Locally, linear grooves have been delicately eroded to form small meanders with undercut walls. |
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After removing the damaged portion of drywall, undercut the edges for a good clean opening. |
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They are now voicing confidence that the new deadline will be met, but it does undercut the political timeline here. |
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Roth has made the strange decision to constantly undercut the dramatic tension inherent within his own story. |
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And the way the information dribbled out over time, it undercut the credibility of the system. |
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As a working journalist and Guild member, I believe her comments undercut the credibility of my profession. |
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The fact that I won't have to undercut my sleeping cycle to do extra work is a relief. |
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But almost from the outset, Maskhadov was challenged and deliberately undercut by his ruthless and less principled rivals. |
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Others fear that the museum's financial concerns will undercut its artistic activities. |
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Or do I withhold punishment or censure and in so doing undercut the teacher's authority? |
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However well-intentioned that allusion might have been, it undercut the work's subtle emotional power. |
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The well deserved sleep Brooke didn't receive completely undercut her pleas for an early discharge from the hospital. |
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I undercut the top of the jugs with a belt sander so that you can get a good, solid grip. |
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The wall continues sheer to 30m and the first undercut and stalactites appear. |
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We would soon join them on a boulder slope which turned into a beautiful undercut cliff. |
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Fund managers do not rebate the cost of commission because they do not want to undercut advisers. |
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The moist yet cool south-west airstreams undercut the dry and hot continental air, leading to vigorous and deep convection. |
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The big boys wanted to undercut prices to force the small guys out of business. |
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The sales team pushes back at Wilkes, arguing that the new products undercut their efforts to sell brokers and lenders on the exchange. |
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The backside is undercut and serrated to prevent glare and is dovetailed into the slide with a set-screw for windage adjustments. |
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One would seek to undercut or outmaneuver countervailing coalitions, a latter-day British grand strategy, so to speak. |
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The latest proposal to undercut the fundamental democratic institution of the jury trial came from an unelected legal laywoman. |
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Will his subsequent role as a leading critic of the war enhance this theme, undercut it, or have little impact? |
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These channels sometimes undercut farm roads and fields, causing them to collapse. |
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The base of the cliff is heavily undercut, so you certainly do not want to be here on a stormy day or when a full spring ebb tide is running. |
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They regard Valencian as just a southern dialect of Catalan, so this move has actually undercut their status. |
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Moreover, both moments of elemental happiness are undercut by sharp turns toward alienation and fear. |
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Either way, the telecoms operators are likely to see it as a subsidy to undercut market pricing. |
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But the fabled label lost out when affordable copies of its candy-coloured cardies undercut its trade. |
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A post or an undercut front sight may snag on the bottom of the holster loop during your draw. |
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He is passionately persnickety in a way that Hollywood has typically undercut and portrayed as snobby. |
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Property reform helped undercut popular support for the violent Maoist group. |
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Declinism tends to produce overly cautious behavior that could undercut our influence. |
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In 1984 Congress undercut the exclusionary rule which barred evidence obtained in violation of the Fourth Amendment. |
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Hence, in theory, Egg should be able to undercut the Goliaths and provide better value for its customers. |
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Unfortunately, the touchingness of the nunchuk scene is undercut slightly by the extreme obviousness of the body double. |
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This is an opportunity to undercut its domestic power base and also to curb extremism. |
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But to undercut Edwards' populist image, the Republicans suggest that Edwards should have done just that. |
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Almost immediately, the emergence of the Cold War undercut hopes that the United Nations could serve as a means of collective security. |
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Use a cold chisel and a hand-drilling hammer to undercut the edges so the hole is wider at the bottom than it is at the driveway surface. |
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His descriptive passages are often a rhapsodic rush to the edge of sentimentality, only undercut in the final moment by a shift in tone. |
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Just be careful not to undercut the prices you're charging through your sales reps and distributors. |
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Paris can afford to undercut rivals thanks to its excellent infrastructure. |
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A smaller company would have to establish a reputation, and may have to undercut competitors on price, narrowing down its profits, he said. |
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An ambitious kid could make decent headway if he was willing to smooth-talk lots of retailers and undercut his competitors. |
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Now they are being drastically undercut by competition from the rest of Europe and particularly from Asia. |
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The rocks are slightly undercut, with small shrimps and anemones beneath the overhangs. |
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These subsidies distort commodity prices and undercut U.S. exporters in key markets around the world. |
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During soft markets, insurers tend to undercut prices for competitive reasons. |
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I learned quickly that if I wanted any of this business, I had to undercut everyone else's prices. |
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The contractor glanced at the file, read the information he required, undercut his competitors and got the contract. |
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But there is still anger in the industry about British firms being undercut by hauliers from abroad who are paying so much less for fuel. |
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The company's low cost base allows it to undercut competitors, offer cheaper computers, better service and still have better margins. |
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Opposite the cottonwood, on the far bank, is a 40-foot undercut cliff that resembles the prow of a ship. |
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Most print dealers were so desperate that they would undercut your price by a measly hundred dollars just to ace you out of a deal. |
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Over millennia a crystal clear creek had undercut the slope to create the hidden canyon. |
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Directly opposite, the cliff wall becomes heavily undercut and forms a 5m-long tunnel. |
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Or maybe, because the meandering river had undercut the bank below their old ponderosa, Duke and Doreen sensed that the tree was no longer safe. |
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This photo may undercut her assertion that she was cut out of the loop. |
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There's a series of perfectly overhanging trees, some of which are partly submerged creating some enticing looking weed rafts and the bank would appear to be undercut too. |
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The reeded footposts with undercut foliage are typical of Salem beds of the Federal period, but the dramatic canted, carved paw feet move the bed into the classical style. |
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The idea is that America has become a madhouse, but the film's idiotic storyline and grotesque stereotypes of mental illness undercut its intended social impact. |
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The Model 41 has an undercut square post foresight, but its backsight attracted interest since it is mounted on a rib extending rearwards from the barrel. |
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For them, it was assimilate or starve, with the constant reality of low-wage labor being undercut by new arrivals. |
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Was it a set-up by powerful but corrupt Saudis who felt the bootleggers had undercut their market or ripped them off over bribes or a share of the profits? |
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But false claims of biodegradability in the past and a lack of a widely accepted and credible degradability standard have undercut the public's trust. |
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Satellite television outfits like DirectTV have undercut cable on price and signed up millions of customers. |
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Particularly once people start dying, you have to figure out how to make the humor not undercut the emotion of the piece. |
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In the photo, the ostentatious monument is undercut by a temporary stall selling wares in its niche. |
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After years of struggling to find cheap, reliable labor in Oklahoma, he had found a way to undercut his competitors without closing up shop and moving overseas. |
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So everyone raising prices knows that a competitor could undercut them. |
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There is a battle to undercut rivals and yet still make a profit. |
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Rock transmits sound fairly well and heavy foot vibrations, if the ledge you're stood on is undercut below you, can warn the fish and make them nervous for a while. |
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The reef comprises interconnected blocks of rock which are undercut and full of fissures and cracks, providing concealment for an abundance of marine life. |
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The top of the undercut is formed at the boundary of a large shale band. |
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By tying the two together, it was just long enough to assist the top part of the climb until an undercut gave access to a narrow rift and easier descent. |
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To undercut the door jam, lay a piece of scrap flooring on the underlayment and using that as a guide, saw off the bottom the door jam so the plank will fit. |
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Much has been made of the film's structure, but I don't think its non-linearity really does much besides undercut any dramatic impact the film might have had. |
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It was also supported by trades unions, which feared that non-whites would agree to work for lower wages than Europeans and so undercut their standard of living. |
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A scrap of cardboard will support your handsaw so you can undercut the bottoms of the doorway moldings to allow for the flooring to slip underneath. |
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It looked impossible to step onto the chimney directly above, as it was undercut at its base, and the surface was smooth, with no holds to be seen. |
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Only later was my smugness undercut by the notion that the fly, dropping slowly through the water, could be mistaken by an artless fish for a hatchery pellet. |
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Economists have the concept of a Nash equilibrium to explain the situation where a small number of competitors tend not to undercut each other, even without colluding. |
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Studio executives say the counterfeits and free downloads off the Internet threaten to undercut their industry, as it did with the music industry. |
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Our customers are frequently faced with the necessity of deburring and polishing complex-shaped three-dimensional metal surfaces with undercut areas. |
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He says the decision would also complement the current push to regulate the labour hire industry and ensure employers did not use labour hire to undercut the award system. |
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Unleashing the Power of PR also debunks common myths that undercut the effectiveness of PR and obscure its real value. |
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The release drew criticism from musicians including Lily Allen and Kim Gordon, who felt the release undercut less successful acts. |
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Both Harrods and Harvey Nichols have backed out after initial interest because the product undercut their premium caviars. |
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Although moral arguments did play a secondary role, they usually had major resonance when used as a strategy to undercut competitors' profits. |
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Business Premier fares also slightly undercut air fares on similar routes, targeted at regular business travellers. |
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For too long, agency status has been used to undercut wages and casualise workplaces. |
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The carp often called Asian carp are voracious feeders of plankton and can undercut an entire ecosystem, imperiling a range of native fish. |
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The Standard Oil trust streamlined production and logistics, lowered costs, and undercut competitors. |
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Rosebery was in the Lords, but Harcourt controlled the Commons, where he often undercut the prime minister. |
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Another source of weight damage is from unblasted pillars or stubs left in the undercut area. |
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It is especially dangerous as both banks are undercut, and it has been the scene of a number of fatalities including those of a honeymoon couple. |
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Well, I'll be bound!! Another example of following the rules and being undercut on pricing by those who don't follow the regs. |
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He undercut rank and file militancy by bureaucratizing the union. |
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Too often her critique of orientalism is undercut both by the content of the texts she rites in support, and by her own repetition of the terms she anathematises. |
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He adopts for his names Greek words that either confirm the character or undercut him or her ironically, and sometimes lead to, or depend on, wordplay in the text. |
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However these objects are at least largely there because they carry layers of complex significance and symbolism that undercut any commitment to realism for its own sake. |
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The court's jurisdiction was gradually undercut by the King's Bench and Exchequer of Pleas with legal fictions, the Bill of Middlesex and Writ of Quominus respectively. |
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In the same section, Bobby Noble s essay on the history of drag kings in Toronto suggests that marginalized groups can perform, and thereby undercut, traditional masculinity. |
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New York subsidized this service which undercut rival ports. |
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