For Slow Food, Alice is an international vice president and member of the president's council, according to the group's organigram. |
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Slow and highly attenuating lithosphere exists beneath this portion of the Anatolian plate and geometry of the Benioff zones. |
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Their table mates belong to Slow Food Pittsburgh, which is dedicated to good eating. |
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The drugs can't arrest the disease's progress, but they can slow it down considerably. |
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She's a slow and methodical worker, and her drawings reflect the extra care she takes. |
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Slow scene changes, line fluffs and anachronistic props appear occasionally. |
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Slow readers are more likely to be rated unfavourably than are faster readers. |
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Slow down your eating, savor your food, and enjoy sharing life with family and friends. |
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Slow motion, rapidly crosscut with regular speed footage, gives a sense of the breakneck pace of battle. |
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Slow progress was made, but we managed to get to the bathtub before the water overflowed. |
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The first time I heard about the Slow Food movement, recently arrived on our shores from its native Italy, I thought the whole idea sounded cute. |
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It is perhaps the fact that Laner is a jack of all trades and a master of none, that makes Slow Food, as a whole, an inessential release. |
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Slow fades and dissolve shots are also used to complement the film's unhurried, unforced pace. |
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Slow circulation leads to a build-up of waste products, but can be stimulated with dry skin brushing. |
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Slow and stately movement is compounding the lost opportunities of earlier wasted years. |
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Slow food makes pleasure a priority, a return to traditional foods and the experience of eating. |
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This captures the very earliest stages of fall in a way few games even attempt, blending serotinal greens with the slow incursion of rusty reds. |
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Slow calibration drift is a subtle and insidious source of unreliable instrument readings. |
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Slow summer bookings have prompted offers of 1970s prices for package holidays. |
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The Spring 2002, we ordered our first heritage turkey from Slow Food in New York. |
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Slow shutter speed, high contrast and serendipitous symmetry made the risk well worth it. |
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Slow simmering of whole cloves in liquids such as stocks, soups and stews releases a mild garlic flavor. |
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Slow of foot, but agile of mind, how did he catch the speedy antelope and other game which provided him with his protein? |
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Church attendance continues on a long, slow, steady decline, according to Church of England statistics. |
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Until the drive towards economic and monetary union the development of the capital provisions had been slow. |
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First-time heart attacks typically occur over a longer period of time, with a slow, sometimes hourslong buildup to the 911 call. |
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Also, the progress of constructing ideal hyperaccumulators by using biological technologies is slow. |
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The area of each specimen was lased imbricately twice with a uniformly slow speed at a 90-degree angle to the surface and at a distance of 1 mm. |
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When dealing with values in the unit interval we expect the speed of incremence to slow down the closer we come to maximal belief. |
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These Normans began a long period of slow conquest during which almost all of Wales was at some point subject to Norman interference. |
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The nurse always must be alert to signs of slow leak or insidious infiltration. |
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Henry's pace through Staffordshire was slow, delaying the confrontation with Richard so that he could gather more recruits to his cause. |
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England's naval organisation was haphazard and the mobilisation of fleets when war broke out was slow. |
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A small minority of critical scholars were slow to accept the latest translation. |
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His speech development was also slow, and he retained a stammer, or hesitant speech, for the rest of his life. |
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The failures of his marshals and a slow resumption of the offensive on his part cost him any advantage that this victory might have secured. |
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The existing system of canals was inexpensive but was too slow and too limited in geography. |
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Whittle was unable to interest the government in his invention, and development continued at a slow pace. |
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The faster the incoming air is, however, the less efficient it becomes to slow it to subsonic speeds. |
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The inlet system's job for transonic and supersonic aircraft is to slow the air and perform some of the compression. |
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In the Eastern Empire the slow infiltration of the Balkans by the Slavs added a further difficulty for Justinian's successors. |
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In the 17th century there was slow progress in trade and population growth. |
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But Newton insisted that divine intervention would eventually be required to reform the system, due to the slow growth of instabilities. |
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Being so lighthanded the vessel could not be properly managed and could carry but little sail, consequently her progress was but slow. |
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Though the basking shark is large and slow, it can breach, jumping entirely out of the water. |
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Experts forecast that the economy will slow in the coming months. |
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In zebrafish, the adaxial cells are precursors to the embryonic slow muscle fibers. |
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To distant observers the light appears, due to gravitational time dilation, to slow down as it approaches the antihorizon. |
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The antivibration systems now mean that hand-held close-up photos can be taken at very slow speeds without blurring. |
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His barehandedness was not unusual. Unlike position players, pitchers had in general been slow to seek the protection of a glove. |
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Big data has the potential to revolutionise the global healthcare system, but barriers to its adoption mean progress is slow. |
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There was a long line at the grocery store because the checker was so slow. |
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Mrs Parsons was as brisk as her husband was dawdlesome, and as plump and perky as he was slow. |
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The slow cinema verite pacing of this film suited it's totally depressoid theme. |
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As planned, within seconds of touching down, the space craft released a 40-foot-wide drag parachute to help slow it down. |
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Just as Ione began to slow, she struck Ione's sword aside and drove her own blade home. |
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This animal may be a fast runner, but it has been a dreadfully slow evolver. |
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Once in the classroom, students also employed foot-dragging strategies to slow the transition from the hall state to the student state. |
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I witnessed the slow burial of dead shells and bones, whose long journey toward fossildom was just beginning. |
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He looked down at the puppy fast asleep in his arms. Maybe this furbaby would slow down the ticking of her biological clock, too. |
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She was not a giggler, despite her extreme youth, and she smiled the small slow smile that men brought to her face without knowing why. |
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The glabrous old head cranks round on him, stiff and slow, until the clouded eyes draw level with his own. |
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Glycin developers are non-staining and have exceptionally good keeping properties, but are too slow in action for general use. |
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When we reach the piano, Ormus sits down and starts to play a slow, haunting gospelly tune. |
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They could explore the convoys leaving America because prevailing winds and currents made the transport of heavy metals slow and predictable. |
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Heavy goods transport on these roads was by means of slow, broad wheeled, carts hauled by teams of horses. |
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Instead, France's economic growth and industrialisation process was slow and steady through the 18th and 19th centuries. |
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Gene flow may slow this process by spreading the new genetic variants also to the other populations. |
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The railways entered a slow decline owing to a lack of investment and changes in transport policy and lifestyles. |
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Opponents also claim that the absence of a market mechanism may slow innovation in treatment and research. |
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In the Scottish Highlands too, the Gaels were generally slow to accept the Scottish Reformation. |
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With the promotion of birth control in the 1980s, the growth rate began to slow. |
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Culturally speaking, it saw the beginning of the slow decline of the Cornish language. |
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Its German language services are tailored for German language learners by being spoken at slow speed. |
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A long siege could slow down the army, allowing help to come or for the enemy to prepare a larger force for later. |
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The Western version of the canter is called a lope and while collected and balanced, is expected to be slow and relaxed. |
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Once there, the New Guard advances towards the Old Guard in slow time and halts. |
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Today, baked beans can be made in a slow cooker or in a modern oven using a traditional beanpot, Dutch oven, or casserole dish. |
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Life in the countryside was slow but lively, with numerous local festivals and social events. |
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The first months of 1821 marked a slow and steady decline into the final stage of tuberculosis. |
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By the middle of that year, her decline was unmistakable, and she began a slow, irregular deterioration. |
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Hamilton had been told by the McLaren team to slow down and that Button would not pass him if he did so. |
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Scientists of the day were well aware that the natural decay of radium releases energy at a slow rate over thousands of years. |
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The rate of release is too slow to have practical utility, but the total amount released is huge. |
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The rhythm for both fast and slow hornpipes is very even and should be executed that way by the dancer. |
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The conception of an opera as a coherent structure was slow to capture Handel's imagination and he composed no operas for five years. |
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Quiet and contemplative, and requiring little virtuosity from the soloist, the piece was slow to gain popularity among violists. |
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As the movement began to slow down, many acts began to falter and broke up. |
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Progress on the scheme was slow and in 1861 Prince Albert died, without having seen his ideas come to fruition. |
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Chaplin suffered a series of minor strokes in the late 1960s, which marked the beginning of a slow decline in his health. |
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In Japan, where the popular film tradition integrated silent movie and live vocal performance, talking pictures were slow to take root. |
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However, even with access to both technologies, most of the Hollywood companies remained slow to produce talking features of their own. |
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Greens come in all shapes and sizes, fast, slow, big crown, small crown and so on. |
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Her meteoric rise to power was followed by a slow, lackluster career at the top. |
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He had a fairly slow start to his racing career, using his own money to help work his way up the ranks. |
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Unique flight cams show the trajectory of the dart through the air in slow motion to sometimes surprising results. |
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O'Sullivan himself has stated his desire for entertaining the watching public, and has said that slow, gritty games put viewers off. |
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It was also slow in coming to its decisions, as certain ones required the unanimous consent of the entire Assembly. |
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Sure, using the brakes will slow the car, but just as with throttle input, there is a finite amount of brake input available to you mid-drift. |
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Scotland was slow to accept William, who summoned a Convention of the Estates which met on 14 March 1689 in Edinburgh. |
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Although the recession reached its trough in June 2009, voters remained frustrated with the slow pace of the economic recovery. |
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From about 1921, Britain had started a slow economic recovery from the war and the subsequent slump. |
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This was more successful, but escort duty tied the fighters to the bombers' slow speed and made them more vulnerable. |
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In this role, the Blenheims again proved to be too slow and vulnerable against Luftwaffe fighters, and they took constant casualties. |
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The army and civil authorities in India were very slow to respond to the needs of the troops and civilian refugees. |
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Progress was slow, as movement was made difficult by monsoon rains and IV Corps was short of supplies. |
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Tibetan Buddhism has also made slow inroads into the country in recent years. |
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This trend has begun to slow due to ongoing population growth in Tokyo and the high cost of living there. |
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The 1960s saw a slow but sure increase in the popularity of foreign cars on the British market. |
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Varying requirements and the complications of international politics caused slow progress. |
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Federal Reserve increase the interest rate, slow or stop the growth of the money supply, and reduce the money supply. |
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We'll mosey along toward the river. Kinder take it easy an' drift the herd down slow so as to let the cattle put on flesh. |
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This energy is taken from the rotational energy of the black hole causing the latter to slow. |
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This was not a satisfactory solution, so researchers looked for a way to slow penicillin excretion. |
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The line is only for high speed passenger trains eliminating slow freight and commuter trains. |
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The study found that even very low concentrations of crude oil can slow the pace of fish heartbeats. |
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In particular, Amnesty criticised the continuation of gas flaring and Shell's slow response to oil spills. |
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He, did, however, accept that more had to be done to assist maternal health and that progress in this area had been slow. |
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The kirk used theatre for its own purposes in schools and was slow to suppress popular folk dramas. |
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We were all supposed to be wearing the uniforms and the helmet, walking in slow motion with the heat haze. |
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Having ridden a distance of two or three miles, Garey slackened his pace, and put the mustang to a slow walk. |
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However, on the whole the play initially received mixed reviews on its opening at the Majestic Theatre on Broadway and was slow to earn money. |
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Many previous films about the RMS Titanic shot water in slow motion, which did not look wholly convincing. |
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He was a slow learner, and one day Wittgenstein hit him two or three times on the head, causing him to collapse. |
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Despite slow maturation so that growing up is rarely achieved by two and a half years, Bulldogs' lives are relatively short. |
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However, the changes have been criticized as being too slow or merely cosmetic. |
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Congress on lengthening the barrier, but progress has been slow due to lobbying and lack of funding. |
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Construction work or collisions on the freeway distract and slow down commuters, contributing to even longer delays. |
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The Revolution increased the political instability in Mexico, but did not significantly slow United States investment. |
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Puddling was a means of decarburizing pig iron by slow oxidation as the iron was manually stirred using a long rod. |
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In spring, the moult is slow, starting from the forehead, across the back, toward the belly. |
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Apical growth of the stem was slow from 1926 through 1936 when the tree was competing with herbs and shrubs and probably shaded by larger trees. |
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After a slow start to the following season, Advocaat resigned from his post in December 2001 and was replaced by Alex McLeish. |
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The surrounding scenery and wildlife are regarded as attractions of the village, as is the slow pace of life. |
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During the Industrial Revolution the Welsh woollen industry was slow to mechanize compared to the mills of northern England. |
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However, the technological revolution took much longer in Wales than it had in England, with slow adoption of machinery. |
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Political activism in the Rhondda has a deep link with trade unions and the socialist movement but was initially slow to develop. |
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Plumer continued the tactical development of the Fifth Army, during its slow and costly progress in August. |
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This theory states that slow geological processes have occurred throughout the Earth's history and are still occurring today. |
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I concede that the work has been slow so far, but it should speed up soon. |
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In addition to their streamlined bodies, some can slow their heart rate to conserve oxygen. |
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Michael Williams' book On the slow train takes its name from the Flanders and Swann song. |
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The changes leading to this stage in Europe were initiated in the Agricultural Revolution of the 18th century and were initially quite slow. |
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This particular example is used by some to illustrate the slow change from racism towards acceptance and equality of all citizens in London. |
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It all began as a joke, but the Slow Food movement is no laughing matter. |
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Slow learners and late starters have, over time, proven just the opposite. |
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Electronic signs now flash the words SLOW DOWN at speeding vehicles just before the start of the roadworks to give motorists the chance to kill their speed. |
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The Slow Food movement, based in the north of Italy, has recently highlighted the unique position of trattorias in Italian life, awarding symbols for excellence. |
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It seems like overconfidence is one of the big targets of Thinking, Fast and Slow. |
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Slow music stared, and then Emmet broke into song with his sweet voice. |
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Slow economic times don't have to spell disaster for your business. |
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Slow scene changes, line fluffs, and anachronistic props appear occasionally. |
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Slow moving or static high pressure areas with their temperature inversions typify these conditions and cause rising pollution if they enclose a source of pollution. |
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Slow Food is coming to Scotland this Thursday when a a Grand Scottish Banquet will be held at Edinburgh's Sheraton Grand Hotel. |
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Slow to adapt to a new formation the visitors toiled in the early stages, but their defence was solid with Simon Burnett unbreachable in goal. |
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The process of cooling and creating the vacuum was fairly slow, so Savery later added an external cold water spray to quickly cool the steam. |
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The slow speed and large mono chamber of the hover barge actually helps reduce the effect of wave action, giving a very smooth ride. |
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However, this new approach was slow to take root in the biological sciences, the last bastion of the concept of fixed natural types. |
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Severe winter cold helps reduce adelgid populations and slow their spread, so the recent trend toward relatively mild winters is actually facilitating the adelgid onslaught. |
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Townshend had written it as a slow blues, but after several abortive attempts, it was turned into a more powerful song with a bass solo from Entwistle. |
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Clapton's nickname of 'Slowhand' came from Giorgio Gomelsky, a pun on the slow handclapping that ensued when Clapton stopped playing while he replaced a string. |
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Slow slip helps scientists balance the books at subduction zones by explaining where all the motion of the subducting plate goes. |
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This slow growth continued until, after the Second World War, the Abercrombie Plan called for the establishment of a ring of new towns around London. |
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He seemed likeable, a scrupulous, slow young man, without the disengagedness of Considine, that light-hearted, light-handed seducer who even shot lions negligently. |
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That's where the Crock Pot Smart-Set 6-Quart Programmable Slow Cooker, from Rival, Milford, Mass. |
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Reducing the load will cause the motor to speed up, and increasing the load will cause the motor to slow down until the load and motor torque are equal. |
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Depending on the sequence, the rotor may turn forwards or backwards, and it may change direction, stop, speed up or slow down arbitrarily at any time. |
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Due to the slow pace of informal negotiations, BAE Systems exercised its put option which saw investment bank Rothschild appointed to give an independent valuation. |
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Daria closed her eyes, exhaling slow smoke through her nostrils, listening to the bumpity sound of wheels on the polished cobblestone unevenness of the street. |
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Their debut started slow, but bulleted to number six in its fourth week. |
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This allows trains to use one track where the other track is out of service due to track maintenance work, or a train failure, or for a fast train to overtake a slow train. |
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All of those uncompressed images are going to slow down the page load. |
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As progress at the siege was slow, James sent Hans the royal gunner in Robert Barton's ship and then the Earl of Arran with provisions and more artillery. |
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On a slow journey back to France, Voltaire stayed at Leipzig and Gotha for a month each, and Kassel for two weeks, arriving at Frankfurt on 31 May. |
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The problem was not the radar, but the flow of information from trackers from the Observer Corps to the fighters, which took many steps and was very slow. |
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Romanesco is slow to blow and more forgiving to grow than most cauliflowers, while being perhaps the most delicious and certainly the nuttiest-flavoured of the lot. |
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The slow merger of Baltica and Laurentia, and the northward movement of bits and pieces of Gondwana created numerous new regions of relatively warm, shallow sea floor. |
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Population growth in the early phases of the town was described as being slow due to the dependence on the growth of work places at the Rothes Colliery. |
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He was carrying a lantern now held in the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford, and a search of his person revealed a pocket watch, several slow matches and touchwood. |
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The economic benefits of Union which had been promised by proponents of the Act were slow to materialise, causing widespread discontent amongst the population. |
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However, the Neolithic Revolution in Brittany did not happen due to a radical change of population, but by slow immigration and exchange of skills. |
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The first buyers were mainly speculators, so although the lots initially sold well, few purchasers settled on their lots, and the town was slow to fill. |
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Milton's poetry was slow to see the light of day, at least under his name. |
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She was quick, beautiful, imperious, while he was quiet, slow, and misty. |
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In America, the commercial industry for bison has been slow to develop despite individuals, such as Ted Turner, who have long marketed bison meat. |
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Language revitalization is an attempt to slow or reverse language death. |
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The Seine, Thames, Meuse, Scheldt and Rhine rivers joined and flowed west along the English Channel as a wide slow river before eventually reaching the Atlantic Ocean. |
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Other mercury isotopes are converted when irradiated with slow neutrons into one another, or formed mercury isotopes which beta decay into thallium. |
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Usually, more experienced dancers will do the slow hornpipe but younger dancers will start out with the fast hornpipe and then switch in later years. |
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Unlike his father, Henry did not exploit the large debts that the barons frequently owed to the Crown, and was slow to collect any sums of money due to him. |
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Fast sections and slow sections were juxtaposed against each other. |
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The rebels had counted on aid from Henry, but he lacked domestic support and was slow to mobilise an army, not arriving in France until the next summer. |
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Scipio, from which the regimental slow march of the British Grenadier Guards is derived, was performed as a stopgap, waiting for the arrival of Faustina Bordoni. |
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Puddling was a means of decarburizing pig iron by slow oxidation, with iron ore as the oxygen source, as the iron was manually stirred using a long rod. |
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While Ada and her husband Alisdair have had no sexual, nor even mildly affectionate, interaction, the lessons with Baines become a slow seduction for her affection. |
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The variety of angles in the course, from slow bends to hairpins, will both test your skill as a driver and allow you the opportunity to pass other carts. |
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The landscape of the Rhondda was formed by glacial action during the last ice age, as slow moving glaciers gouged out the deep valleys that exist today. |
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As he finished he heard the footsteps of the woman who daily came to work for him. They were slow, dragging footsteps implying the bulk they gracelessly shifted. |
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A choir sang one of the Lamentations of Jeremiah. The mournful melisma accompanied the slow procession to the palace built by Herod the Great, at present untenanted. |
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The process of unliming hides and skins in tanning has been a slow and disgusting one, consisting in soaking the skins in a bath of manure in water, called bate. |
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Slow breathing reduces chemoreflex response to hypoxia and hypercapnia, and increases baroreflex sensitivity. |
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In collaboration with composer David Julyan, Nolan's films featured slow and atmospheric scores with minimalistic expressions and ambient textures. |
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In general, the fossil record shows a very slow appearance of these lifeforms in the Precambrian, with many cyanobacterial species making up much of the underlying sediment. |
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During the slow recovery from this catastrophe a previously obscure group, archosaurs, became the most abundant and diverse terrestrial vertebrates. |
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Gradually, despite the early punishment he received, Thompson warmed up and worked his way into the fight whilst Haye seemed to tire and slow down. |
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Historically, the basking shark has been a staple of fisheries because of its slow swimming speed, placid nature, and previously abundant numbers. |
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Davis, who later in his career acquired a reputation for slow play and overt use of tactics rather than break building, was a very different player at his best. |
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Pretending to be slow is fair game. Pretending to be injured is not. |
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If you didn't know Bill Nye well you might think to watch his easeful ways, and hear his slow, drawlsome speech, that he was lazy. Make you no such error. |
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Some states are slow to establish relations with new states and thus do not recognise them, despite having no dispute and sometimes favorable relations. |
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Johnson, 45 years old with thinning blond hair, was a strapping, cigar-smoking man from Owensboro, Kentucky, who still spoke in a kind of slow, backwoodsy drawl. |
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We had to slow our advance after the enemy mined the road ahead of us. |
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Response to Roberts' ministry was initially slow, but soon the crowds turned out and the meetings were carried on until the early hours of the morning. |
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It did not slow down the British war effort or recruiting for the army. |
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In January 1946, a number of mutinies broke out in the armed services, starting with that of RAF servicemen frustrated with their slow repatriation to Britain. |
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His discovery of the neutron made it possible to produce elements heavier than uranium in the laboratory by the capture of slow neutrons followed by beta decay. |
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Slow moving sea spiders are common, sometimes growing as large as a human hand. |
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Instead they were reduced to the slow attrition of a tonnage war. |
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Slow wave phase reversals between two zygomatic leads used monopolarly are often seen as such artifacts. |
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This series saw the introduction of new characters, such as Cranky, The Horrid Lorries and Old Slow Coach. |
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As a monetarist, Thatcher started out in her economic policy by increasing interest rates to slow the growth of the money supply and thus lower inflation. |
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And thus may the slow and imperfect wits of mortals be satisfied, that Providence to the Deity is no moliminous, laborious and distractious thing. |
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Slow roasting is better for lean or not so tender cuts such as topside or whole bolar blade, which are not suitable to be cooked very pink. |
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All of you cross-posting, cross-dressing trans-testicles come out of the woodwork late at night. Why is that? Slow night at the bath house? |
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Along with juice, the Slow Juicer can make soy milks, nut milk, cocktails, sauces, marinades, baby food and ice cream. |
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Slow left armer Waseem ali took 3 wickets only for 8 runs while Khurram Iqbal 2-7 and Talha Faheem 2-14 bowling well for the winner. |
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This guy is right up on my tail, so I will slow down to let him past. |
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Little is known about the young man John hired to instruct his son, except that he treated the younger boy harshly, chiding him for being slow and wayward. |
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I'm a confirmed morning person, a wind-up doll who starts my day in near-manic motion and ends it with slow, mechanical tasks requiring little energy or thought. |
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Its recurrence was regular, but as slow as the tolling of a death-knell. |
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After a few slow numbers, the band moved on to some more dancy tunes. |
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Slow lorises communicate with each other by marking areas with their scent. |
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The HEI program was terminated in 2008 due to slow progress. |
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Sales were slow at first, but now things are really motoring. |
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Cumbersome machines can endanger operators and slow down production. |
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Slow migrators, such as the red-eyed vireo or the great crested flycatcher, were the most adaptable to changes. |
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In the almost thirty years since Carlo Petrini began the Slow Food organization, he has been constantly engaged in the fight for food justice. |
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These autochthonous products have been nominated by the Kavadarci-based office of the Slow Food Foundation for Biodiversity. |
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The Slow Loris has giant eyes to hunt prey in the dark and is the only poisonous primate in the world. |
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Slow at first, then steadily, a stream of liquid drips off the incision. |
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Slow West was filmed in New Zealand and riffs on spaghetti western The Good, the Bad and the Ugly. |
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Globe, retired private landlord and residential lettings specialist Slow Mr Speaker COMMONS Speaker John Bercow's officiation of PMQs causes me concern. |
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Moreover, it is significant that the first Slow Food presidium in the world was set up in Tuscany in 1999 for the Zolfino bean, whose progress I followed for four years. |
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All published Instrument Routes, Visual Flight Rules and Slow Routes can be selected as can military and civilian airfields within the United States. |
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This has given rise to efforts like the Slow Church Movement and The Parish Collective which focus heavily on localized involvement across work, home, and church life. |
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Since 1986, the Slow Food movement has identified 254 presidia, or authentic artisanal food products, in Italy, from lardo fatback to onions, garlic, artichokes and apricots. |
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