Broadly Sentence Examples

broadly
  • He smiled broadly and winked.

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  • People broadly agree that government should do at least this much.

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  • Broadly speaking, the forests here yield to steppes, and the soil is very fertile; but the whole region suffers periodically from drought.

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  • This selection of one market for detailed examination does not rob our sketch of generality, as might at first be thought, since broadly the history of the development of one market is the history of the development of all, and on the whole the economic explanation of the evolution that has taken place may be universalized.

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  • Broadly speaking, they may be divided into two classes, of which the first includes topographical, chorographical and general maps, the second the great variety designed for special purposes.

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  • Broadly speaking, all the brown races which inhabit the portion of Asia south of Siam and Indo-China, and the islands from the Philippines to Java, and from Sumatra to Timor, may be described as belonging to the Malayan family, if the aboriginal tribes, such as the Sakai and Semang in the Malay Peninsula, the Bataks in Sumatra, and the Muruts in Borneo, be excepted.

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  • The organization of the Lutheran Church (Eglise de la confession dAugsburg) is broadly similar.

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  • The Palaearctic Subregion is, broadly speaking, Europe and Asia, with the exception of India and China.

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  • The leaf has a broadly sheathing base succeeded by a short stalk bearing the pitcher, which represents a much enlarged midrib with a winglike lamina.

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  • The Aegithognathae, meant to comprise the passeres, woodpeckers and swifts, &c., are really schizognathous but with a vomer which is broadly truncated in front.

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  • Broadly speaking, the " smaller body" is characterized by a rigid adherence to old forms of dress and speech, to a disapproval of music and art, and to an insistence on the " Inward Light " which, at times, leaves but little room for the Scriptures or the historic Christ, although with no definite or intended repudiation of them.

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  • The whole region is characterized by a remarkable degree of physical uniformity, and may be broadly described as a vast plateau of an average elevation of 3000 ft., bounded westwards by the Ethiopian and Galla highlands and northwards by an inner and an outer coast range, skirting the south side of the Gulf of Aden in its entire length from the Harrar uplands to Cape Guardafui.

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  • The great part of this immense region consists of chapadoes, as the larger table-land areas are called, chapadas or smaller sections of the same, and broadly excavated river valleys.

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  • The white population is broadly divisible into the British and Dutch elements, the percentage of other whites in 1904 being but 8.6.

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  • Samuel's son, Francis Parkman, a graduate of Harvard in 1807, was one of the most eminent of the Boston clergymen, a pupil and friend of Channing, and noted among Unitarians for a broadly tolerant disposition.

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  • Broadly, the least costly arrangement is that in which the cost of the superstructure of a span is equal to that of a pier and foundation.

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  • The islands may be divided broadly into volcanic and coral islands, though the physiography of many islands is imperfectly known.

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  • Broadly speaking these methods of revelation are found in all ancient religions, but no other religion presents anything precisely analogous to prophecy.

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  • Although the relief is strong, the mountain forms are rounded rather than rugged; few of the summits deserve or receive the name of peaks; some are called domes, from their broadly rounded tons, others are known as balds, becatise the widespread forest cover is replaced over their heads by a grassy cap.

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  • Others more broadly interpret the concept of securing life, liberty, and property.

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  • We may broadly distinguish two main geographical elements in the alpine flora, namely, the northern element and the endemic element.

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  • It has been shown that the western provinces of Holland may be broadly defined as lying below sea-level.

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  • Mysticism may broadly be described as the effort to give effect to the craving for a union of the soul with the Deity already in this life; and asceticism as the effort to give effect to the hankering after an ever-progressive purification of the soul and an atoning for sin by renunciation and self-denial in things lawful.

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  • In the young of the year the whole head, neck and throat are clothed in dull black, and most of the feathers of the mantle and wing-coverts are broadly tipped and mesially streaked with tawny or lightish-grey.

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  • The Medina pieces, whether entire suras or isolated passages interpolated in Meccan suras, are accordingly pretty broadly distinct, as to their contents, from those issued in Mecca.

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  • But if the facts of the religion, broadly viewed, never underwent a change, the interpretation of those facts did so in no small degree.

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  • Broadly speaking, the Lower Egyptian was much better than the Upper Egyptian; a conclusion also evident in the art of the tombs done on the spot.

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  • Broadly speaking, the Balkan Peninsula may be divided into four areas which geologically are distinct.

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  • In common with lemmings and other representatives of the Microtinae, voles are, however, broadly distinguished from typical rats and mice by the structure of their three pairs of molar teeth.

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  • But, regarded broadly, the Highland mountains are monuments of erosion, the relic of an old tableland, the upper surface and former inclinations of which are shown approximately by the summits of the existing masses and the direction of the chief water-flows.

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  • The counties in which there was the largest increase in the decennial period-with Linlithgow first, followed by Lanark, Stirling, Renfrew, Dumbarton and thirteen others-principally belonged to the Central Plain, or Lowlands, in which, broadly stated, industries and manufactures, trade, commerce and agriculture and educational facilities have attained their highest development.

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  • The history of Judah is, broadly speaking, that of the Davidic dynasty and the Temple, and it begins at the time of the first king of the rival north.

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  • Broadly the malleable and ductile metals and alloys show a fibrous character when ruptured, the fusible ones a crystalline fracture.

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  • Broadly speaking, the Himalayas are peopled by Mongoloid tribes; the great river plains of Hindustan are still the home of the Aryan race; the triangular table-land has formed an arena for a long struggle between that gifted race from the north and what is known as the Dravidian stock in the south.

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  • Regarded broadly, four tolerably distinct types present themselves.

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  • This is an old distinction, which now tends to become obsolete; but broadly speaking a larger measure of discretion is allowed in the nonregulation provinces, and the district officer may be a military officer, while in the regulation provinces he must be a member of the Indian civil service.

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  • Broadly speaking, the subdivision is characteristic of Bengal, where revenue duties are in the background, and the tahsil of Madras, where the land settlement requires attention year by year.

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  • The details vary in the different provinces; but, broadly speaking, a settlement may be described as the ascertainment of the agricultural capacity of the land.

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  • In Bengal Proper, and also in Madras, it may be broadly said that horses are not bred.

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  • Broadly speaking, the greater part of the internal trade remains in the hands of the natives.

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  • Two types may be distinguished broadly, the Nabataean and the Graeco-Roman.

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  • The state of the prison, the desperation of the prisoners, broadly hinted in their conversation and plainly expressed in their conduct, the uproar of oaths, complaints and obscenity, the indescribable stench, presented together a concentration of the utmost misery and the utmost guilt."

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  • The chief recommendation put forward to mend the system comprised lengthening of all sentences, a diminution in the dietaries, the abolition of large gratuities, and, speaking broadly, a general tightening of the reins.

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  • Speaking broadly, rice and oilseeds predominate in the eastern and sub-Himalayan districts, millets and cotton in Bundelkhand and wheat in the greater part of the Gangetic plain.

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  • For the rest he was too Aristotelian, if we take the word broadly enough, or, as the result of his Cambridge studies, 3 Bacon, Novum Organum, ii.

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  • Broadly speaking, it is the sum of an individual's bodily, mental and spiritual growth; having its roots, as it were, spread over many lives, past and future.

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  • The London protocol of 1871, with a view to prevent such abuses, lays down, perhaps a little too broadly, " that it is an essential principle of the law of nations that no power can liberate itself from the engagements of a treaty, nor modify the stipulations thereof, unless with the consent of the contracting powers, by means of an amicable arrangement."

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  • Speaking broadly, what France, Germany, Spain and England assimilated from Italy at this epoch was in the - first place the new learning, as it was then called.

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  • Viewed broadly, the financial resources of the earlier Empire were obtained from (1) the public land alike of the state and the Princeps; (2) the monopolies, principally of minerals; (3) the land tax; (4) the customs; (5) the taxes on inheritances, on sales and on the purchase of slaves (vectigalia).

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  • The gentry and landowners are all, broadly speaking, members of the established Church, but it is impossible to name any other class of society as belonging definitely either to " Church " or " Chapel."

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  • Broadly speaking it may be said that a distinction may be drawn between " spirits " and " gods," but it is a distinction of degree rather than of kind, obvious enough at the upper end, yet shading off into manifold varieties of resemblance in the lower forms. Some writers only recognize friendly agencies as gods; but destructive powers like the volcano, or the lords of the underworld, cannot be regarded as the protectors of the life of man, yet they seem in many mythologies to attain the full personalised stature of gods with definite names.

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  • Broadly speaking, however, it may be said that the attempt to show that.

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  • It is, however, more broadly applied to a style of fabric originally made from the alpaca wool but now frequently made from an allied type of wool, viz.

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  • The regular police organization, which preserves order, checks evil-doing, and "runs in" malefactors, falls naturally and broadly into two grand divisions, the administrative and the active, the police "in the office" and the police "out of doors."

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  • Speaking broadly, the general type of the flora of the lower, hotter and wetter regions, which extend along the great plain at the foot of the Himalaya, and include the valleys of the larger rivers which penetrate far into the mountains, does not differ from that of the contiguous peninsula and islands, though the tropical and insular character gradually becomes less marked going from east to west, where, with a greater elevation and distance from the sea and higher latitude, the rainfall and humidity diminish and the winter cold increases.

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  • Malatia opium is in pieces of irregular size usually of a broadly conical shape, weighing from 1-2 lb.

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  • In fact, broadly speaking, the Sadducees for the period during which they are reported to exist, represent and embody the tendency to conformity with neighbouring Gentiles, which is deplored and denounced by Jewish writers from Moses to Philo.

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  • Its central core of Lower Carboniferous rock is broadly displayed towards the north, while southward it contracts; on either side lie the younger rocks, the coal-fields, the Permian strata and the Triassic formations, the last-named, while sweeping round the southern extremity of the Carboniferous axis of the uplift from its eastern and western flanks, spread out in a large sheet over the midland counties.

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  • The exterior is decorated with sculptures and tile-work, and internally it is divided, broadly speaking, into a museum of general antiquities below, and the large gallery of pictures of the Dutch and Flemish schools above.

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  • In the genus Cycas the female flower is peculiar among cycads in consisting of a terminal crown of separate leaf-like carpels several inches in length; the apical portion of each carpellary leaf may be broadly triangular in form, and deeply dissected on the margins into narrow woolly appendages like rudimentary pinnae.

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  • In his thirtieth year, a broadly cultured cosmopolitan, Sumner returned to Boston, resolved to settle down to the practice of his profession.

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  • Broadly speaking his work in those very 'eighties was not so good as the labour, essentially delicate and fresh and just, of some years earlier, nor had it always the attractiveness of the impulsive deliverances of some years later, when the inspired sketch was the thing that he generally stopped at.

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  • This is broadly true.

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  • Broadly speaking, these families make their first appearance in time in the order given above, and show a progressive morphological evolution along certain special lines.

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  • Lodge, Easy Mathematics, chiefly Arithmetic (1905), treats the subject broadly in its practical aspects.

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  • Speaking broadly the development was from rigour to indulgence, and the three schisms referred to voiced the protests of the puritan minority.

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  • Few men, if any, have ever acquired a settled mental habit of surveying human affairs broadly, of watching the play of passion, interest, circumstance, in all its comprehensiveness, and of applying the instruments of general conceptions and wide principles to its interpretation with respectable constancy, unless they have at some early period of their manhood resolved the greater problems of society in independence and isolation.

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  • A more detailed investigation of all the characters of the Ferns will be needed before the course of evolution thus broadly indicated can be traced, but the results obtained afford a deeper insight into the general method of progression and the selective factors in the process.

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  • Russian Lapland is broadly similar to the lower-lying parts of Swedish Lapland, but the great lakes are more generally distributed, and the valleys are less direct.

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  • At the same time it cannot be broadly said that Christianity took a decisive side in the metaphysical controversy on free-will and necessity; since, just as in Greek philosophy the need of maintaining freedom as the ground of responsibility clashes with the conviction that no one deliberately chooses his own harm, so in Christian ethics it clashes with the attribution of all true human virtue to supernatural grace, as well as with the belief in divine foreknowledge.

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  • Oftener the summit of the ridge is broken into individual mountains, broadly flat-topped and of nearly equal elevation..

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  • Broadly speaking, the climate on the north and west of the main ranges is both milder and moister than on the south and east, and accordingly the precipitation in the former is relatively heavier, namely IO to 20 in.

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  • It may be divided broadly into two zones.

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  • Broadly speaking, the Palaeozoic Lycopods, whatever their dimensions, show a general agreement in habit and structure with our living forms, though often attaining a much higher grade of organization.

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  • The genus possessed small broadly oval or triangular leaves in addition to the large fronds like that shown in fig.

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  • Similarly, the genus Sagenopteris, characterized by a habit like that of Marsilia, and represented by fronds consisting of a few spreading broadly oval or narrow segments, with anastomosing veins, borne on the apex of a common petiole, is abundant in rocks ranging from the Rhaetic to the Wealden, but has not so far been satisfactorily placed.

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  • In man the most important of these circumstances is age, but speaking broadly this is really a question of bulk, the child being affected like the adult, but by smaller doses.

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  • As few substances are absolutely identical in action, but only broadly similar, it is often difficult to divide sharply one group from another.

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  • The reaction against anthropomorphism begins in Greek philosophy with the satirical spirit of Xenophanes (540 B.C.), who puts the case as broadly as any.

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  • The news was disseminated broadly.

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  • Broadly, the vat accounting liability will fall on the purchaser rather than the seller.

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  • The sunshine and showers continue, in a broadly westerly airflow.

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  • The remainder of the files have been arranged in a broadly alphabetical order.

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  • This would provide the publisher with a single payment broadly analogous with a library purchase.

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  • He sought APC's comments on whether the paper raised the correct questions and APC members broadly endorsed the sections relating to this.

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  • Products developed under this agreement are therefore expected to be broadly applicable in the treatment of many kinds of cancer.

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  • The imaging armamentarium can be broadly grouped into two (Table 1 ).

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  • This broadly distributed deformation shows no asymmetry or evidence of rotation.

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  • After many previous house-price booms most of the adjustment came through inflation pushing up rents and incomes, while home prices stayed broadly flat.

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  • Industry links are broadly categorized for ease of navigation.

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  • The trajectory traced by developments subsequent to 1997 can be broadly characterized as moving deeper into the machine.

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  • Likely health gain or effect on demand Patients get seen in broadly chronological order.

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  • Most of us broadly agree on the colors we see, because we are using similar neural circuits to see them.

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  • The time limits for making personal injury claims are, broadly speaking, much more generous than the time limits for making ET claims.

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  • Coca cultivation and coca cultivation and cocaine production were broadly stable while seizures of cocaine rose to new highs.

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  • No DoD corps, regardless of how broadly constituted, has cognizance of more than perhaps half the territory of information warfare.

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  • Work is broadly commensurate with the 80 hours effort specified for the assessment.

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  • The Turkish diaspora in Europe is broadly comparable to the South Asian diaspora in Europe in several respects.

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  • Tho broadly comparative; representing recycling, composting, energy recovery, and land filling; the waste they refer to is categorically different.

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  • In addition to the JMC agreement, there are four separate overarching concordats intended to apply broadly uniform arrangements across Government.

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  • They broadly conform to the principles and processes outlined in the sections above.

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  • Broadly conical conifer with dark green leaves which are silver underneath.

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  • The number of calls to Crimestoppers nationally was broadly consistent Monday to Friday, while fewer calls were made at the weekend.

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  • News from other portfolio constituents has been broadly positive.

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  • All three authors stand within the evangelical tradition, somewhat broadly construed.

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  • Conceptual understanding broadly reflected these trends, and conceptual and behavioral performance were found to be only weakly correlated.

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  • This engraving of 1807 broadly corresponds with the Isaac Miller drawing of about 1677.

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  • More recently, I have begun to explore a possible general role for the frontal cortex in processing emotion more broadly.

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  • His design for Thame broadly followed the popular cruciform or " square " design.

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  • The Association wishes to achieve a balanced return from a broadly diversified blend of assets.

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  • David MacNaughton's paper examined the broadly Humean model of the moral agent that many neoclassical environmental economists typically assume.

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  • A one-year, full-time further education course broadly equates to 20 SUMs or 800 learning hours.

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  • The final two sections are broadly concerned with environmental ergonomics.

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  • Eurydice publications may be broadly divided into descriptions of national education systems, comparative studies devoted to specific topics, and indicators and statistics.

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  • It does not, very broadly, catch inducements representing amounts foregone or deferred by the provider.

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  • Although broadly predictable, the year on year changes in ice dynamics and glacier foreland dynamics is such that new opportunities will constantly arise.

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  • The established historiography broadly interprets war commemoration in the post-war period in two ways.

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  • What role do humanists allot to documentation, broadly considered?

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  • Is broadly indicative play a role for workers without.

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  • But it does, at certain times and in certain places, allow and require the following of a broadly libertarian agenda.

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  • In his words it was an informal group of broadly like-minded people.

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  • Numerous other examples of early biblical majuscule exist, several of which are broadly comparable with P64.

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  • This is broadly aligned on the outer defenses and may be an intra mural walkway used defensively.

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  • However, the section is broadly enough drafted to be used by councils anywhere to combat ordinary neighbor nuisance.

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  • Fish and whales feature broadly widely in the collection of hanging ornaments.

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  • Broadly, two approaches are employed to diagnose osteoporosis.

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  • Leaves broadly oval, turning red and yellow in autumn.

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  • The leaves are broadly ovate, stalked, and usually smooth.

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  • In relation to the former report the Highland experience broadly matched the national findings which were generally positive.

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  • The only way to guarantee that the council / assembly is broadly representative of the community is to have a broadly proportional electoral system.

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  • The number of successful male Protestant applicants was broadly proportionate to the numbers applying.

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  • Community Interest Company 4.2 NCVO broadly welcomes the proposals for the Community Interest Company.

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  • The standard of proof now demanded for the police is broadly the same standard faced by other public servants in disciplinary charges.

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  • This situation is broadly replicated in the limestone aquifers but the Permo-Triassic sandstones display much less geographical coherence.

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  • In the sixth form students ' progress is broadly satisfactory.

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  • The effects are broadly similar to eating seaweed in its original, fibrous state.

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  • This position (or collection of positions) include those associated, broadly speaking, with a postmodern sensibility.

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  • In keeping with most writers - both novelists and journalists - I am ' broadly shallow ' .

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  • North American Van Lines offers broadly similar services in the US.

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  • The results show that the wetting of the lead-free alloys broadly follows that of tin-lead solder if allowance is made for the melting point.

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  • Achromatic and chromatic colors Broadly speaking, colors are divided into achromatic and chromatic colors.

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  • Trends in car travel have been broadly static over the last decade.

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  • Selling prices of timber fire doors remained broadly steady with 57% seeing no change.

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  • The BMA junior doctors committee is broadly supportive of these plans.

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  • Despite Cromwell's broadly sympathetic view, however, many Quakers were imprisoned by local magistrates for causing disturbances in their regions.

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  • Rather than a strictly chronological account, we were led through a broadly thematic dissection of the last 30 years of Saturday nights.

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  • What I always want is for them to say the marks are broadly accurate, if a little ungenerous.

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  • Such reasoning supports, I then argue, conclusions about value that support an account of the concept broadly consistent with classical utilitarianism.

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  • Broadly, the VOA would provide summary valuations in hard copy or electronic form wherever possible.

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  • If we take this broadly historical view of the progress of economics, it is obvious that even in England there was no general agreement, during the 19th century, as to the methods most appropriate to economic investigation.

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  • Broadly this phenomenon is termed polymorphism; however, it is necessary to examine closely the diverse crystal modifications in order to determine whether they are really of different symmetry, or whether twinning has occasioned the apparent difference.

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  • On the one hand, the general agreement everywhere between the Hebrew accounts and contemporaneous records from Mesopotamia proves beyond cavil that, broadly speaking, the Bible accounts are historically true, and were written by persons who in the main had access to contemporaneous documents.

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  • The above law of gradual evolution is perfectly consistent with a second principle, namely, that at certain times evolution is much more rapid than at others, and that organisms are accelerated or retarded in development in a manner broadly analogous to the acceleration or retardation of separate organs.

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  • Although ancestor-worship, or, more broadly, the cult of the dead, has in many cases overshadowed other cults or even extinguished them, we have no warrant, even in these cases, for asserting its priority, but rather the reverse; not only so, but in the majority of cases the pantheon is made up by a multitude of spirits in human, sometimes in animal form, which bear no signs of ever having been incarnate; sun gods and moon goddesses, gods of fire, wind and water, gods of the sea, and above all gods of the sky, show no signs of having been ghost gods at any period in their history.

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  • In a middle section of the system, from the Hudson river in southern New York to the James river in southern Virginia, the crystalline belt is narrowed, as if by the depression of its south-eastern part beneath the Atlantic Ocean or beneath the strata of the Atlantic coastal plain which now represents the ocean; but the stratified belt is here broadly developed in a remarkable series of ridges and valleys determined by the action of erosion on the many alternations of strong and weak folded strata; and the plateau assumes full strength southward from the monochinal Mohawk valley which separates it from the Adirondacks.

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  • Another group is Pronolagus, typified by the Cape thick-tailed hare, the so-called Lepus crassicaudatus, which is externally similar to Lepus proper, but has the skull and teeth of the general type of the next group. The tailless rabbit of Mount Popocatepetl, Mexico, originally described as a distinct generic type, under the name of Romerolagus nelsoni, is broadly distinguished by the entire absence of the tail, and the short ears and hind-feet, its general form being like that of the Liu-Kiu rabbit, while, as in the latter, the post-orbital process of the skull is small, and represented only by the hinder half.

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  • We may distinguish broadly two ways by which such selective elimination of individuals from the number of those who contribute to the next generation may occur, viz.

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  • On the other hand, the ethical optimism of Shaftesbury, rather broadly impressive than exactly reasoned, and connected as it was with a natural theology that implied the Christian scheme to be superfluous, challenged attack equally from orthodox divines and from cynical freethinkers.

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  • Broadly speaking, with home reversion schemes, the older you are, the more you'll be paid for your property.

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  • In keeping with most writers - both novelists and journalists - I am ' broadly shallow '.

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  • Sample collection is opportunistic, represents the entire age range and can be broadly stratified by region.

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  • Despite Cromwell 's broadly sympathetic view, however, many Quakers were imprisoned by local magistrates for causing disturbances in their regions.

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  • It is broadly used in the making of plastics, resins and rubber.

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  • However, this terminology can be used broadly, as many styles such as emo, indie, punk, rockabilly and goth are sometimes also classified under alternative styles.

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  • In the Western tradition, nudity can, broadly speaking, attract both positive and negative metaphorical meanings.

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  • There are many forms of this shrub, the best being that in which the leaves are broadly edged with silver; effective against a sheltered wall and in poor warm soils.

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  • The leaves, which are broadly lanceolate, are about 9 inches in length and 2 1/2 inches broad, dark green above, and felted with dimcolored tomentum below.

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  • Nearly all the golden kinds are robust and easily grown, and the bicolor group are even more so, but, speaking broadly, the delicate sulphur and white sorts are tender and unsatisfactory, except on the most favourable soils.

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  • Calceolaria Plantaginea - A low-growing plant spreading by means of short side growths; the leaves, formed in rosettes, are broadly ovate, with toothed margins and attain a considerable size in moist positions.

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  • Narrow down your search specifically by garment and size, or search more broadly and find a variety of clothes available in your size.

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  • Dwarfism is a term applied broadly to a number of conditions resulting in unusually short stature.

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  • More broadly speaking, however, puberty is used as a collective term to refer to all the physical changes that occur in the growing girl or boy as the individual passes from childhood into adulthood.

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  • Assessment tools fall broadly into two groups.

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  • The major priorities include centering on the individual, understanding autism, adopting appropriate adaptations, and a broadly based intervention strategy building on existing skills and interests.

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  • Abnormal movements are broadly classified as either hyperkinetic (too much movement) and hypokinetic (too little movement).

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  • Regulations vary broadly so it's important to do your homework.

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  • If you want to be memorable, this can mean anything from acting outrageously or simply smiling broadly while looking good.

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  • Broadly speaking, this addiction can even be something that is seen as "healthy" such as laughing or exercising, but the mere fact that it is needed is what should tip Pisces off that he needs a bit more moderation.

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  • Educate yourself-Understand that there aren't any grants that are broadly labeled single parent grants.

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  • There are broadly two types of pocket watches.

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  • Business letters are broadly defined as any communication between corporate entities or between customers, clients, employees or potential employees, and a business.

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  • The scent is sharply reminiscent of cinnamon, but broadly balanced by a coating of thick, creamy icing.

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  • Harrigan woke up, as if on cue, smil­ing broadly at everyone.

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  • It may be said broadly, therefore, that in .episcopacy the government is monarchical; in congregationalism, democratic; and in Presbyterianism, aristocratic or representative.

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  • Broadly speaking, the American portion of the sub-region consists of an Atlantic and Pacific forest area and an intervening non-forest one, partly occupied by the Rocky Mountains, partly by intervening plains.

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  • In the 18th century the nobility of France and the nobility of Poland alike answered to the very strictest definition of nobility; but the political positions of the two were as broadly contrasted as the positions of any two classes of men could be.

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  • Viewed broadly, the Russian empire may be said to occupy the territories to the N.W.

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  • Broadly speaking, the army is divided into regulars, Cossacks and militia.

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  • What may broadly be called "conjuring" is a much more probable explanation of most of the recorded phenomena; and in the vast majority of cases the witnesses do not seem to have duly appreciated the possibilities of conjuring, and have consequently neither taken sufficient precautions to exclude it nor allowed for the accidental circumstances which may on any particular occasion favour special tricks or illusions.

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  • If our view is correct that, broadly speaking, the two ways of regarding economic questions are complementary rather than mutually exclusive, there does not seem to be any reason why the growth of the historical school should have been destructive of the " old Political Economy " if it had been well founded.

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  • Broadly speaking, the northern districts of the province produce principally cold weather crops, such as wheat and grain, and the eastern ones principally rice.

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  • Other breeds include the Japanese, with an orange coat, broadly banded on the hind-quarters with black; the pink-eyed and short and thick-furred albino Polish; the Siberian, probably produced by crossing the Himalayan with the Angora; and the black-and-tan and blue-and-tan.

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  • The prosoma and opisthosoma were broadly confluent and probably immovably welded together.

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  • But this is only a momentary lapse, for he broadly distinguishes the two kinds.

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  • He, however, soon realized that the charters of one town can only be understood by comparing them with those of other towns, and he was gradually led to continue the work which Augustin Thierry had broadly outlined in his studies on the Tiers Etat.

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  • The value of fresh bagasse, or as it is often called " green " bagasse, as fuel varies with the kind of canes from which it comes, with their treatment in the mill, and with the skill used in firing; but it may be stated broadly that I lb of fresh bagasse will produce from I a lb to 24 lb of steam, according to the conditions.

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  • It would appear that the purchasing power of the inhabitants of India has increased of late years, and there is a growing demand for refined sugar, fostered by the circumstance that modern processes of manufacture can make a quality of sugar, broadly speaking, equal to sugar refined by animal charcoal, without using charcoal, and so the religious objections to the refined sugars of old days have been overcome.

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  • Thus the orographical features of the country correspond broadly with the geological divisions.

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  • The insect life of Japan broadly corresponds withthat of temperate regions in Europe.

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  • Speaking broadly, however, four different varieties are usually distinguished.

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  • Thus it has been used broadly of all theological doctrines, and also in a narrower sense of fundamental beliefs only, confession of which is insisted upon as a term of church communion.

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  • But the books in which his humour is broadly displayed, the travels and the sketches, are not really so significant of his power as the three novels of the Mississippi, Tom Sawyer, Huckleberry Finn and Pudd'nhead Wilson, wherein we have preserved a vanished civilization, peopled with typical figures, and presented with inexorable veracity.

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  • He often states a rule too broadly or narrowly, and then, as it were, gropes after restrictions and extensions.

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  • The first method distinguishes between uncial or majuscule, and cursive or minuscule; the second between papyrus, vellum or parchment, and paper (for further details see Manuscript and Palaeography); and the third distinguishes mainly between Gospels, Acts and Epistles (with or without the Apocalypse), New Testaments (the word in this connexion being somewhat broadly interpreted), lectionaries and commentaries.

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  • Even those who do not fall into the error of making Smith the creator of the science, often separate him too broadly from Quesnay and his followers, and represent the history of modern economics as consisting of the successive rise and reign of three doctrines - the mercantile, the physiocratic and the Smithian.

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  • Among marine Mesozoic reptiles, each of the groups broadly known as ichthyosaurs, plesiosaurs, mosasaurs and crocodiles were polyphyletic in a marked degree.

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  • They have been broadly classified into the Outer Hebrides and the Inner Hebrides, the Minch and Little Minch dividing the one group from the other.

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  • Speaking broadly, there were few very rich and few very poor.

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  • Although local affairs do nut now enlist, even in New England, so large a measure of interest and public spirit as the town system used to evoke in Massachusetts, Rhode Island and Connecticut in the thirties, still, broadly speaking, the rural local government of America may be deemed satisfactory.

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  • Speaking broadly, the Kansas or Minnesota farmer's wheat does not have to pay for carriage to Liverpool more than 2S.

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  • He laid the foundations broadly in evangelism, finance, temperance and education, founding in the latter connexion a middleclass school at Shebbear, at which generations of ministers' sons and numerous students for the ministry have been educated.

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  • Green, on the other hand, in deducing his own conclusion that the world is, or is a system of, one eternal intelligence, incautiously put it forward as " what may be called broadly the Kantian view " (Prolegomena, § 36), and added that he follows Kant " in maintaining that a single active conscious principle, by whatever name it be called, is necessary to constitute such a world, as the condition under which alone phenomena, i.e.

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  • Speaking broadly, red is the colour for feasts of martyrs, white for virgins, violet for penitential seasons, &c.; no less than sixty-three different uses differing in details have been enumerated.

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  • Broadly speaking, your swing speed determines what is the correct shaft flex.

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  • Pelageya Danilovna Melyukova, a broadly built, energetic woman wearing spectacles, sat in the drawing room in a loose dress, surrounded by her daughters whom she was trying to keep from feeling dull.

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