex PRR lines. |
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For instance, the Wenhu Line of the Taipei Metro serves many relatively sparse neighbourhoods and feeds into and complements the high capacity metro lines. |
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Other nearby tube stations are Embankment connecting the District, Circle, Northern and Bakerloo lines, and Leicester Square on the Northern and Piccadilly lines. |
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The nightly closures are used for maintenance, but some lines stay open on New Year's Eve and run for longer hours during major public events such as the 2012 London Olympics. |
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There were trenches for us men, but no place of safety for our horses nearer than this long and narrow donga which ran from within our lines towards those of the Boers. |
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Major rail lines run London to Norwich, London to Cambridge and King's Lynn, and London to Southend with a number of rural branch lines servicing the wider region. |
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As a result, however, the rival dynastic lines clashed, often violently. |
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It's two weeks until opening night and our lines are still not down yet. |
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When lowering the height of Deciduous trees, especially under utility lines, utilize drop crotch pruning where possible to minimize the likelihood of suckering. |
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Along Hammond's lines, Raymond Williams explains art as a set of practices influenced by broad cultural factors rather than simply the ideas of genius alone. |
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There were even moments when, looking into her cheval-glass, she cried out against that arrangement in comely lines and tints which got for her the dulia she delighted in. |
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Dangdut attempts to form many popular music genres like rock, pop, and traditional music to create this new sound that lines up with the consumers' tastes. |
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We derive an explicit rule for when eikonalization is valid, and provide a direct connection to the picture of multiple Wilson lines crossing a shockwave. |
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This is a reversal of the usual method of etching, where the lines of the design are exposed to the acid, and the plate printed by the intaglio method. |
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No services will operate on the other lines for the time being. |
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The lyrics ultimately paint a picture of dystopia, the inevitable result of a world devoid of empathy and compassion, answering the question posed in the opening lines. |
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The script itself contains variable and command substitution, the read command, and a while loop to get everything done in less than 10 lines of executable code! |
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The Cromford Canal was largely abandoned in 1944, and several of the rail lines passing through the Peak were closed as uneconomic in the 1960s as part of the Beeching Axe. |
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The Great Western Main Line and its branches such as the Henley and Marlow branch lines link the southern side of the Chilterns with London Paddington. |
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He was seen by an aeroplane, our Archie gunner and a whole division to crash in their lines just opposite our trenches, much jubilation and more congratulations. |
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This paint program supports lines, circles, and textured fills. |
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The graticule is formed by the lines of constant latitude and constant longitude, which are constructed with reference to the rotation axis of the Earth. |
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Two new lines opened in 2015 extending the network to the southern suburbs of Wilford and Clifton and the western suburbs of Beeston and Chilwell. |
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Along the same lines, Kipling repeatedly warned against revising the Treaty of Versailles in Germany's favour, which he predicted would lead to a new world war. |
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The superintendent helped gerrymander the school district lines in order to keep the children of the wealthy gated community in the better school all the way across town. |
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Procurement of a new fleet of Metrocar trains, a new signalling system, overhaul and maintenance of structures, track and overhead lines, and further station improvements. |
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In the 12th century a few lines were added to complete the account. |
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The movie opens with a group of medieval pilgrims journeying through the Kentish countryside as a narrator speaks the opening lines of the General Prologue. |
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In a 2010 interview with The Telegraph, Caine spoke of the impersonations and how everyone he meets quotes lines at him, to the point he quotes them quoting him. |
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The trams are electrically powered from 750 V DC overhead lines. |
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Its first organised group was the Ancient Order of Druids, founded in London in 1781 along Masonic lines as a mutual benefit society and still extant today. |
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The East Coast and West Coast main railway lines connect the major cities and towns of Scotland with each other and with the rail network in England. |
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Pieces cut through the engine's fan case, engine bay, internal fuel tank and hydraulic and fuel lines before leaving through the aircraft's upper fuselage. |
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The spectators gaped helplessly as the balloon approached the power lines. |
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The Herdings line then runs on reserved track, and the Halfway line crosses the county border into Derbyshire and out again on reserved lines in the countryside. |
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Later on in his life, in 1862, Faraday used a spectroscope to search for a different alteration of light, the change of spectral lines by an applied magnetic field. |
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The plates of the head are thin and broad, and marked on their outer surface by lines of growth, and radiating ridges resembling the plates of the marsupite. |
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Cayley and Salmon discovered the 27 lines on a cubic surface. |
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Each version includes lines and entire scenes missing from the others. |
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It was several years before these remote lines were connected with the parent LSWR system and any through traffic to them was handled by the GWR and its associated companies. |
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The following year saw mixed gauge laid through the Box Tunnel, with the broad gauge now retained only for through services beyond Bristol and on a few branch lines. |
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Then we hunted up a place close by to hide the canoe in, amongst the thick willows. We took some fish off of the lines and set them again, and begun to get ready for dinner. |
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He tipples palmistry, and dines On all her fortune-telling lines. |
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A direct attack on the Danish lines failed but, later in the year, Alfred saw a means of obstructing the river so as to prevent the egress of the Danish ships. |
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The website got two million attempted connections within the first five minutes of the tickets going on sale and an average of 2,500 people on the phone lines every minute. |
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A series of Norman victories along the route cut the city's supply lines and in December 1066, isolated and intimidated, its leaders yielded London without a fight. |
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Preserved GWR lines include those from Totnes to Buckfastleigh, Paignton to Kingswear, Bishops Lydeard to Minehead, and Kidderminster to Bridgnorth. |
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Stephenson was farsighted in realising that the individual lines being built would eventually be joined together, and would need to have the same gauge. |
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He advocated a national network of railways, based upon what he had seen of the development of colliery lines and locomotive technology in the north of England. |
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Lionel Kessler, relaxing perhaps on a Louis Quinze day bed, garlanded all round with lines of beauty, seeing welcome proof that his clever maligned young friend was a mensch. |
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He created some works along more sombre lines, including Dante Sonata, which symbolised the unending struggle between the children of darkness and the children of light. |
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He would also rather be a tyrant and recites some lines of Ercles. |
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It recruited largely Indian troops, and trained them along European lines. |
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The Lerner and Loewe musical was still quite recent at the time and his widow Jackie quoted its lines in a 1963 Life interview following JFK's assassination. |
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Richmond offered an entirely new view of the play's love story lines. |
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A body within the Puritan movement in the Church of England sought to abolish the office of bishop and remake the Church of England along Presbyterian lines. |
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This new club was built on palatial lines, the design being based on the Palazzo Farnese in Rome, and its Saloon in particular is regarded as the finest of all London's clubs. |
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In the United Kingdom the early lines of the Great Western Railway were built to Brunel's broad gauge, which was also associated with a more generous loading gauge. |
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In Melbourne several double track lines have a third track signalled in both directions, so that two lines are available in the peak direction in the AM and PM peaks. |
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Due to a clause in the Act the railway was managed as the independent Darlington Section until 1876, when the lines became the NER's Central Division. |
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The Union Pacific Railroad has since acquired both of these lines, but continues to operate them as separate lines in a directional running setup. |
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In 1963 Richard Beeching published his report The Reshaping of British Railways, which recommended closing the network's least used stations and lines. |
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Some other names for specific types of raised pavement markers include convex vibration lines, Botts' dots, delineators, cat's eyes, road studs, or road turtles. |
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