Access Sentence Examples

access
  • You gave Howard access to the checking account.

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  • You had access to that door and didn't walk through it.

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  • He gave us access to a web site on which to submit our information.

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  • He reached a door finally and typed in the access code.

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  • Gabriel was locked out, and Darkyn wasn't permitted access in the first place.

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  • The Internet is not unique in solving for this access to information.

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  • I'll give you the access code.

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  • I'll help you access them, but we must both focus.

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  • He has direct access to you and the most to gain.

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  • The wide hallways were lit by skylights and lined with inset doors whose access pads glowed to the right of each door.

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  • He motioned to a glowing access pad.

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  • It has a large number of landlocked nations without ports to access the international markets, both for imports and exports.

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  • After a surprised pause, she waved her bracelet in front of the internal access pad.

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  • I recently gained access to this database that the company's owner uses.

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  • You will have access to any equipment you need from any realm.

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  • She waved her wrist before the access pad, but once more, the warrior prevented the door from opening.

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  • He gets stymied at times because of lack of access to certain information sources.

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  • I'm checking it out; I have access to that data base, but I bet the plate is stolen.

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  • She trotted to the bottom and waved her band before the access pad, waiting as the stone door opened.

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  • Today, an astonishing 77 percent of the people in the world have mobile devices and thus access to all kinds of better care via telemedicine.

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  • The measure was taken to give him unfettered access to her visions.

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  • First, the web promotes access to information, a huge force for peace.

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  • He had access to his part much earlier than I did, so he was able to make some investments that really paid off.

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  • As the camper was on the wooded side of the circle, there was no simple access to the rear.

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  • As access becomes cheaper and better, and the whole world has mobile phones, more information can be delivered to people in remote parts of the world.

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  • In 2006, roughly a billion people had access to the Internet.

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  • He stepped aside and she waved her band in front of the access door.

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  • He needed more than access to the underworld to save her; he needed the medical advice of someone like Wynn.

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  • The access to information that mobile phones are bringing virtually everywhere on the planet is helping people raise their standard of living and will do so even more dramatically in the years to come.

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  • It seems fitting to end this part of the list—ways that information and communication will help end war—by noting that every day, every moment, more and more people have access to the Internet.

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  • Dean speculated that they might be concentrating too much on Fitzgerald and the Dawkinses, and not on others who had access to the Deans' quarters.

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  • Would you be able to access national data bases?

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  • The big question remains, who would have access to all that theater paraphernalia?

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  • It took him a full day to realize she didn't know how to exit her room, that her intent at disassembling the access pad had been to make it work for her.

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  • He stopped at the opposite side of the table, within reach if he chose, which she suspected he would if she so much as flinched toward the access pad.

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  • Imagine a world where everyone on the planet has access to this expanded canvas of human expression that technology has created.

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  • A round table in the center had an access pad attached to the top, so she passed her armband over it.

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  • You have some access to data bases that could be helpful.

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  • At least, she could when Gabriel let her access the portals again.

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  • Access is provided by a ladder, communicating with a door about 20 ft.

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  • All rooms offer air conditioning, mini bar, Internet access.

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  • Dictators may think they can control information access and technology.

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  • Para, Parnahyba, Parahyba, Santos and Rio Grande do Sul are river ports situated near the sea on rivers having the same name; but, with the exception of Path and Santos, they are difficult of access and are of secondary importance.

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  • For the first time since being attacked, my mind began to access what happened and try to formulate a coherent response.

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  • Worst of all, it had all been to gain access to money she could have had without protest.

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  • It was as she neared a dead end that she saw the single door with two access pads, the only door with additional security in the wing.

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  • He nodded to his advisor, who waved his wrist before the access pad.

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  • Excited and nervous, Kiera crossed to it and waved her armband over the access pad.

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  • Many vitreous rocks show alteration of this type in certain parts where either the glass has been of unstable nature or where agencies of change such as percolating water have had easiest access (as along joints, perlitic cracks and the margins of dikes and sills).

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  • The best remedy in such cases is to prevent the air from gaining access to the coal by building a wall round the burning portion, which can in this way be isolated from the remainder of the working, and the fire prevented from spreading, even if it cannot be extinguished.

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  • He was a liberal patron of Greek philosophers and men of letters, and he collected a valuable library, to which such men had free access.

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  • The additional possibility of access to all humans' Digital Echoes, to be studied for a million unnoticed causal correlations, will hasten the demise of disease as well and will increase quality of life and longevity.

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  • A poor person with free access to the Internet at the library is wealthier than a poor person with free access to just a library.

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  • Earlier, I've walked the perimeter of the property and noted multiple places of easy access, via trees, with low hanging limbs.

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  • Mingrelia and Imeretia (valley of Rion) are the gardens of Caucasia, but the high valleys of Svanetia, farther north on the south slopes of the Caucasus mountains, are wild and difficult of access.

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  • Through his friendship with Sir William Hicks Strype obtained access to the papers of Sir Michael Hicks, secretary to Lord Burghley, from which he made extensive transcripts; he also carried on an extensive correspondence with Archbishop Wake and Bishops Burnet, Atterbury and Nicholson.

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  • In 1904 Dr Carton and the abbe Leynaud discovered huge Christian catacombs with several miles of subterranean galleries to which access is obtained by a small vaulted chamber.

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  • But the trench of the Uda, to the east of Lake Baikal, offers easy access for the Great Siberian railway up to and across the high plateau.

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  • These often have the form of prisms of calcite surrounded by a cuti cular meshwork; the whole is nourished and kept alive by processes, which in Crania are branched; these perforate the shell and permit the access of the coelomic fluid throughout its substance.

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  • Many of the treatments of the ancient world had high degrees of efficacy, all obtained without access to any modern knowledge or equipment.

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  • If you had access to a library, its stock of medical books and journals was very small.

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  • His works can scarcely be entitled original compositions, his labour having consisted chiefly in the arrangement of his materials, but on this very account they are of considerable value as convenient books of reference, easier of access and almost as trustworthy as the original documents.

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  • Having arrived at the conclusion that the food of plants consists of minute particles of earth taken up by their rootlets, it followed that the more thoroughly the soil in which they grew was disintegrated, the more abundant would be the " pasture " (as he called it) to which their fibres would have access.

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  • Since these streams had in no case originally easy access to the sea, we naturally find lakes on their course, and several of them terminate in tracts of more or less permanent inundation.

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  • The Aka country is very difficult of access, the direct road from the plains leading along the precipitous channel of the Bhareli river, which divides the Aka from the Daphla country.

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  • Santa Catharina and Maranhao have well-sheltered harbours formed by an island lying in the mouth of a large bay, but the latter is shallow and difficult of access.

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  • In Teneriffe and Grand Canary the corpse was simply wrapped up in goat and sheep skins, while in other islands a resinous substance was used to preserve the body, which was then placed in a cave difficult of access, or buried under a tumulus.

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  • The commercial relations with the North cannot be regarded as an important element in the union of the Hanse towns, but the geographical position of the Scandinavian countries, especially that of Denmark, commanding the Sound which gives access to the Baltic, compelled a close attention to Scandinavian politics on the part of Lubeck and the League and thus by necessitating combined political action in defence of Hanseatic sea-power exercised a unifying influence.

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  • This plain is continued on the opposite bank of the Danube by the valley of the Morava (Marchfeld), which constitutes the easiest access to the north.

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  • The high priest Joshua is accused before Yahweh by Satan, but is acquitted and given rule in Yahweh's house and courts, with the right of access to Yahweh in priestly intercession.

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  • The version in which Hugdietrich gains access to his future wife by disguising himself as a woman has also a foundation in fact.

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  • The particular tablets in question date only from about the 7th century B.C., but it is agreed among Assyriologists that they are copies of older texts current in Babylonia for many centuries before, and it is obvious that the compilers of Genesis had access to the Babylonian stories.

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  • This was due first to the difficulties of the navigation, next to the exclusiveness of the Dutch, who, holding the Spice Islands, prevented all access to places east of them, and lastly to the stream of enterprise being latterly diverted to the more temperate regions farther south.

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  • About a mile and a quarter from the Bab Bu Saadun, the north-west gate of the city, is the ancient palace called the Bardo, remarkable for the "lion court," a terrace to which access is gained by a flight of steps guarded by marble lions, and for some apartments in the Moorish style.

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  • Congregationalism proper, as a theory of the organized Christian life contemplated in the New Testament, re-emerges only at the Reformation, with its wide recovery of such aspects of evangelic experience as acceptance with God and constant access' to Him through the sole mediation of Christ.

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  • For all reasons an attempt to preserve Stonehenge was desirable; and the owner, Sir Edmund Antrobus I was willing, on certain conditions, as to limitations of access, to co-operate with the Society of Antiquaries, Wiltshire Archaeological Society and Society for the Preservation of Ancient Monuments in taking such steps as might be necessary to prevent more stones from falling, and even (if possible) to set up some which had fallen.

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  • On the other, how account for a comparatively synchronous commencement of bronze civilization when one at least of the metals needed for the alloy would have been naturally difficult of access, if not unknown to many races?

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  • You.ll grant us access to it?

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  • To enforce adherence to business rules, we absolutely do not want to provide direct access to the data services to ASP code.

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  • The members of LGCM were investigated for facilitating (in its literal sense of making easier) access to an allegedly blasphemous poem.

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  • Thanks to Beverley, her local community can continue to have direct access to Norfolk Police.

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  • The five were denied access to the British consul for over two weeks.

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  • Any evaporative cooler has to have easy access to exterior air.

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  • The pound was a simple fenced enclosure, often with access to a stream for drinking water.

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  • Fortunately, they had access to three social encyclicals.

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  • Collaboration, communication, access to information, and the other advantages that the Internet brings will all come to bear here.

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  • The size and number of the volumes, however, and their great expense, made them difficult of access, and Frau von Mohl published the French translation (1876-1878) with her illustrious husband's critical notes and introduction in a more convenient and cheaper form.

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  • Beneath the fine banqueting hall, a flight of steps descends into "the Wogan," a vast subterranean chamber giving access to the harbour.

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  • The House of Habsburg now ceded Salzburg and the Inn-Viertel to Napoleon (for his ally, the king of Bavaria); a great portion of the spoils which Austria had torn from Poland in 1795 went to the grand duchy of Warsaw, or Russia; and the cession of her provinces Carinthia, Carniola and Istria to the French empire cut her off from all access to the sea.

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  • Atmospheric air gains access to the air-tubes through paired spiracles or stigmata, which usually occur laterally on most of the body-segments.

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  • The British Museum had been formed, and he had access to everything it contained in addition to the abundant materials afforded him by the private museum of Sir Ashton Lever.'

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  • However, it must also be remembered that, throughout the whole of his career, Gould consulted the convenience of working ornithologists by almost invariably refraining from including in his folio works the technical description of any new species without first publishing it in some journal of comparatively easy access.

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  • The country is altogether difficult of access, and only one military route leads up from the river Terek, while every one of the eleven passes known across the Caucasus is a mere bridle-path.

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  • Groups of dwellings, such as are still to be seen on some of the small canals at Burano, clustered together along the banks of the deeper channels which traverse the lagoon islands and give access to the tide.

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  • From the interior of the court access is given to the upper loggia by a very beautiful staircase of early Renaissance style, built in the middle of the 15th century by Antonio Rizzo.

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  • The government accordingly resolved to reopen the Lido entrance to the lagoon, and thus to afford a shorter and more commodious access from the sea.

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  • Though tortuous of access, the channels afford a clear passage of 27-35 ft.

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  • Ralph of Coggeshall, who used information gained from crusaders, and William of Newburgh, who had access to a work by Richard I.'s chaplain Anselm, which is now lost.4 The French side is presented in Rigord's Gesta Philippi Augusti and in the Gesta (an abridgment and continuation of Rigord) and the Philippeis of William the Breton.

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  • In the reverberatory furnace, similar to the one used in softening, the lead is brought to a brightred heat and air allowed to have free access.

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  • A majority of the ports, from which these roads are built, are small and difficult of access, and the coasting trade is restricted to vessels carrying the Brazilian flag.

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  • The others are either difficult of access, or are rendered practically useless by dangerous reefs, sand bars and shoals.

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  • Religious dress (whether of priests or worshippers) was regulated by certain fundamental ideas concerning access to the deity and its consequences.

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  • In general the climate of Venezuela is healthy wherever the ocean winds have free access.

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  • At Port Logan in Wigtonshire cod-fish are kept in a large reservoir, scooped out of the solid rock by the action of the sea, egress from which is prevented by a barrier of stones, which does not prevent the free access of the water.

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  • Upon the fall of his cabinet Antonelli created for himself the governorship of the sacred palaces in order to retain constant access to and influence over the pope.

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  • In diabetes this organ seems to play a part which is not yet precisely determined; and one fell disease at least has been traced to a violent access of inflammation of this organ, caused perhaps by entry of foreign matters into its duct.

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  • No doubt the coming of the Saxons, which entirely changed the condition of the country, must have greatly injured trade, but although there was not the same freedom of access to the roads, the Londoners had the highway of the river at their doors.

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  • Dr Creighton had access to the manuscript returns of burials and christenings for five years from 1578 to 1582 preserved in the library at Hatfield House.

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  • Access to Chitral from the north is therefore but a matter of practicable tracks, or passes, in two or three directions, and the measure of practicability under any given conditions can best be reckoned from Chitral itself.

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  • A sufficient weight of molten glass to form a bottle is gathered and placed in a funnel-shaped vessel which serves as a measure, and gives access to the mould which shapes the outside of the neck.

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  • It has an area of upwards of eight acres, is easy of access, and affords anchorage for vessels of every size.

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  • Robertson has shown that the typhoid bacillus can grow very easily in certain soils, can persist in soils through the winter months, and when the soil is artificially fed, as may be done by a leaky drain or by access of filthy water from the surface, the microorganism will take on a fresh growth in the warm season.

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  • The former commercial importance of the town has disappeared, and the Schlei now affords access to small vessels only.

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  • The government looked on the practice with great disfavour, because it transferred large areas from the easy access of the state to an ownership beyond its reach.

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  • These journeys, naturally following the most frequented routes, often cover the same ground, while immense tracts, owing to their difficulty of access, remain unvisited by any European.

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  • All matters affecting the community are discussed in the majlis or assembly, to which any tribesman has access; here, too, are brought the tribesmen's causes; both sides plead and judgment is given impartially, the loser is fined so many head of small cattle or camels, which he must pay or go into exile.

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  • The Bay of Hakodate, an inlet of Tsugaru Strait, is completely land-locked, easy of access and spacious, with deep water almost up to the shore, and good holding-ground.

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  • Next, as all investigation proceeds from that which is known best to that which is unknown or less well known, and as, in social states, it is the collective phenomenon that is more easy of access to the observer than its parts, therefore we must consider and pursue all the elements of a given social state together and in common.

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  • It need scarcely be said that these restricted approaches give littlc access to the storms which disturb the seas outside.

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  • The poetry of the nation remained immovable in the ancient groove until very modern times, when, either by direct access to the originals or through the medium of very defective translations, the nation became acquainted with the masters of Occidental song.

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  • Roads connecting noted localities with the chief town of such neighborhoods, or leading to seaports convenient of access.

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  • There are two harbours,difficult of access owing to the number of reefs and sunken rocks.

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  • He was liberal, kindly, good-tempered and easy of access, and his yielding to his subjects' wishes in order to obtain supplies for carrying on the French war contributed to the consolidation of the constitution.

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  • Scrub and woods with dense undergrowth line both its banks, and, except by the great chaussee from Metz to Verdun, access to the French side becomes impossible to troops in ordered bodies.

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  • If he had access to his original notes of the 21st and 22nd of January 1567, then he was safe - that is, if Darnley's memory of the conversations tallied so exactly with Mary's.

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  • It permits complete rotation of the tube and measurement of all angles in reversed positions of the circle; the handles that move the slides can be brought down to the eye-end, inside the tube, and consequently made to rotate with it; and the position circle may be placed at the end of the cradle next the eyeend where it is convenient of access.

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  • These are made to shut air-tight against their frames, so as to prevent the air from taking a short cut back to the upcast, while preserving free access between the different districts without following the whole round of the air-ways.

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  • Originally the family was an Old World type, but in the Miocene it gained access into North America, where the earliest form is Bothriolabis, an ancestral peccary showing signs of affinity with the European Miocene genus Palaeochoerus.

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  • It gives copious details, and, as he had access to the correspondence and official documents of the Spanish leaders, it is, although necessarily possessing bias, the fullest and most authentic record existing of the events it relates.

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  • This railway would give the quickest means of access to British Central Africa and the southern part of Belgian Congo.

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  • Ultimately he seems to have got free access to the collection, which he re-catalogued - the work of almost a whole summer, for which the curators rewarded him with nine guilders.

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  • The shore is low, bordered in its eastern half with lagoons, and difficult of access on account of the submarine bar of sand which stretches along nearly the whole of the coast, and also because of the heavy surf caused by the great Atlantic billows.

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  • Its high cliff-bound coast is difficult of access.

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  • Hence, through a triple gateway in a richly ornamented screen, access is gained to the first or Hexagonal Court, which measures about 250 ft.

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  • The Feuillants copy is in existence, being the only manuscript, or partly manuscript, authority for the text; but access to it and reproduction of it are subjected to rather unfortunate restrictions by the authorities, and until it is completely edited students are rather at the mercy of those who have actually consulted it.

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  • The access to the inner room was by a similar door through the partition.

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  • Where there can be no suspicion of such "tendency" as has been noticed above there is less ground for scepticism, and it must be remembered that the earlier books contain only a portion of the material to which the compilers had access.

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  • Since the Northern and Southern Sla y s had absented themselves and the Poles were in opposition, the Reichsrat was adjourned (May 3), and the Germans now again demanded the grant of a revised constitution, with German as the language of State, a special status for Galicia and Dalmatia, access for the Germans to the Adriatic, and the partition of Bohemia.

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  • Hungary, on the other hand, striving for access to the money markets of the West, desired that the obligation of the Austro-Hungarian Bank to cash its notes should be explicitly mentioned in the law, in order to make the public loans rank as easily negotiable securities on foreign bourses.

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  • In 1882-1884 a dock some 7 acres in extent was constructed, with an entrance lock giving access to the quay sides for vessels of 3000 tons.

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  • The shores are rocky, there are no harbours, and the roadstead off Grand Bourg is difficult of access, owing to the surrounding reefs.

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  • As middlemen they already possessed a large interest in the spice trade, for the Portuguese, having no direct access to the principal European markets, had made a practice of sending cargo to the Netherlands for distribution by way of the Scheldt and Rhine.

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  • The completion of the harbour works, making Brussels a seaport by giving sea-going vessels access thereto, was taken in hand in 1897.

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  • Protection from violent draught and shelter from extremes of heat and cold are necessary, but in most cases the choice is best left to the animals themselves, and the most successful arrangements consist of free exposure to the open air, with access to warmth and shelter.

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  • The material is sometimes won by the aid of channelling machines which make a series of cuts at right angles to each other in the face of the rock; a block is then broken off at its base by wedges forced into the cuts, and its removal permits access to other blocks.

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  • South of the Jurjura and separated from it by the valley of the Sahel, is the Biban range with a famous double pass of the same name, through which alone access is gained to the highlands beyond.

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  • The mixture is then allowed to settle in the iron vessel, access of air being prevented as much as practicable, and the clear liquor is syphoned off.

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  • The inference lies near at hand that both writers had access to the full collection of thirteen, not omitting the Pastorals.

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  • Often, as has been said, the atoll is divided into a number of islets, but in some smaller atolls the ring is complete, and the sea-water gains access beneath the surface of the reef to the lagoon within, where it is sometimes seen to spout up at the rise of the tide.

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  • The Avral Mountains, which separate the Kash from the Kunghez, are lower, but rocky, naked and difficult of access.

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  • In the meantime Chalmers applied himself with great diligence and assiduity to the investigation of the history and establishment of the English colonies in North America; and enjoying free access to the state papers and other documents preserved among what were then termed the plantation records, he became possessed of much important information.

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  • The original plan seems to have been to construct these narrow streets to give access to the great business houses which, it was foreseen, would be built on the frontage of the main streets.

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  • The larger part of the system in this part of the country is not of marine origin; yet the sea had access to parts of the interior more than once, as shown by the marine fossils in some of the beds.

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  • Although relatively unsuccessful in securing access to the British islands, the importance of the United States as a supplier of the other West Indies continually grew, and when the communication of the French and Spanish islands with their metropolises was practically cut off by the British during the Napoleonic wars, the dependence of these colonies upon the American carrying trade became absolute.

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  • The necessity for defence from hostile attacks, economy of space and convenience of access from one part of the community to another, by degrees dictated a more compact and orderly arrangement of the buildings of a monastic coenobium.

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  • At its north-east corner access was given from the dormitory to the necessarium, a portentous edifice in the form of a Norman hall, 145 ft.

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  • The date of his birth cannot be exactly determined, but from various indications in his work it seems to have been about 63 B.C. He studied at Nysa under the grammarian Aristodemus, under Tyrannio the grammarian at Rome, under the philosopher Xenarchus either at Rome or at Alexandria, and he had studied Aristotle along with Boethus (possibly at Rome under Tyrannio, who had access to the Aristotelian writings in Sulla's library).

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  • There is indeed a tradition that a written collection (diwan) existed in the family of an-Nu ` man, the last Lakhmid king, containing a number of poems by the Fuhul, or most eminent poets of the pagan time, and especially by those who had praised the princes of the house, and that this collection passed into the possession of the Omayyad caliphs of the house of Marwan; to this, if the tradition is to be believed, al-Mufaddal probably had access.

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  • Rich at Bagdad of a MS. with brief glosses; and at Vienna there is a modern copy of a MS. of which the original is at Constantinople, the glosses in which are taken from al-Anbari, though the author had access also to al-Marzugi.

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  • Most of the mining development is in southern British Columbia, where a network of railways and waterways gives easy access; but as means of communication improve to the north a similar development may be looked for there.

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  • He knew how to control the ferocious Iroquois, who had cut off France from access to Lake Ontario; to check them he had built a fort where now stands the city of Kingston.

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  • The danger from the Iroquois on Lake Ontario had long cut her off from the most direct access to the West, and from the occupation of the Ohio valley leading to the Mississippi, but now free from this savage scourge she could go where she would.

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  • On one side of the inner court, to which a finely ornamental doorway gives access, is a large hall with a vaulted ceiling of stone, 20 ft.

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  • Oxidation is better effected (if a very high temperature be not required) the farther the substance is from the apex of the inner cone, for the air has thus freer access.

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  • The Timaeus of Plato in the Latin version of Chalcidius was known to him as to his contemporaries and predecessors, and probably he had access to translations of the Phaedo and Meno.

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  • The majestic cliffs of the north coast, however, which reach an extreme height in Benwee Head (892 ft.), are difficult of access and rarely visited.

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  • About the age of twenty he was seized with a violent access of devotional rapture.

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  • He wore a sharp shirt of hair next his skin, scourged himself every Friday and other fasting days, lay upon the bare ground with a log under his head, and allowed himself but four or five hours' sleep. This access of the ascetic malady lasted but a short time, and More recovered to all outward appearance his balance of mind.

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  • It also gave access by a branch to Leicester and Lincoln.

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  • Besides these five groups, an obscure road, called by the Saxons Akeman Street, gave alternative access from London through Alchester (outside of Bicester) to Bath, while another obscure road winds south from near Sheffield, past Derby and Birmingham, and connects the lower Severn with the Humber.

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  • But in the middle ages the altars were placed against the east wall of the churches, or else against a reredos erected at the east side of the altar, so as to prevent all access to the table from that side; the celebrant was thus brought round to the west side and caused to stand between the people and the altar.

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  • Schmidt published his Grammatik der tibetischen Sprache in 1839 and his Tibetisch-deutsches Worterbuch in 1841, but neither of these works justified the great pretensions of the author, whose access to Mongolian sources had enabled him to enrich the results of his labours with a certain amount of information unknown to his predecessors.

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  • It is difficult of access on all sides, and everywhere difficult to traverse.

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  • The superior had free access to this corridor, and through open niches was able to inspect the garden without being seen.

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  • Access is gained to the harbour through a winding and dangerous passage over 2 m.

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  • A zigzag highway, regarded as a triumph of engineering, winds through the mountain passes between Cettigne and the Austrian seaport of Cattaro; and other good roads give access to the richest parts of the interior.

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  • Spartan arms could punish any violation of that " sacred truce " which was indispensable if Hellenes from all cities were to have peaceable access to the Olympian festival.

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  • Immediately to the east of this doorway was the gate giving access to the Altis at its north-west corner.

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  • Facing this inner building on north, east and west were rooms of different sizes, to which doors or colonnades gave access.

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  • It cannot be doubted that the Roman house - from which three doors gave access to the Altis - was that occupied by Nero when he visited Olympia.

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  • A Doric propylon with three doors gave access on the south-west side.

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  • With the access of English and French settlers, Samuel Drisius, who preached in Dutch, German, English and French, was summoned, and he laboured in New Amsterdam and New York from 1652 to 1673.

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  • There is great natural beauty in the surroundings, but the mountains render the town difficult of access from the interior, and give it an exceptionally hot and unhealthy climate.

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  • They enclose long lateral valleys, some of which are fertile and highly cultivated, and traversed by narrow precipitous gorges at intervals, which form the only means of access to the interior from the sea.

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  • It should always be borne in mind that in the Western and Central Alps there is but one ridge to cross, to which access is gained by a deep-cut valley, though often it would be shorter to cross a second pass in order to gain the plains, e.g.

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  • To prevent self-fertilization, or the access of insects, it is advisable to remove the stamens and even the corolla from the flower to be impregnated, as its own pollen or that of a flower of the same species is often found to be " prepotent."

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  • The whole should be compactly arranged, so as to facilitate working, and to afford convenient access for the carting of the heavy materials.

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  • This access is especially desirable as regards the store-yards and framing ground, where fermenting manures and tree leaves for making up hot beds, coals or wood for fuel and ingredients for composts, together with flower-pots and the many necessaries of garden culture, have to be accommodated.

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  • This more direct and ready access to the plants within is one of the principal recommendations of this form of pit.

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  • The second basin gives access to the docks, of which there are six; two 390 ft.

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  • The village rises steeply above a very narrow cove on the north coast, sheltered, but difficult of access, vessels having to be warped into it by means of hawsers.

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  • His Historia Ecclesiastica, in eighteen books, brings the narrative down to 610; for the first four centuries the author is largely dependent on his predecessors, Eusebius, Socrates, Sozomen, Theodoret and Evagrius, his additions showing very little critical faculty; for the later period his labours, based on documents now no longer extant, to which he had free access, though he used them also with small discrimination, are much more valuable.

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  • Access to the central aisle is gained through a door of sculptured wood known as the Beautiful Gate.

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  • The route quits that of the Albula Pass at Thusis, passes first through the celebrated gorge of the Via Mala, then through the Schams basin and past Andeer, beyond which the Rofna gorge gives access to the village of Sphigen (from which the pass takes its name) in the upper reach of the main or Hinter branch of the Rhine.

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  • The coasts are shallow, and deficient in natural ports, except on the east of Schleswig-Holstein, where wide bays encroach upon the land, giving access to the largest vessels, so that the great naval harbour could be constructed at Kiel.

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  • Otto was also related to the great house of Hohenstaufen, a relationship which gave him access to sources of information usually withheld from the ordinary monastic annalist, and his work is very valuable for the earlier part of the career of Frederick I.

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  • The nest is of large size, built of sticks, lined with soft material and placed on a ledge of rock - a spot being chosen, and often occupied for many years, which is nearly always difficult of access.

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  • Dr John Wallis, the keeper, allowed him free access to the university registers in 1660; "here he layd the foundation of that book which was fourteen years afterwards published, viz.

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  • Fowey harbour, which is easy of access in clear weather, will admit large vessels at any state of the tide.

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  • Three funicular railways from different points of the city give access to the highest parts of the hills behind the town.

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  • These- L'Histoire du stathouderat (The Hague, 1748), L'Histoire du parlement d'Angleterre (London, 1748), Anecdotes historiques (Amsterdam, 3 vols., 1 753) - gained for him access to the salons of Mme.

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  • Access to them is gained from the narrow lanes which usually surround them.

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  • The natural irritation in France standing arising from the British occupation of the Nile valley, and the non-fulfilment of the pledge to withdraw the British garrison from Egypt, which had grown less acute with the passing of years, flamed out afresh at the time of the Fashoda crisis, while the Anglo-Boer war of 1899-1902 led to another access of irritation against England.

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  • The harbour is good and safe, though difficult of access.

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  • The fine subdivision of filamentous and net-forms is similarly a provision for easy access of water and light to all parts.

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  • Access from the city to the Alhambra Park is afforded by the Puerta de las Granadas (Gate of Pomegranates), a massive triumphal arch dating from the i 5th century.

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  • You may not access our networks, computers, or Contents in any manner that could damage, disable, overburden, or impair them, or interfere with any other Person’s use and enjoyment.

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  • You may not attempt to gain unauthorized access to any Contents, other accounts, computer systems, or networks connected with our sites or Contents.

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  • It has been warned of the limitations and risks in use of the information, and despite such warnings, chooses of its own free will to continue to access or use the Contents.

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  • His successors continued to fortify the access to Reval from the sea, large works being undertaken, especially in the early years of the 19th century.

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  • Denied access to the churches, the latter preached and celebrated the sacrament in private houses.

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  • The head of the bay is fringed with islands and reefs, behind which is the mouth of the Santiago river, Poza Harbour, San Lorenzo Bay, Pailon basin and a network of navigable channels, all of which are difficult of access.

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  • Most of these are difficult of access and their trade is unimportant.

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  • British influence kept the peace amongst peoples who were not subjects of the King-Emperor; Great Britain lighted, buoyed, charted and patrolled for over a century waters over which it claimed no formal lordship; and kept in strange ports an open door, through which traders of every nation might have equally free access to distant markets.

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  • The foreign occupation also led to the establishment of a French troupe of actors, and to their performances the boy, through his grandfather's influence, had free access.

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  • It is true that the house was closed and access to the archives only very sparingly allowed until Baron Walther's death in 1885.

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  • As an historical source, therefore, the value of Judges will depend largely upon the question whether the Deuteronomic editor (about 600 B.C. at the earliest) would have access to trustworthy documents relating to a period some six or seven centuries previously.

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  • This bee excavates several parallel galleries to which access is gained by a cylindrical hole.

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  • The pouch-shaped, landlocked bay is spacious and easy of access.

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  • To the north, in the Piazza Stesicoro, is the amphitheatre, a considerable portion of which has been uncovered, including the two corridors which ran round the whole building and gave access to the seats, while a part of the arcades of the exterior has been excavated and left open; the pillars are made of blocks of lava, and the arches of brick.

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  • It is a part of the great plan to give worthy access to the temple from the city of Argos.

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  • There are four engineering colleges in India, which furnish to natives access to the higher grades of the public works department; and the provincial education services are recruited solely in India.

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  • The declination circle is most inconvenient of access, and slow motion in declination can only be effected when the instrument is clamped by a long and inconvenient handle; so that, practically, clamping in declination was not employed.

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  • In such large telescopes it becomes a matter of the first importance to provide means of convenient access to the eye-end of the instrument.

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  • Common's telescope presents many ingenious features, especially the relief-friction by flotation of the polar axis in mercury, and in the arrangements of the observatory for giving ready access to the eye-piece of the telescope.

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  • The ruins are less frequently visited than those of Pompeii, not only because they are smaller in extent and of less obvious interest, but also because they are more difficult of access.

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  • Access to the stages of the ziggurat, from the court beneath, was had by an inclined plane on the south-east side.

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  • The inhabitants of the adjacent East Prussian territory are at all times to have access for themselves and their boats to the Vistula.

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  • On its east, between it and the coast, which it follows at a moderate distance, is a fertile strip difficult of access, and on the west it throws off so many lateral ranges and spurs, as to break up the country into a chaos of corrugated and precipitous hills and steep-sided valleys, each with a rapid perennial stream.

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  • The nuts grow in greatest abundance on the extremities of second year's branches, where light and air have ready access.

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  • The settler also, who selected his homestead covering watering places to which the range cattle formerly had free access, came into conflict with the cattlemen.

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  • Many of the rivers, especially those of the west coast, are obstructed by bars at their mouths that render them difficult of access.

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  • For the murder of Escovedo, see Andrew Lang's discussion of it in his Historical Mysteries (1904); and the Espanoles e ingleses (1903) of Major" Martin Hume, who had access to various newly discovered MSS.

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  • Algeciras stands at the head of a railway from Granada, but its only means of access to Gibraltar is by water.

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  • As a Hindu by birth, and a Vaishnava by family religion, I have had the freest access to the innermost sanctuaries and to the most secret of scriptures.

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  • Benoist's Guichardin, historien et homme d'etat italien an X VI' siecle (Paris, 1862), and C. Gioda's Francesco Guicciardini e le sue opere inedite (Bologna, 1880) are not without value, but the authors had not had access to many important documents since published.

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  • The secondary fermentation proceeds slowly and the carbonic acid formed is allowed to escape by way of the bung-hole, which in order to prevent undue access of air is kept lightly covered or is fitted with a water seal, which permits gas to pass out of the cask, but prevents any return flow of air.

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  • The process is tedious, the resulting fibre is brown in colour, and it is said to be peculiarly liable to undergo heating (probably owing to the soft heavy quality of the flax) if exposed to moisture and kept close packed with little access of air.

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  • The line is marked at intervals by frontier posts held by military police and commanding the roads of access to the tract beyond; and any person from the plains who has received permission to cross the line has to present his pass at these posts.

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  • The district long suffered from lack of railway communications, but in 1910 the completion of the Selati line giving it direct access to Delagoa Bay was begun.

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  • Through Omdurman come the exports of Kordofan and Darfur, while by the Red Sea railway there is ready access to the markets of the world.

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  • The centre of the beetsugar industry is Skane, but it is also carried on in the island of Gotland; its great access of prosperity is chiefly owing to the existence of a protective duty on imported sugar.

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  • A cash indemnity of 300,000 was also paid, and certain stipulations were made with regard to the construction of other railways giving access from Chile to the Bolivian interior.

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  • Two entrances give access to the grotto, an old one extremely narrow, and a new one, made in 1890, through which the exploration of the cavern can be made in about 8 hours, half the time it took before.

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  • It has a pocket-hole on either side, giving access to the pockets, which are always in the arkhalik, where also is the breast-pocket in which watch, money, jewels, and seals are kept.

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  • The pile of buildings known as the corn warehouses are traversed by a canal which gives access to its several departments, and are provided with mechanical grain-elevators.

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  • Of the three great river basins of Ionia and Lydia, those of the Hermus, Cayster and Maeander, it commanded the second, and had already access by easy passes to the other two.

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  • The foreign settlement occupies a position between the native town and the sea, which neither affords a, convenient access for shipping nor allows space for any great extension of area.

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  • Moshesh ruled over a region largely mountainous and over a people numerous and virile; Pondoland was somewhat remote and was densely inhabited by warlike Kaffirs; the two Griqua states were, however, missionary creations; they were thinly inhabited and occupied open plains easy of access - hence their ultimate collapse.

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  • According to Evelyn he was " debonnaire and easy of access, naturally kind-hearted and possessed an excellent temper," virtues which covered a multitude of sins.

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  • Constantly moving through Poitou and the Limousin, as the exigencies of the civil war required, occasionally taking his turn as a guard, at least on one occasion trailing a pike on an expedition against the Leaguers, with no access to libraries, and frequently separated even from his own books, his life during this period seems most unsuited to study.

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  • In writing the above article, Professor Christie had access to and made much use of these MSS., which include a life of Julius Caesar Scaliger.

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  • Owing to the ice in the White Sea Russian hunters found Novaya Zemlya less easy of access than did the Norwegians.

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  • The boundary with Chile was greatly modified by the results of the war of 1879-83, as determined by the treaties of 1884, 1886 and 1895, Bolivia losing her department of the littoral on the Pacific and all access to the coast except by the grace of the conqueror.

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  • This line gives La Paz access to the Peruvian port of Mollendo, 496 m.

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  • On the 18th of May 1895 a treaty was signed at Santiago between Chile and Bolivia, " with a view to strengthening the bonds of friendship which unite the two countries," and, " in accord with the higher necessity that the future development and commercial prosperity of Bolivia require her free access to the sea."

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  • At this time Barlaam, an eremite of great sanctity and knowledge, dwelling in the wilderness of Sennaritis, divinely warned, travels to India in the disguise of a merchant, and gains access to Prince Josaphat, to whom he imparts the Christian doctrine and commends the monastic life.

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  • In doctrine the great Tibetan teacher, who had no access to the Pali Pitakas, adhered in the main to the purer forms of the Mahayana school; in questions of church government he took little part, and did not dispute the titular supremacy of the Sakya Lamas.

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  • In 1822 he showed that when a mass of platinum black, supplied with alcohol by a wick is enclosed in a jar to which the air has limited access, acetic acid and water are produced; this experiment formed the basis of the Schiitzenbach Quick Vinegar Process.

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  • The centre of the railway system, which had in 1898 a length of some 3500 m., or 30% of the total length of the Austrian railways, is Prague; and through the Elbe Bohemia has easy access to the sea for its export trade.

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  • The north-western and northern slopes of the Sailughem mountains are extremely steep and very difficult of access.

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  • Railway communications are provided by the Mexican National with the United States, with the national capital and southern Mexico, and with Matamoros, and by the Belgian line with Tampico on the Gulf coast, and with Trevino, or Venadito, on the Mexican International line, which gives access to the iron deposits of Durango.

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  • He also had access to the archives of state, and gathered from them information beyond the reach of most.

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  • Without manuals, dictionaries, and easy access to texts, we should go as far astray as any medieval chronicler.

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  • The lower or estuarine courses of some of the English rivers as the Thames, Tyne, Humber, Mersey and Bristol Avon, are among the most important waterways in the world, as giving access for seaborne traffic to great ports.

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  • They must give notice of any infectious disease to the medical officer of health and to the poor-law relieving officer, and they must give free access for inspection.

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  • Even human dead are not safe from their attacks, their powerful claws enabling them to gain access to newly interred bodies in cemeteries.

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  • The harbour works board, constituted in 1877, improved the river channel and the bar; made wharves and embankments; lighted the lower reaches of the river by electricity, so as to allow vessels to enter by night; and constructed a breakwater and counter-mole outside the bar of the river Nervion, between Santurce, Portugalete and the opposite headland at the village of Algorta, so as to secure deep anchorage and easy access to the river.

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  • The coast lands held by European powers, which cut off Abyssinia from access to the sea, vary in width from 40 to 250 miles.

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  • The plateau summits rise to elevations of 9000, 10,000 and i i,000 ft., are generally forested, but are too difficult of access to be much inhabited.

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  • Free access of air to the tissues also seems to increase the yield of quinine, for the renewed bark is found to contain more quinine than the original bark

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  • The dimensions of the exterior piers ceased to control the height of the building, which was limited alone by the possibility of securing adequate foundations, and by a consideration of the amount of floor space which could be devoted without too great loss to a system of passenger lifts of sufficient capacity to afford speedy access to all parts of the building.

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  • The success of his pamphlet gained him ready access to all Whig circles; but already his confidence in that party was shaken, and he was beginning to meditate that change of sides which has drawn down upon him so much but such unjustifiable obloquy.

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  • A branch of the Midland railway south from Bedford connects with the Great Northern line at Hitchin, and formerly afforded the Midland access to London over Great Northern metals.

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  • It lies in open country near the river Dane, having water communications by the Trent and Mersey canal, and a branch giving access to the Shropshire Union canal.

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  • The older convents are usually built in places difficult of access and are strongly fortified; for in troublous times they served as refuges for the peasants or rallying-places for demoralized troops.

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  • The Rumanian Academy keeps jealous watch over the treasures it has accumulated, and few have had access to the riches entombed in its archives; nor has any private or public collection been catalogued.

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  • As an outlet for Montenegrin commerce, however, Antivari cannot compete with the Austrian Cattaro, the harbour being somewhat difficult of access in stormy weather.

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  • After 1180 the premier position was assumed by Ghent, but until access by sea was stopped by the silting up of the Zwyn, which was complete by the year 1490, Bruges was the equal in wealth and power of its neighbour.

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  • The republic rewarded her champion with the further distinction of state counsellor in jurisprudence, and, a unique mark of confidence, the liberty of access to the state archives.

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  • Giusto Fontanini's Storia arcana della vita di Pietro Sarpi (1863), a bitter libel, is nevertheless important for the letters of Sarpi it contains, as Griselini's Memorie e aneddote (1760) is from the author's access to Sarpi's unpublished writings, afterwards unfortunately destroyed by fire.

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  • It is on the main railway from Czernovitz, in Bukovina, to Galatz; and on two branch lines, one of which enters Transylvania through the Ghimesh Pass, while both give access to the salt mines, petroleum wells and forests of the Carpathians.

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  • The first, till 1832 the only access to the city from the south, consists of seven semicircular ribbed arches, is about 30 ft.

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  • By this arrangement he was able to be frequently in Edinburgh, and to cultivate the literary and scientific society for which it was at that time specially distinguished; and through Maskelyne, whose acquaintance he had first made in the course of the celebrated Schiehallion experiments in 1774, he also gained access to the scientific circles of London.

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  • Pop. (1901), 4753 A branch of the Highland railway also gives access to Elgin, and there is a line to Buckie and Portessie on the Moray Firth.

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  • Sir Robert Peel told the house that, in his previous budgets, he had given the manufacturers of the country free access to the raw materials which they used.

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  • In this respect English governments are more, cautious or reactionary than many of those on the continent of Europe, and access to official documents is denied when it is granted elsewhere; even the lapse of a century is not considered, a sufficient salve for susceptibilities which might be wounded by the whole truth.

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  • When thousands after thousands are dragooned out of their country for the sake of their religion, or sent to row in the galleys for selling salt against law, - when the liberty of every individual is at the mercy of every prostitute, pimp or parasite that has access to power or any of its basest substitutes, - my mind, I own, is not at once prepared to be satisfied with gentle palliatives for such disorders" (Francis to Burke, November 3, 1790).

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  • The Chicago, Burlington & Quincy (owned by the Great Northern and the Northern Pacific railways) traverses the state along its western boundary and gives it access to a third great railway system with transcontinental service.

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  • Tylor - to the effect that it originated in the desire of the primitive man to bring on at will certain abnormal nervous conditions favourable to the seeing of those visions and the dreaming of those dreams which are supposed to give the soul direct access to the objective realities of the spiritual world.

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  • The harbour is easy of access, well sheltered and deep, with wharf accommodation for vessels -of the largest tonnage.

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  • Of the tributaries of the river, the Voronezh, the Khoper, the Medvyeditsa and the Donets are navigable - the Donets having a course of 680 m., and during high water affording access to the government of Kharkov.

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  • There is only a single spring of fresh water on the island, and that in a position difficult of access.

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  • Branch lines give access to Kraguyevats, Zayechar, Semendria and other important towns, and there are several smaller railways in the valleys of the Save, the Danube, the Servian Morava and their tributaries.

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  • It lies at the centre of a network of railways giving it access to all the principal towns of the Westphalian iron and coal fields.

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  • The work was dedicated to the king, and Calvin says he wrote it in Latin that it might find access to the learned in all lands.'

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  • He cut off all access to Antwerp from the sea by constructing a bridge of boats across the Scheldt from Calloo to Oordam, in spite of the desperate efforts of the besieged to prevent its completion.

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  • In the necessary research he received some pecuniary help from Robert Boyle, but he was hindered in the preparation of the first part (1679) through being refused access to the Cotton library, possibly by the influence of Lauderdale.

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  • From the coasts there is almost everywhere easy access to the interior through the mountains by valley roads; and though the plain exists unbroken only in the midlands, its ramifications among the hills are always easy to follow.

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  • Of those written from a conservative or traditional stand 1 The south of Palestine, if less disturbed by these changes, may well have had access to older authoritative material.

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  • After various disappointments they found access to Chow-king-fu on the SiKiang or West River of Canton, where the viceroy of the two provinces of Kwang-tung and Kwang-si then had his residence, and by his favour were able to establish themselves there for some years.

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  • A number of Ricci's letters are extant in the possession of the family, and access to them was afforded to Giuseppe La Farina, author of the work called La China, considerata nella sua Storia, &c. (Florence, 1843), by the Marchese Amico Ricci of Macerata, living at Bologna.

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  • In Jurassic times the sea gained access to East Africa north of Mozambique, but does not appear to have reached far beyond the foot-plateau except in Abyssinia.

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  • Claudius, who was a native of Lyons, extended the right of Roman citizenship to many of his fellow-townsmen, gave them access to the magistracy and to the senate, and supplemented the annexation of Gaul by that of Britain.

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  • The Carolingians had as it were a fresh access of energy, and the Louis IV.

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  • When the succession of Cleves and of Julich, so long expected and already discounted by the treaty of Halle (1610), was opened up in Germany, the great war was largely due to an access of senile passion for the charms of the princesse de Cond.

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  • To put a stop to this, to ensure his own access to the Mediterranean and exclude his chief rival, Napoleon made a desperate effort in 1812 against a country as invincible as Spain.

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  • None of the inhabitants of Monaco have access to the tables; and their interest in the maintenance of the status quo is secured by their complete exemption from taxation and the large prices paid for their lands.

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  • Sixty miles lower down is the mouth of the (left hand) tributary the Kaduna, a river of some magnitude which gives access to Zungeru, the headquarters of the British administration in Northern Nigeria.

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  • In the greater part of the Ebro basin the heat of summer is even more intense, The treeless mostly steppe-like valley with a brightcoloured soil acts like a concave mirror in reflecting the suns rays and, moreover, the mountains and highlands by which the valley is enclosed prevent to a large extent the access of winds.

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  • The ridge connecting Fort St George with Hospital Hill is tunnelled to give access to the two parts of the town lying on either side.

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  • There are two trunk railways, one connecting the Sudan with Egypt, the other affording access to the Red Sea.

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  • On receiving a favourable reply from the Holy See, Gedymin issued circular letters, dated 25th of January 1325, to the principal Hanse towns, offering a free access into his domains to men of every order and profession from nobles and knights to tillers of the soil.

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  • Inside a cloister-like arcade, surrounded by cellular store-rooms, forms the ground floor, and a somewhat lighter arcade, giving access to little dwelling-rooms, runs round it above.

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  • After a short stay in Cairo, Gordon proceeded to Khartum by way of Suakin and Berber, a route which he ever afterwards regarded as the best mode of access to the Sudan.

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  • The coral reefs fringing the coast are here broken by a straight channel with deep water giving access to the harbour, which consists of a series of natural channels and basins.

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  • Instantly, access to the building was uppermost on her mind.

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  • He was impressed that I had done so much on my own time and without breaking any rules - so impressed that he got me limited security access to do more sleuthing.

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  • It was critical to a myriad of complications; we held the key to access of the past!

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  • Post details on a web site that only us can access without any fear we can be traced by using it.

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  • I also want access to data bases that might help such as Motor Vehicle registrations, crime records, outstanding warrants; that sort of thing.

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  • Aside from assigning Xander to keep an eye on her, the Black God hadn't restricted her access to anything.

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  • She gritted her teeth, hating the fact he had open access to her thoughts and worse—he could respond to them!

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  • But we don't know how much information Claire had access to and what she passed to Czerno.

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  • If he wants access to my domain, he will deal with me directly, not prey on your weaknesses.

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  • Fate is considered the weakest deity, which gives him unlimited access to all of the worlds.

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  • Surely none of the Dawkinses, who lived in California, would have had either access to or knowledge of the trunk-stored skeleton.

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  • In recent years, the government, in an effort to formalize access and camping in the area, had instituted a fee program, creating considerable controversy with a number of locals.

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  • The deity Fate had told him as much, after shutting down Gabriel's access to the underworld.

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  • Fate's mention of him gaining access to the underworld made Gabriel wonder if the deity was referring to Darkyn's mate.

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  • He sensed magic, though, and understood the Immortal was able to access the tablet in a way Death had no need to.

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  • The Anshan ships didn't work like the Qatwali ships did; her access needed to be programmed into the computer, but she'd broken the pad before Ne'Rin could do it.

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  • You have access to the adjacent farmland; so, use the meadow for feeding.

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  • The nursery also uses interactive whiteboard technology and has broadband access to the internet.

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  • No longer confined to working in the bedroom, wireless access to the internet has been made available in our hotels.

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  • With extremely fast access times and low power consumption flash harddrives are a very interesting choice, especially to the portable market.

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  • Drug A attaches to the acetylcholine receptors on the smooth muscle without stimulating them and prevents acetylcholine from gaining access to them.

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  • In every museum there is a strong, new (and wholly admirable) emphasis on access and interpretation.

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  • He turned the access point's transmitting and receiving aerials through 90 degrees.

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  • Also to assess strategies to reduce possible complications of totally implantable venous access devices (e.g. anticoagulants to reduce the risk of thrombosis ).

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  • The access to the the roost is usually at or near the gable apex or the lower eaves.

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  • You may seek full approval of some aspects at the outline stage, for example means of access.

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  • Urban Rock Abseiling employs dedicated rope access arborists, who hold relevant chainsaw training certificates.

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  • How to Find Archive Material For access to archive material users should contact the archivist in advance.

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  • He taught them how to access shared resources such as clip art or the scanner.

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  • The Web site includes free access to full-text articles from Volume 1 (4) Winter 2001.

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  • To complete the refurbishment a new entrance atrium is to be constructed which will include the upgrade of the external access for DDA compliance.

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  • The idea for a tactile audiogram developed from the increasing need for deafblind children to have access to information.

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  • I donât have access to the Internet, can I complete the license authorization procedure by phone?

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  • We will permit only authorized employees, who are trained in the proper handling of personal data, to access your personal information.

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  • Massive california child health insurance program baby boomer file a lawsuit structural access to disabilities be able.

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  • The hidden backdoors allow easy access any time the attacker wants back in.

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  • The user may later use the backspace or left arrow to access the skipped fields.

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  • Managers may seek to redress the power balance by restricting access to the Internet.

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  • Faculty and staff are protected with stronger (e.g., VPN) security plus access to their own guaranteed bandwidth.

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  • Customers also have access to 24-hour telephone banking or by logging on to NatWest Online Banking.

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  • Session Log A screen you can access showing all the requests you've made during your current visit to smile banking.

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  • Membership also offers access to the 80 camping barns in some of the best countryside in England, including six National Parks.

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  • In addition they have bathrobes, high speed internet access and wet bar including sink, mini fridge and microwave.

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  • These were used by the defenders of the castle to access the battlements and provide a line of defense around the castle.

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  • Iron Man Cheats Collect the four homing beacons in each act to access the secret area to retrieve a piece of his armor.

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  • A Premier Enclosure Badge entitles the bearer to access all main Restaurants.

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  • Rose Cottage has a bidet and access to woodland gardens.

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  • Improving the access should help to deter motor bikers from using the site.

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  • Your module handbook should also tell you top How do I access blackboard?

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  • The permitted access routes have boardwalks constructed to minimize damage to the vegetation.

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  • The new boardwalk will be above the high water mark - to allow access at all times.

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  • The site has a drop of four meters across it and timber boardwalks provide level access and protect the ground from visitor pressure.

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  • Nearby, we have access to football, hockey, lacrosse and rugby pitches, and share an excellent boathouse on the river.

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  • Retractable bollards have restricted access to Grafton Road north of the railroad line during rush hour for years.

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  • We also have access to a smaller conference hall for exhibitor presentations, which is an unexpected bonus.

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  • In addition the site includes texts and browseable maps and also offers free online registration to access advanced services, including a personal bookshelf.

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  • The stated rationale is to widen access, reduce brain drain, bolster research capabilities and maximize the competitiveness of the sector.

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  • Driven in part by my then brand-new Web access, I used a search engine to determine that Oris had no Canadian distributor.

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  • The resulting synthesis emphasizes breadth of subject matter, multiple means of intellectual access, and opportunities for digressing from the narrative.

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  • Progress has been made in improving the design of cage fronts to make access better for depopulation thus reducing bone breakage.

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  • If bare breasts, bare buttocks or genitals are present, block access to the site.

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  • The golf course access bridge crosses the brook at the end of the lane at the far side of the BNFL sports ground.

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  • The triple chrome buckles feature a quick release system for easy access.

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  • The ground is accessed by a rather bumpy access road, leading into the main car park.

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  • The Player provides faster access to top activities, such as ripping, burning, and syncing.

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  • The words shown above give access to all the memory, including the first 64k bytes.

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  • But the fare-paying passengers had roomy cabins and access to the original lounges and first class dining room.

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  • The transatlantic fibre-optic cable enters the UK at Cornwall, with access points available throughout the region along is route.

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  • Written to assist the Linux user in configuring a cable modem for internet access using a cable modem for internet access using a cable network.

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  • Working alongside your existing phone cable, it offers Internet access without disrupting incoming or outgoing calls.

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  • The next step is to secure venous access with a plastic cannula either in the back of the hand or in the forearm.

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  • Personal Spends All inmates are allowed access to a certain amount of cash which can be used to buy items from the prison canteen.

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  • The phased moved away from a slots allocation based on historic patterns to one based on weighted capitation should improve the equity of access.

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  • One cottage has its own large carport with direct access to the cottage.

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  • Each individual study carrel is equipped with internet access.

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  • At 1850 GMT, four robbers armed with crowbars boarded a bulk carrier, gaining access via the forward mooring ropes.

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  • The two six inch front castors rotate through 360 degrees enabling the power chair to access even the smallest spaces with ease.

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  • The area was grazed by cattle but access to the crop was restricted by an electric fence.

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  • First Floor Landing - Loft access, smoke detector, textured ceiling.

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  • Across Glasgow and Paisley, Access Cleaning Solutions always ensure total customer satisfaction with our leather cleaning.

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  • Access to the park is through the main entrance over the bridge, by boat or by our nearby pontoon.

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  • To access the beach you must descend the rocky escarpment that shelters the bay, via a steep flight of steps.

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  • Today, for fear of its desecration, Stonehenge is usually shut off to public access on midsummer's eve.

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  • Struck by the loader bucket if the access platform is within the working radius of the loading machine (for 360 degree excavators ).

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  • Only the dominant male, with rare exceptions, had access to mating opportunities.

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  • I could not easily access the information on what Esure's compulsory excesses were.

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  • The site provides access to guidelines, resources and locally produced exemplars.

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  • After all, widening access is something that the educational and political establishments constantly exhort us to do.

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  • The A55 coastal expressway is within 3 miles offering swift road access to the North Wales Coastal towns.

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  • The three indicators allow different facets of access to be measured.

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  • This clearly includes the facilitation of widespread access within the short to medium term of at least a part of its current resources.

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  • With increased familiarity will come a demand for greater Internet access from all parts of the community.

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  • In 1998, in circumstances that turned farcical, a Paris journalist was given authorized access to military archives.

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  • The case is made of a weatherproof material with a clasp fastener at the fron t for easy access.

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  • In addition, the access gates are locked to keep out unwanted visitors, and the columns have rubber fenders to prevent scrapes.

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  • You can display your documents on the Internet or restrict access to a chosen few within a local area network.

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  • Other buttons give access to tables of contents for historical texts, and a collection of materials for studying Gothic fiction.

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  • The Biometric devices scan the fingerprint or retina of the eye to allow only authorized personnel to gain access to secure areas.

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  • Everyone is entitled to equal access under the DDA this includes a building's fire alarm.

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  • Data bases which contain sensitive personal data shall be protected by fire walls and access passwords.

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  • Install Sputnik Agent on an appropriate access point, reflashing the firmware, or purchase such a unit from Sputnik.

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  • The venue is a trout fishery which allows access to coarse anglers in the winter months.

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  • The access roads on the southern flanks of Exmoor should be closed.

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  • This website provides access to a complete record of the region's archeology, from the smallest prehistoric flint to the largest medieval castle.

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  • Click the link below to access a simple flowchart to help you keep things straight.

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  • I applied to Oxford because the four-year course and the emphasis on linguistic fluency promised a deeper access to the ancient world.

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  • Offices have access to drinking water (not yet with added fluoride) it is provided on tap.

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  • There are several freshwater lochs, some with restricted access, offering fly-fishing for brown trout.

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  • Some have thus enjoyed access this year, largely due to adopting a low profile and low footfall.

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  • The amended Bill will not put the right of access to advocacy on a statutory footing for patients detained under the Mental Health Act.

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  • Direct access can also be gained to the coastal footpath from the back garden.

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  • The term street includes footways, car parks, public house forecourts and generally any area where the public have access without payment.

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  • Access is from the station forecourt, past the shed on the side away from the station building.

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  • There are further steps giving direct access to the rocky foreshore beyond.

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  • It can also be subsequently scanned to a digital format for enhanced access.

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  • A log-in restricted area provides access to online articles, email updates, and interactive forums.

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  • Access to the upper foyer from this level is by 16 carpeted steps with handrails on both sides.

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  • A sloping ramp provides easy access to the entrance foyer which is a few steps below car park level.

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  • The ship appeared to be very disabled friendly with level access to all areas, disabled toilets and lifts serving all decks.

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  • Youth Access has a central and ongoing partnership with the National Youth Agency, which supports the furtherance of Youth Access's strategic aims.

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  • The introduction of open access is of concern to many, not only gamekeepers.

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  • Access to the yacht is via a wide gangway, which rests at the same level as the quayside.

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  • If a tanker is loaded from a fixed gantry and access is required onto the top of the tanker, fencing should be provided.

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  • Ground floor with private patio and garden with direct access to communal gardens and pool.

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  • There is a double gated entrance to the rear side giving access to plenty of parking / turning space.

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  • Access to both hides is through unlocked gates on the roadside at the western end of the causeway.

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  • Further access off front left restaurant and rear bar to fully fitted trade kitchen, premises have internal gents / Ladies WCs.

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  • We have asked for quotes from local glaziers, now that the local Council has blocked our access to grant aid.

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  • The site provides access to a glossary of acronyms and a glossary of clinical abbreviations.

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  • System programs require access to funny features - to blow the hooter or ring the gong on hardware failure, for example.

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  • And the mirror opens dripping a little black goo and giving access to the halls Ramon was trapped in before.

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  • Weiser defines a spectrum of access ranging from open to closed, with various gradations in between.

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  • Your weekend grandstand ticket gives general circuit wide access.

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  • Access land will normally be indicated on the ground at key entry points by a new waymarking symbol (see graphic ).

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  • I intend to cover the lower access holes later with a couple of blind grommets.

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  • It also features front and rear doorways making access more convenient (attract an excess of hysterical teenage groupies ).

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  • The trees along the moorland edges are trimmed to allow the black grouse better access to the cover of the forest.

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  • Directly beyond this blast door is a security turnstile and small guardroom to control access to the airlock.

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  • Firewall A Firewall is a program which prevents hackers from gaining access to your computer.

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  • The lane was probably built to give access to Lune Mill in the first half of the 13th century, or earlier.

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  • The nearside has a platform / aluminum access steps and stainless steel handrails which extend round the platform.

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  • I have not yet investigated whether the utilities provided on the site include the ability to access a hard disk.

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  • The icons give you access to the local hard disk.

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  • Next to the turret base a large hatchway (7) provides access to the space behind the secondary armament.

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  • Hay is vital - all rabbits at any age need access to unlimited, good quality hay is vital - all rabbits at any age need access to unlimited, good quality hay.

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  • Access to a suitable piece of ground or body of water would be required to use a heat pump.

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  • Conclusion - the challenges The Updated drug strategy (Home Office, 2002) aims to improve access to prescribed heroin.

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  • You will be given access to a locker, which has room for storage of a large holdall.

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  • Connect Now The LJMU web Site Provides access to the Liverpool John Moores University web site home page.

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  • Only a quarter of 13 and 14-year-olds had access to textbooks to help in doing English, history and geography homework.

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  • Hundreds of small feed hoppers have been sited across the estate to ensure that the birds have access to wheat all year round.

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  • Equally horrifying is the fact that many women do not have access to the best possible medical treatment.

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  • From the village, a sequence of chair-lifts take you up to the mid-mountain hub of Sportinia for access to Cesana and Sestriere.

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  • Unfortunately, not everyone has access to ACS grade ammonium hydroxide.

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  • In deep hypnosis a subject may spontaneously access these heightened faculties but it can also be induced by suggestion.

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  • Athens login off campus Icarus, from ScienceDirect 93- Access on and off campus.

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  • Iceni identity used to confirm the user has access to this resource.

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  • Access Mobility impaired visitors can access the mill from the back entrance through the double red gates.

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  • Consequently, Hunt access, either for hounds or horses, was becoming seriously impeded.

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  • The Public Records Acts 1958 & 1967 raise no legal impediment to charging for access to public records.

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  • Private sector provision of Internet access for all looks increasingly implausible even in affluent countries.

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  • The Bog Standard campaign aims to highlight the importance of access to decent hygiene facilities.

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  • Access to the public transport system is then said to be of crucial importance for those without access to a car.

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  • Access, including lifts to the upper floors, will be dramatically improved.

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  • Women, who were ritually impure through birth or menstruation, were not allowed access to game.

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  • Likewise, do not leave ladders to provide easy access to otherwise inaccessible parts of your house.

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  • In addition to the monthly Review, subscribers also receive in-depth Research Files plus access to our online Salary Surveys Directory.

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  • And the very fact that they access multiple keyword indexes reduces their response time.

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  • The database contains two indices which control access to it.

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  • More celebrities have been created by the media and the appetite of the public to access modern celebrity culture has become insatiable.

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  • If the businessman died insolvent, the lender would be locked out and would not be able to access its security.

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  • Access to care affordable group health insurance used to deny.

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  • Improve access to care welfare policy maryland baltimore county of reputable insurers.

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  • Firstly, it is aimed at preserving intact all existing legal regimes providing access to information.

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  • Hummingbird Exceed provides the performance boost necessary for students to remotely access graphically intensive CAD design tools from PCs in their homes.

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  • Also limiting access to these spaces to spatial movement may improve social interaction.

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  • On the one hand, daily life's complex interactions seem to require ever increasing access to specific, accurate information.

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  • The example to the right shows four star access networks interconnected by a cycle backbone network.

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  • His ideas for a globally interconnected set of computers would allow all users to access information on any subject, anywhere.

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  • While customers operate their accounts by phone or internet it's access at every post office that has recently attracted the most interest.

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  • As access to the technology widens, that new commonalties will be discovered between shared interest groups separated by location and history.

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  • How To 1 To access this option, click the Aliases / Forwarding icon on the main screen of your cPanel interface.

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  • They will charge you a straight £ 3,000 to access and match your interim assignment against its library of senior interims.

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  • It also interleaves VDG RAM access to prevent contention.

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