Boundaries Sentence Examples

boundaries
  • There are no boundaries for us.

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  • The city's boundaries were enlarged in 1905.

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  • They were connecting the dots now, drawing the boundaries of their relationship.

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  • Natural boundaries are always the most definite and the strongest, lending.

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  • Dotted lines separated the boundaries of each of the kingdoms.

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  • Rivers do not form effective international boundaries, although between dependent self-governing communities they are convenient lines of demarcation.

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  • The boundaries of the subregions are not well defined.

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  • It was proposed to include in Natal such portions of the Harrismith and Vrede districts as were comprised by a line following the Elands river north from its source on the Basutoland border to its junction with the Wilge river, and thence drawn straight to the point where the boundaries of Natal, the Transvaal and the Orange River Colony meet on the Drakensberg.

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  • In July 1803 Monroe left Paris and entered upon his duties in London; and in the autumn of 1804 he proceeded to Madrid to assist Pinckney in his efforts to secure the definition of the Louisiana boundaries and the acquisition of the Floridas.

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  • Its north-eastern boundaries were decided by the Anglo-Russian agreement of 1873, which expressly acknowledged "Badakshan with its dependent district Wakhan" as "fully belonging to the amir of Kabul," and limited it to the left or southern bank of the Oxus.

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  • The component vibrations at P due to the successive zones are thus nearly equal in amplitude and opposite in phase (the phase of each corresponding to that of the infinitesimal circle midway between the boundaries), and the series which we have to sum is one in which the terms are alternately opposite in sign and, while at first nearly constant in numerical magnitude, gradually diminish to zero.

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  • The amplitude of the light at any point in the axis, when plane waves are incident perpendicularly upon an annular aperture, is, as above, cos k(at-r 1)-cos k(at-r 2) =2 sin kat sin k(r1-r2), r2, r i being the distances of the outer and inner boundaries from the point in question.

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  • For a considerable time Barasat town was the headquarters of a joint magistracy, known as the "Barasat District," but in 1861, on a readjustment of boundaries Barasat district was abolished by order of government, and was converted into a subdivision of the Twenty-four Parganas.

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  • The boundaries of the Transvaal have varied from time to time.

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  • The boundaries of the state were defined, and to them the Transvaal was strictly to adhere.

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  • In the articles of the new convention the boundaries were once more defined, concessions being made to the Transvaal on the Bechuanaland frontier, and to them the republic was bound to " strictly adhere."

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  • Notwithstanding the precise fixing of the boundaries of the republic by the London Convention, President Kruger endeavoured to maintain the Boer hold on Goshen and Stellaland, but the British government on Efforts.

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  • In May 1895, on the urgent representations of Sir Henry Loch, the British government annexed Tongaland, including Kosi Bay, thus making the British and Portuguese boundaries conterminous on the coast of south-east Africa.

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  • Its scope may be briefly indicated as including (a) duties exercised elsewhere by the Borough Councils, and by the London County Council (although that body is by no means powerless within the City boundaries); and (b) peculiar duties such as control of markets and police.

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  • The boundaries of these divisions do not in any way correspond with each other, or with the police divisions, or with the borough or parish boundaries.

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  • P of the city was its special property, and it extended as far as the limits of the territorium of the nearest Roman city or as near thereto as the natural boundaries."

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  • The British government intervened, took formal possession of St Lucia Bay (to which Germany as well as the Transvaal advanced claims), caused the Boers to reduce their demands, and within boundaries agreed to recognize the New Republic - whose territory was in 1888 incorporated in the Transvaal and has since 1903 formed the Vryheid division of Natal.

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  • It is tribal in its origin, and differentiated, not according to boundaries between states, but on national and provincial lines.

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  • The boundaries of Pisidia, like those of most of the inland provinces or regions of Asia Minor, were not clearly defined, and appear to have fluctuated at different times.

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  • Italy from the Tiber to the Alps, but by the end of the 5th century B.C. it was considerably diminished, and about the year 100 B.C. its boundaries were the Arnus (Arno), the Apennines and the Tiber.

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  • In this way the feudal county, or duchy, formed itself, corresponding in most cases only roughly to the old administrative divisions of the state, for within the bounds of the county there had often formed private feudal possessions too powerful to be forced into dependence upon the count, sometimes the vice-comes had followed the count's example, and often, on the other hand, the count had attached to his county like private possessions of his own lying outside its boundaries.

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  • His uncle Obed, to whom equally with Abdallah is due the foundation of the Ibn Rashid dynasty, laboured to extend the Shammar boundaries.

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  • In 1777 the state offered a large premium for every pound of steel, similar to German steel, made within its boundaries; and in 1789 a rolling and slitting mill was built near Providence.

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  • He was largely occupied in 1763 and in 1779-86 in settling the boundaries of several of the states.

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  • If we consider lines of electric force to be drawn from the boundaries of these areas, they will cut up the space round the conductor into tubular surfaces called tubes of electric force, and each tube will spring from an area of the conductor carrying a unit electric charge.

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  • The boundaries of the borough were extended in 1733.

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  • The Army is divided, usually in harmony with national boundaries, into "territories," each under a "Commissioner," with headquarters in the capital of the country.

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  • The cuticle is secreted by an epidermis in which no cell boundaries are to be seen; it sends out processes into the bristles.

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  • The priests were the Arval Brothers, who conducted the victims - ox, sheep and pig (suovetaurilia) - in procession with prayer to Ceres round the boundaries of the ager Romanus.

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  • On this ground Maxwell inferred that the forces acting in the radiometer are connected with gliding of the gas along the unequally heated boundaries; and as the laws of this slipping, as well as the constitution of the adjacent layer, are uncertain, the problem becomes very intricate.

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  • It was here that in 1814 Great Britain, Austria, Russia and Prussia concluded the treaty (dated March i, signed March 9) by which they severally bound themselves not to conclude a separate peace with Napoleon, and to continue the war until France should have been reduced within the boundaries of 1792.

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  • A committee of the Royal Geographical Society - the deliberations of which were interrupted by the departure on his last voyage of Sir John Franklin, one of the members - suggested these meridians as boundaries; the north and south boundaries of the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans being the polar circles, leaving an Arctic and an Antarctic Ocean to complete the hydrosphere.

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  • It has been found more convenient to take as northern boundaries the narrowest part of the straits near the Arctic circle, Bering Strait on the Pacific side, and on the Atlantic side the narrowest part of Davis Strait, and of Denmark Strait, then the shortest line from Iceland to the Faeroes, thence to the most northerly island of the Shetlands and thence to Cape Statland in Norway.

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  • Benjamin Franklin in 1775 and Charles Blagden in 1781, by means of numerous observations of temperature made on board the packets plying on the Atlantic passage, determined the boundaries of these two currents and their seasonal variations with considerable precision.

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  • The differences of salinity support this method, and, especially in the northern European seas, often prove a sharper criterion of the boundaries than temperature itself; this is especially the case at the entrance to the Baltic. Evidence drawn from drift-wood, wrecks or special drift bottles is less distinct but still interesting and often useful; this method of investigation includes the use of icebergs as indicators of the trend of currents and also of plankton, the minute swimming or drifting organisms so abundant at the surface of the sea.

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  • Now translated into Spanish and Indonesian, the song seems undaunted by boundaries.

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  • The principal road extends from the shafts southward; and on both sides of it the coal has been removed from the light-shaded area by cutting it back perpendicularly towards the boundaries, along faces about 50 yds.

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  • It has, therefore, been to some extent superseded by the long-wall method, the upper half being taken at the first working, and removed as completely as possible, working backwards from the boundaries to the shaft.

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  • By the Florida treaty, finally ratified at that time, the claims of the United States to Texas, based on the Louisiana purchase, were given up, and the eastern and northern boundaries of the province were determined.

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  • The final step in the determination of the present boundaries of the state was taken in 1896, when the Supreme Court of the United States decided the Greer county case.

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  • The question of boundaries, to which the question of slavery gave rise, then became the cause of delay, but the Territory became a state in 1846.

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  • These boundaries include an area of about 364,000 sq.

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  • German New Guinea was annexed on the 16th of November 1884, when the German flag was raised in Friedrich Wilhelmshafen and a trading company was established on the north-east coast, and in 1885 the two countries agreed to fix their boundaries through the then neutral areas of the country.

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  • Grisegonelle (Greytunic) (c. 960-21st of July 987), who inaugurated a policy of expansion, having as its objects the extension of the boundaries of the ancient countship and the reconquest of those parts of it which had been annexed by the neighbouring states; for, though western Anjou had been recovered from the dukes of Brittany since the beginning of the 10th century, in the east all the district of Saumur had already by that time fallen into the hands of the counts of Blois and Tours.

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  • To the north of the district lay the district of Saskatchewan, so that when the two were united by the Dominion act of 1905, they were somewhat changed in boundaries and the name Saskatchewan was given to the new province.

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  • No pottery existed in Athapascan boundaries.

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  • The boundaries of Essex were in later times the rivers Stour and Thames, but the original limits of the kingdom are quite uncertain; towards the west it probably included most if not the whole of Hertfordshire, and in the 7th century the whole of Middlesex.

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  • The necessity, for administrative or other purposes, of tabulating separately the returns for so many cross-divisions of the country constitutes one of the main difficulties of the English census operations, more particularly as the boundaries of these areas are frequently altered.

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  • This elementary conception is of the figure as already existing, rather than of its method of description; the test of circularity being the possibility of rotation within a surrounding figure so as to keep the two boundaries always completely in contact.

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  • The second consists in taking a comparatively simple expression obtained in this way, and introducing corrections which involve the values of ordinates at or near the boundaries of the figure.

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  • He had civil and criminal jurisdiction within the boundaries of his estate; he could create offices, found cities, and appoint officers and magistrates, and, although the charter permitted an appeal from his court to the directorgeneral and council in any case in which the amount in dispute exceeded fifty guilders ($20), some of the patroons exacted from their colonists a promise not to avail themselves of the privilege.

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  • In the meantime the patroons had claimed unrestricted rights of trade within the boundaries of their estates.

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  • Since the country was considered to be of little value the question of boundaries was not pressed either by Great Britain or the United States after the War of 1812, and by a treaty concluded on the 10th of October 1818 it was agreed that " any country that may be claimed by either party on the north-west coast of North America, westward of the Stony (Rocky) Mountains shall be free and open for the term of ten years from the date of the signature of the present convention to the vessels, citizens and subjects of the two powers."

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  • Meanwhile Oregon was admitted as a state (February 14, 1859) with the present boundaries, and the remnant of the territory, including portions of what are now Idaho and Wyoming, was added to Washington.

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  • In October 1849 Moshesh was induced to sign a new arrangement considerably curtailing the boundaries of the Basuto reserve.

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  • Except in the south, towards Bohemia, where the Erzgebirge forms at once the limit of the kingdom and of the empire, the boundaries are entirely political.

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  • Nothing but Austria's vehement desire to keep a powerful neighbour at a distance from her boundaries preserved it from being completely annexed by the Prussians, who had succeeded the Russians in the government.

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  • In 1863 when Idaho Territory was formed, the boundaries of the Dakotas were fixed at practically their present limits.

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  • He was occupied chiefly with affairs of the principalities of Anspach and Bayreuth, newly acquired by Prussia, and especially in the settlement of disputes with Bavaria as to their boundaries.

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  • He evolved the theory, among other things, that the boundaries of the old counties or pagi (Gaue) were identical with those of the dioceses.

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  • The indefiniteness of the boundaries between the three classes, and the free interchange of names, show how far they were from being definite offices or orders within the Church.

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  • Provincial Boundaries Railways ful campaign abroad for the destruction of the Austrian Monarchy and the attainment of Czechoslovak independence.

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  • In June 842 the three brothers met on an island in the Saone to negotiate a peace, and each appointed forty representatives to arrange the boundaries of their respective kingdoms. This developed into the treaty of Verdun concluded in August 843, by which Louis received the bulk of the lands of the Carolingian empire lying east of the Rhine, together with a district around Spires, Worms and Mainz, on the left bank of the river.

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  • During Olgierd's reign the southern boundaries of Lithuania touched the Black Sea, including the whole tract of land between the mouth of the Bug and the mouth of the Dnieper.

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  • In view of the fact that Poland was the most defenceless country in Europe, with no natural boundaries, and constantly exposed to attacks from every quarter, it was not unreasonable to expect even this patriotic sacrifice from the privileged classes, who held at least two-thirds of the land by military tenure.

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  • And now, eighty-four years after his death, Poland was once more split up into half a dozen loosely federated states in the hands of country gentlemen too ignorant and prejudiced to look beyond the boundaries of their own provinces.

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  • He considered that the equilibrium of Europe would be irretrievably upset were the Russian boundaries to be pushed into the heart of Germany.

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  • Each legislative district of Baltimore is entitled tc -he number of delegates to which the largest county shall or may be entitled under the foregoing apportionment, and the General Assembly may from time to time alter the boundaries of Baltimore city districts in order to equalize their population.

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  • About this time also the north and east boundaries of the province were beginning to suffer from the aggressions of William Penn.

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  • The territory now forming the state of Delaware was within the boundaries defined by the Maryland charter, but in 1682 it was transferred by the duke of York to William Penn and in 1685 Lord Baltimore's claim to it was denied by an order in council, on the ground that it had been inhabited by Christians before the Maryland charter was granted.

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  • The boundaries, however, are in part not accurately determined.

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  • At the same time the boundaries of property were ill defined and difficult to determine.

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  • Older than these divisions, the date of which is uncertain, the ancient limits of the dioceses of Pamplona, Bayonne and Calahorra, probably corresponded more nearly to the boundaries of the ancient tribes, the Autrigones, the Caristi, the Varduli and the Vascones, with their still differing dialects, than do these civil provinces.

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  • The Stoics had taught them to overstep the political boundaries of states and nationalities, and rise from the Hellenic to a universal human consciousness.

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  • The state is nominally sovereign within its own boundaries, and the authority of its officers and courts in local questions is supreme except in cases where federal intervention or supervision is provided for by the federal constitution.

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  • As the states have control of the schools within their own boundaries there was at first a great lack of uniformity, but the national system is being generally adopted.

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  • Norristown was incorporated as a borough in 1812, and its boundaries were extended in 1853.

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  • Its boundaries include the suburbs, formerly separate urban districts, of Eccleshill, Idle and others.

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  • In formulating this appeal he declared that when the Boers were at war with Mosilikatze, chief of the Matabele, he had aided them on the solemn understanding that they were to respect his boundaries.

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  • In the London convention of February 1884, conceded by Lord Derby in response to the overtures of Boer delegates, the Transvaal boundaries were again defined, part of eastern Bechuanaland being included in Boer territory.

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  • In 1891 the northern frontier of the protectorate was extended to its present boundaries, and the whole of it placed P P under the administration of a resident commissioner, a protest being made at the time by the British South Africa Company on the ground that the protectorate was included in the sphere of their charter.

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  • In 1227 the same monarch confirmed the charter of John fixing the city boundaries and the jurisdiction of its magistrates.

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  • He compelled the poetry of art to draw nearer to life and nature, extended its boundaries and made it more generally intelligible and popular.

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  • Outside the boundaries of the solar system, the metaphysical side of his genius, no longer held in check by experience, fully asserted itself.

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  • The area of the United States, as here considered, exclusive of Alaska and outlying possessions, occupies a belt nearly twenty degrees of middle latitude in width, and crosses Boundaries sad Area, North America from the Atlantic to the Pacific. The southern boundary is naturally defined on the east by the Gulf of Mexico; its western extension crosses obliquely over the western highlands, along an irregular line determined by aggressive Americans of Anglo-Saxon stock against Americans of Spanish stock.

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  • It then included a portion of Glasgow, but in 1226 the boundaries were rectified so as to exclude the whole of the city.

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  • The parliamentary and municipal boundaries of Salford are identical; area, 5170 acres.

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  • Georgia likewise claimed all the lands between the 31st and 35th parallels from its present western boundary to the Mississippi river, and did not surrender its claim until 1802; two years later the boundaries of the Mississippi Territory were extended so as to include all of the Georgia cession.

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  • Although excelled by Alabama in th County Seats County Boundaries; ' -i f y?

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  • The Georgia legislature, however, contended that the United States had not acted in good faith, declared that all land within the boundaries of the state belonged to Georgia, and in 1828 extended the jurisdiction of Georgia law to the Cherokee lands.

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  • It was known first as the Plantation of Wessaguscus or Wessagusset; was incorporated as a township in 1635, and its boundaries have been practically unchanged since 1637, when Round and Grape islands were granted to Weymouth.

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  • These boundaries include the grand-duchy of Oldenburg and the free state of Bremen, the former stretching southward from the North Sea nearly to the southern boundary of Hanover.

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  • Whereas during the 19th century states were being cut out to suit the existing distribution of language, in the 20th the tendency seems to be to avoid further rearrangement of boundaries, and to complete the homogeneity, thus far attained, by the artificial method of forcing reluctant populations to adopt the language of the predominant or governing race.

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  • Thus while in the one case homogeneity of language within state boundaries seems to be one of the conditions making for peace, the avoidance of interference with a well-marked homogeneous area like Finland would seem to contribute equally to the same end.

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  • There is always enough grain within the boundaries of India for the needs of the people; the only difficulty is to transport it to the tract where it is required at a particular moment.

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  • Thus by diplomacy as well as by force of arms Catholic France made possible the continued existence of a Protestant Germany, and helped to create the balance of power between Catholic, Lutheran and Reformed within the Empire, that, crystallized in the Peace of Westphalia, fixed the religious boundaries of central Europe for upwards of two centuries.

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  • Roman remains have often been found in excavations carried out within the existing boundaries, which suggests that the Roman settlement was at least twenty feet below the present surface.

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  • Acting on the recommendation of Governor Robert Lucas (1781-1853), on the 23rd of February 1835 the Ohio legislature passed an Act extending the northern boundaries of what were then Wood, Henry and Williams counties (lying partly within the disputed strip) north to the Harris line, and providing for the organization of new townships within this added territory, and for the appointment of three commissioners to re-mark the line.

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  • The valley, at once spacious and definite, is a natural precinct, and it is probable that no artificial boundaries of the Altis, or sacred grove, existed until comparatively late times.

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  • During the 18th century the two powers came frequently into conflict; and in 1859 their boundaries were settled by treaty.

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  • The old treaty had proved irksome in many ways, especially as it left portions of the territory belonging to protected chieftains of each power as enclaves within the boundaries of the other.

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  • This led to frequent disputes, and a mixed boundary commission was therefore appointed under the new treaty and determined more satisfactory boundaries.

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  • Like many other geographical designations the use of which is controlled neither by natural nor political boundaries, the name has been very differently employed by different writers and at different periods.

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  • And in their indifference to the distinctions of race and nationality they merely accommodated themselves to the spirit which had become characteristic of chivalry itself, already recognized, like the church, as a universal institution which knit together the whole warrior caste of Christendom into one great fraternity irrespective alike of feudal subordination and territorial boundaries.

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  • Gantarawadi has, however, encroached westwards beyond the boundaries which nature would assign to it.

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  • But if we confine the meaning of the term Alps to those parts of the chain that are what is commonly called " Alpine," where the height is sufficient to support a considerable mass of perpetual snow, our boundaries to the west and to the east must be placed at spots other than those mentioned above.

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  • At one time these gardens were in the centre of the city itself, but owing to modern improvements they have been gradually pushed out beyond the city boundaries farther and farther.

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  • It continued to increase in size, various extensions of its boundaries being made, and its trading importance is to a large extent the result of its commercial intercourse with England.

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  • Their country bore some traces of Roman influence, and its main boundaries were the Inns, the Danube, the Lech and the Alps; but its complete settlement was a work of time.

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  • These two diagrams naturally have much the same general shape, but though the boundaries of the several regions in the iron-cementite diagram are known pretty accurately, and though the relative positions of the boundaries of the two diagrams are probably about as here shown, the exact topography of the iron-graphite diagram is not yet known.

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  • Many of the smaller places mentioned in the list of Dionysius, or the early wars of the Romans, had altogether ceased to exist, but the statement of Pliny that fifty-three communities (populi) had thus perished within the boundaries of Old Latium is perhaps exaggerated.

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  • The emperors Claudius, Nerva and Trajan turned their attention to the district, and under their example and exhortation the Roman aristocracy erected numerous villas within its boundaries, and used them at least for summer residences.

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  • But it was not separated from the adjacent territories by any natural frontier or physical boundaries, and it is only by the enumeration of the towns in Pliny according to the division of Italy by Augustus that we can determine its limits.

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  • Though the Apennines comprised within the boundaries of Latium do not rise to a height approaching that of the loftiest summits of the central range, they attain to a considerable altitude, and form steep and rugged mountain masses from 4000 to 5000 ft.

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  • In shape it is an irregular oblong, and it is very difficult to define its boundaries, as at one extremity it wanders into Oudh, while on the south the villages of the state of Rewa and those of this district are hopelessly intermingled.

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  • After the Norman Conquest, when the boundaries between church and state were more clearly marked, it became usual for patrons to appoint to livings not only without the consent, but even against the will, of the bishops.

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  • The congress of Vienna (31st of May 1815) determined the relations and fixed the boundaries of the kingdom; and the new constitution was promulgated on the 24th of August following, the king taking the oath at Brussels on the 27th of September.

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  • Phormium has been treated as a cultivated plant in New Zealand, though only to a limited extent; for the supplies of the raw material dependence has been principally placed on the abundance of the wild stocks and on sets planted as hedges and boundaries by the Maoris.

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  • Fresh-water lakes, one of which, Deal Lake, extends for some distance into the wooded country, form the northern and southern boundaries.

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  • Besides these political divisions there are certain parts of Germany which, not conterminous with political boundaries, retain appellations derived either from former tribal settlements or from divisions of the old Holy Roman Empire.

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  • The total number of German-speaking people, within the boundaries wherein they constitute the compact mass of the population, may be estimated, if the Dutch and Walloons be included, at 65 millions.

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  • Most of the states by which these laws had been published had long ago ceased to exist; probably in every case their boundaries had changed, but the laws remained valid (except in those cases in which they had been expressly repealed) for the whole of the district for which they had been originally promulgated.

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  • In Africa Britain and France proceeded to annex territory adjacent to the German acquisitions, and a period followed during which the boundaries of German, French and British possessions were determined by ncgotiation.

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  • But with the growth of the idea of German unity, Germanism had established a new ideal, of which the centre lay beyond the boundaries of the Austrian monarchy, and which was bound to be antagonistic to the aspirations of other races.

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  • In a dispute, partly about boundaries, partly about the right of intermarriage between the Hellenic and the Hellenizing city, Segesta was hard pressed.

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  • The south and east boundaries were laid down by agreements between Germany and France on the 24th of December 1885, the 15th of March 1894 and the 18th of April 1908.

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  • By an extension of its boundaries the city nearly doubled its area and increased its population in 1907.

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  • In reality again these nome-divisions were treated with considerable freedom, being split or reunited and their boundaries readjusted.

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  • Amenophis caused a series of large scarabs unique in their kind to be engraved with the name and parentage of his queen Taia, followed by varying texts commemorating like medals the boundaries of his kingdom, his secondary marriage with Gilukhipa, daughter of the king of Mitanni.

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  • This with a large area around he dedicated to Aton in the sixth year, while splendid temples, palaces, houses and tombs for his god, for himself and for his courtiers were rising around him; apparently also this son of Aton swore an oath never to pass beyond the boundaries of Atons special domain.

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  • The government 0 the pashalik of Egypt was made hereditary in the family of Mehemet Ali.i A map showing the boundaries of Egypt accompanied the firman granting Mehemet Ali the pashalik, a duplicate copy being retained by the Porte.

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  • The English Miles ro ao 30 Albae -tbae Capitals of Counties County Boundaries Railways --i--- Canals Marshes  ?_ - ' 1s3nge ?

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  • Towards the south the boundaries of the Danish state remained unchanged.

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  • The measures taken by Alfred to repress this revolt culminated in the capture of London in 885 or 886, and the treaty known as Alfred and Guthrum's peace, whereby the boundaries of the treaty of Wedmore (with which this is often confused) were materially modified in Alfred's favour.

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  • As against the Church of Rome, with its system of rigid centralization, the Anglican Church represents the principle of local autonomy, which it holds to be once more primitive and more catholic. In this respect the Anglican communion has developed on the lines defined in her articles at the Reformation; but, though in principle there is no great difference between a church defined by national, and a church defined by racial boundaries, there is an immense difference in effect, especially when the race - as in the case of the English - is itself ecumenical.

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  • By means of an inscription Ross was enabled to identify the site of the temple; it lies, in agreement with the description of Herodotus, on a low hill beyond the boundaries of the town..

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  • Thus Hincmar, archbishop of Reims, complains that not only his metropolitanate (dioecesis) but his bishopric (parochia) is divided between two realms under two kings; and this inconvenient overlapping of jurisdictions remained, in fact, very common in Europe until the readjustments of national boundaries by the territorial settlements of the 19th century.

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  • The Peninsula is inhabited by a great variety of races, whose ethnological limits are far from corresponding with the existing political boundaries.

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  • The boundaries of the " regno" were finally fixed, by a truce with the pope in October 1144, at a line south of the Tronto and east of Terracina and Ceprano.

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  • There were (I) a district Caledonia, of which the southern border must have been on or near the isthmus between the Clyde and the Forth, (2) a Caledonian Forest (possibly in Perthshire), and (3) a tribe of Caledones or Calidones, named by the geographer Ptolemy as living within boundaries which are now unascertainable.

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  • But of the political divisions, the boundaries and capitals of the tribes, and the like, we know nothing.

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  • It is impossible to say anything definite about the boundaries of Phrygia before the 5th century.

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  • The boundaries of the two Byzantine Phrygias were not always the same.

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  • These discoveries definitely determine the district occupied by the Sakiya republic in the 6th and 7th centuries B.C. The boundaries, of course, are not known; but the clan must have spread 30 m.

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  • Delegates from the elector of Saxony met it as it crossed the boundaries of the principality.

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  • The modern subdivisions under the jurisdiction of the Ottoman Empire are in no sense conterminous with those of antiquity, and hence do not afford a boundary by which Palestine can be separated exactly from the rest of Syria in the north, or from the Sinaitic and Arabian deserts in the south and east; nor are the records of ancient boundaries sufficiently full and definite to make possible the complete demarcation of the country.

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  • From 1798 to 1803 Appenzell, with the other domains of the abbot of St Gall, was formed into the canton Santis of the Helvetic Republic, but in 1803, on the creation of the new canton of St Gall, shrank back within its former boundaries.

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  • He dismissed the governor; he determined advantageously to himself the boundaries between his state and the territories of the duke of Savoy and of the papacy; and he enforced his authority over perhaps the most unruly nobility in western Europe, both lay and ecclesiastical.

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  • The empire included within these boundaries is rich in varieties of scenery and climate, from the highest mountains in the world to vast river deltas raised only a few inches above the level of the sea.

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  • On the opposite or north-western frontier of India, the mountainous offshoots run down the entire length of the British boundaries from the Himalayas to the sea.

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  • Within the boundaries of India almost any extreme of climate that is known to the tropics or the temperate zone can be found.

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  • Their jurisdictions coincide for the most part with the magisterial and fiscal boundaries.

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  • The permanent settlement was confined to the three provinces of Bengal, Behar and Orissa, according to their boundaries at that time.

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  • For he left no heir to carry on his work; his death " loosened the bonds which restrained the disruptive forces always ready to operate in India, and allowed them to produce their normal result, a medley of petty states, with ever-varying boundaries, and engaged in unceasing internecine war."

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  • The treaty, known in history as Jay's Treaty, provided that the north-western posts should be evacuated by the 1st of June 1796, that commissioners should be appointed to settle the north-east and the north-west boundaries, and that the British claims for British debts as well as the American claims for compensation for illegal seizures should be referred to commissioners.

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  • Mr Gore, starting from the same basis of faith and authority, soon found from his practical experience in dealing with the "doubts and difficulties" of the younger generation that this uncompromising attitude was untenable, and set himself the task of reconciling the principle of authority in religion with that of scientific authority by attempting to define the boundaries of their respective spheres of influence.

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  • On these the belt of greatest density can be easily traced, and it follows very closely the course of the Milky Way; but, whereas the latter is a belt having rather sharply defined boundaries, the star-density decreases gradually and continuously from the galactic equator to the galactic poles.

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  • Imagine this stratum to be uniformly filled with stars (of course in the actual universe instead of sharply defined boundaries AB and CD, we shall have a gradual thinning out of the stars) it follows that in the two directions SP and SP' the fewest stars will be seen; these then are the directions of the galactic poles.

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  • A glance at the Milky Way, with its sharply defined irregular boundaries, its clefts and diverging spur, is almost sufficient to assure us that it is a real cluster of stars, and does not merely indicate the directions in which the universe extends farthest.

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  • In June 1900 he made an arrangement with Spain, fixing the long-disputed boundaries of the French and Spanish possessions in West Africa.

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  • But the Roman success was by no means decisive, and no definite understanding as to boundaries was come to with Persia.

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  • The boundaries of the territories, protectorates and spheres of influence in Africa of Great Britain, Germany, France, Italy, Belgium and Portugal have been readjusted by a series of treaties, especially between the years 1885 and 1894.

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  • Conditions both in Ohio and in Congress had placed him, and were to keep him for twenty years, in an attitude of aggressive and uncompromising partisanship. His Congressional district was naturally Democratic, and its boundaries were changed two or three times by Democratic legislatures for the purpose of so grouping Democratic strongholds as to cause his defeat.

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  • He was not permitted to take a seat, but his presence in Washington hastened action, and on the 25th of July 1868 the act of Congress establishing a Territory with the present boundaries was approved by President Andrew Johnson.

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  • But the boundaries are not definite and the references to its territory are obscure.

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  • The greater part of the Chinese on the west coast are originally drawn from the boundaries of Kwang-tung and Kwang-si.

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  • The boundaries of British and Dutch Borneo were finally defined by a treaty concluded on the 10th of June 1891.

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  • The boundaries of these provinces, however, are purely arbitrary and not accurately defined.

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  • The boundaries were often changed; and about A.D.

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  • In the schedules of boundaries appended to two Old English charters there occurs mention of pools called " Grendel's mere," one in Wiltshire and the other in Staffordshire.

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  • In 1609 the London Company was reorganized, other colonists were sent out and the boundaries of the new country were fixed, according to which Virginia was to extend from a point 200 m.

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  • The popes, as the phrase went, became Spanish chaplains, with a fixed territory guaranteed to them by Spanish arms; apart from the addition of Ferrara and one or two other petty principalities on the extinction of the reigning house, its boundaries remained unchanged till Napoleonic times.

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  • Massachusetts, Plymouth, Connecticut and New Haven constituted in their early years a group of neighbouring colonies, substantially independent of the mother country, and possessing a unity of purpose and similar institutions but in need of mutual protection from the Indians, the Dutch and the French, and also needing an arbiter to whom they might refer their own disputes, especially those relating to boundaries and trade.

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  • The great form of indirect taxation consisted in the customs dues (portoria), which were collected at the provincial boundaries and varied in amount, though the maximum did not exceed 5 Under the same head were included the town dues (or octrois).

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  • To determine the validity of these claims, which had been complicated by transfers and subdivisions, and to fix their boundaries, which were often very vaguely described, proved a very formidable undertaking; and the slow process of confirmation greatly retarded the development of the Territory.

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  • It finds a place in the northern boundaries of Israel under David, Solomon and Jeroboam II.

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  • Used as an historical term, a pale is a district marked off from the surrounding country by a different system of government and law or by definite boundaries.

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  • At the same time the remaining lordships were added to the English border counties of Gloucester, Shropshire and Hereford, and also to the existing Welsh shires of Cardigan, Carmarthen, Glamorgan and Pembroke, all of which found their boundaries considerably enlarged under this statute.

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  • According to Marquardt, the boundaries of the province were the Tibiscus (Temes) on the W., the Carpathians on the N., the Tyras on the E., and the Danube on the S., but Brandis (in Pauly-Wissowa's Realencyclopddie) maintains that it did not extend farther eastwards than the river Olt (Aluta) - the country beyond belonging to lower Moesia - and not so far as the Theiss westwards, being thus limited to Transylvania and Little Walachia.

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  • In the western and northern alpine part of Sweden, near the boundaries of Norway, the Silurian strata are covered by crystalline rocks, mica schists, quartzites, &c., of an enormous thickness, which have been brought into their present positions upon a thrust-plane.

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  • At its maximum the inland ice not only covered Scandinavia but also passed over the present boundaries of Russia and Germany.

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  • The first column shows the older divisions of the county into provinces, the names and boundaries of which differ in many cases from the lan.

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  • These disputes were settled by a rectification of boundaries which assigned Blekinge to Denmark.

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  • Yet the Swedish Empire was rather a geographical expression than a state with natural and national boundaries.

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  • The estimated number of Indians living within the boundaries of Chile is about 50,000, which presumably includes the nomadic tribes of the Fuegian archipelago, whose number probably does not reach 5000.

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  • In 1877 it received a municipal charter, the boundaries of the borough including the suburban townships of Tranmere, Claughton, Oxton and part of Higher Bebington.

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  • He treated the relations of church and state in L'Eglise et Petal (Brussels, 3 vols., 1858-1862; new and revised edition, 1865), and the same subject occupied a large proportion of the eighteen volumes of his chief historical work, Etudes sur l'histoire de l'humanite (Ghent and Brussels, 1 8551870), which aroused considerable interest beyond the boundaries of Belgium.

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  • The boundaries of the space possessing such virtue were from time to time enlarged.

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  • The new boundary line starts from the summit of the Sapaleri (or Zapalegui), where the Argentine, Bolivian and Chilean boundaries converge, and runs west to Licancaur, thence north to the most southern source of Lake Ascotan which it follows to and across this lake in the direction of the Oyahua volcano, and thence in a straight line to the Tua volcano, on the frontier of the province of Tarapaca.

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  • He had to deal with two difficult settlements as to boundaries with Chile and Brazil, and to take steps for improving the means of communication in the country, by this means reviving its mining and other industries.

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  • The boundaries of the city have not been essentially extended since 1860, and though large and important suburbs have crept up and practically merged with it, its administrative area remains unchanged.

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  • The hill of Criffel and Loch Kinder are situated within the parish boundaries.

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  • The boundaries as fixed by Congress were rejected by a convention which met on the 4th of September at Ann Arbor, but they were accepted by the convention of the Jackson party, which met, also at Ann Arbor, on the 6th of December; the action of this latter convention was considered authoritative by Congress, which admitted Michigan into the Union as a state on the 26th of January 1837.

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  • The Greek Church, like the Roman, soon spread far beyond the imperial dioceses which at first fixed its boundaries, but it was far less successful than the Roman in preserving - its conquests for Christianity.

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  • Society may have at one time been matrilinear in the communities that become the historic Hellenes; but of this there is no trace in the worship of Zeus and Hera.18 In fact, the whole of the family morality in Hellas centred in Zeus, whose altar in the courtyard was the bond of the kinsmen; and sins against the family, such as unnatural vice and the exposure of children, are sometimes spoken of as offences against the High God.I" He was also the tutelary deity of the larger organization of the phratria; and the altar of Zeus c Pparpcos was the meetingpoint of the phrateres, when they were assembled to consider the legitimacy of the new applicants for admission into their circle.20 His religion also came to assist the development of certain legal ideas, for instance, the rights of private or family property in land; he guarded the allotments as Zein KAdpcos,2' and the Greek commandment " thou shalt not remove thy neighbour's landmark " was maintained by Zeus " Opcos, the god of boundaries, a more personal power than the Latin Jupiter Terminus.22 His highest political functions were summed up in the title IIoXtfin, a cult-name of legendary antiquity in Athens, and frequent in the Hellenic world.23 His consort in his political life was not Hera, but his daughter Athena Polias.

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  • It is not as yet possible to fix the exact boundaries of the original home of the Chaldaeans, but it may be regarded as having been the long stretch of alluvial land situated at the then separate mouths of the Tigris and Euphrates, which rivers now combine to flow into the Persian Gulf in the waters of the majestic Shatt el `Arab.

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  • All the boundaries except the northern are natural.

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  • The islands lie entirely within the German sphere of interest, and the boundaries were agreed upon between Great Britain and Germany on the 10th of April 1889.

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  • Their boundaries are not as a rule determined by the physical features of the land; but localities are habitually defined by the use of their names.

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  • Section IX., on Territorial Divisions, indicates the departures from the ancient county boundaries made for certain purposes of administration.

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  • Region, which stretches from the Scottish border to the division centre of England, running south; (3) Wales, occupying the peninsula between the Mersey and the Bristol Channel, and extending beyond the political boundaries of the principality to include Shropshire and Hereford; and (4) the peninsula of Cornwall and Devon.

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  • Essex and Suffolk, Suffolk and Norfolk, Cornwall and Devon, Durham and Yorkshire, Lancashire and Cheshire, are all separated by rivers, while rivers form some part of the boundaries of almost every county.

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  • Still, it is noteworthy that the Severn and Trent nowhere form continuous county boundaries.

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  • Watersheds are rarely used as boundaries for any distance; but, although slightly overlapping the watershed on all sides, Yorkshire is very nearly coincident with the basin of the Ouse.

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  • The boundaries of the parishes, the fundamental units of English political geography, are very often either rivers or watersheds, and they frequently show a close relation to the strike of the geological strata.

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  • The hundreds, or groups of parishes, necessarily share their boundaries, and groups of hundreds are often aggregated to form larger subdivisions of counties.

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  • As for the boundaries of these ancient seas, we can say nothing with certainty, but it is of interest to note the evidence we possess of still older land conditions, such as we have in the old rocks of Shropshire, &c. In the Devonian period it is clear that an elevatory movement had set in towards the north, which gave rise to the formation of inland lakes and narrow estuaries in which the Old Red Sandstone rocks were formed, while in the south of England lay the sea with a vigorous coral fauna.

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  • For various administrative and other purposes England and Wales have been divided, at different times from the Saxon period onwards, into a series of divisions, whose boundaries have England and Wales; Areas.

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  • Registration counties are groups of registration districts, and their boundaries differ more or less from those both of the ancient and the administrative counties.

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  • They may dispense with the disqualification of a parish or district councillor arising only by reason of his being a shareholder in a water company or similar company contracting with the council, and, as has above been stated, they have large powers of altering the boundaries of parishes.

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  • This led to a treaty with the United States in 1824 and one with Great Britain in 1825, by which the excessive demands of Russia were relinquished and the boundaries of the Russian possessions were permanently fixed.

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  • In a circular letter addressed to the powers on the 1st of August 1885 His Majesty declared the neutrality of the "Independent State of the Congo," and set out the boundaries which were then claimed for the new state.

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  • At the date of the issue of the circular the agreements with France and Portugal had partially defined the boundaries of the Free State on the lower river, and the 30th degree of longitude east of Greenwich was recognized as the limit of its extension eastwards.

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  • The following is a list of the agreements subsequently made with reference to the boundaries of the state (see also Africa, §5) I.

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  • North of the Lukuga river the main chain throws out into the central zone, in a north-westerly direction, a secondary range known as the Bambara Mountains, which forms one of the boundaries of the Manyema country.

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  • It was separate from Italy proper, the Aesis first and then the Rubicon being the boundary on the east, and the Arnus the boundary on the west, so that, for example, Luca remained outside the boundaries of Italy proper, even in 89 B.C. Romanization had, however, progressed considerably, the foundation of colonies and the construction of roads had gone on during the 2nd century, and the whole district as far as the Padus was given the Roman franchise in 89 B.C., while the Transpadanes received Latin rights, and were fully enfranchised forty years later.

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  • For the next three years the land was fairly quiet, the chief political events being the convention (6th February 1891) between Italy and Abyssinia, protocols between Italy and Great Britain (24th March and 15th April 1891) and a proclamation by Menelek (loth April 1891), all on the subject of boundaries.

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  • The first trade route to be established by white men within the present boundaries of Utah was the old Spanish trail from Santa Fe to Los Angeles.

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  • The boundaries of the 8th division include those of the former Oudh, Allahabad, Assam and Presidency districts; and the troops now quartered in Bengal only consist of the Presidency brigade with its headquarters at Fort William.

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  • A second question relates to the boundaries.

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  • The Vaal, within the boundaries of the colony, is increased by the Harts river from the north-east and the Riet river from the south-east, whilst just within the colony the Riet is joined by the Modder.

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  • The line a" a" drawn from zero parallel to the first line, produced to the boundaries of the diagram, will cut the vertical at the end of the first year at the percentage of the driest year's flow which may be safely drawn continuously from the reservoir throughout the two years.

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  • The positions of springs are determined by permeable depressions in the surface of the ground below the general level of saturation, and frequently also by the holding up of that level locally by comparatively impermeable strata, sometimes combined with a fault or a synclinal fold of the strata, forming the more permeable portion into an underground basin or channel lying within comparatively impermeable boundaries.

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  • Its boundaries, however, cannot be definitely fixed, as they change with the periods of humidity and drought.

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  • This story seems to have no foundation in fact; it was not Whitman, but the great influx of settlers in1843-1844that saved Oregon, if, indeed, there was then any danger of its being given up. (See Whitman, Marcus.) 1857; and on the 14th of February 1859 Oregon was admitted into the Union with its present boundaries.

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  • The boundaries of Rockingham Forest were increased from 6 m.

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  • On the retrocession of the Transvaal in 1881 the independence of the Swazis was recognized by the Boers and the Pretoria convention of that year defined the boundaries of the country.

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  • In the latter part of the 19th century, however, this state of things began to be greatly modified owing to the strong Polish national movement which threatened to drive back the boundaries of Germanism in the eastern provinces of Prussia, as they had already been driven back in Bohemia.

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  • Cenwalh, the last monarch who ascended the throne of Wessex unbaptized, carried the boundaries of that kingdom into Mid-Somersetshire, where they halted for a long space.

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  • He did not return for fifteen months; but when he did reappear it was to complete the work which he had begun in 1155, to extort from the greater barons the last of the royal fortresses which still remained in their hands, and to restore the northern boundaries of the realm.

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  • The English king, however, seeing the manifest advantage of his position, tried to drive too hard a bargain; he demanded the old boundaries of 1360, with his new conquest of Normandy, the hand of the princess Catherine, and a great sum of ready money.

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  • The peace set back the boundaries of Russia from the Danube to the Pruth; it secured the free navigation of the first of these rivers; it opened the Black Sea to thy commercial navies of the world, closing it to vessels of war, and forbidding the establishment of arsenals upon its shores.

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  • A grave constitutional question, which was ultimately settled by legislation, was raised as to the right of the government to undertake military operations beyond the boundaries of India without the consent of parliament.

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  • See "The Boundaries of Wisconsin" in vol.

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  • This was called the Debatable Land, because the possession of it was a constant source of contention between England and Scotland until its boundaries were finally adjusted in 1552.

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  • In connexion with this chapel it is related that, when the temple was in course of erection, Terminus, the god of boundaries, and Juventas refused to quit the sites they had already appropriated as sacred to themselves, which accordingly became part of the new sanctuary.

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  • This was interpreted as a sign of the immovable boundaries and eternal youth of the Roman state.

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  • Although the second book is a sort of inventory of our ideas, as distinguished from the certainty and boundaries of our knowledge, Locke even here makes the assumption that the " simple ideas " of the five senses are practically qualities of things which exist without us, and that the mental " operations " discovered by " reflection " are those of a person continuously existing.

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  • The new fiscal system taxed men according to their means and raised no obstacle to commerce within the national boundaries.

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  • Moreover the effacement of old boundaries, the overthrow of ancestral governments, and the invocation, however hollow, of the sovereignty of the people, awoke national feeling which had slumbered long and prepared the struggle for national union and independence in the 19th century.

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  • It forms an irregular square, extending for about sixty miles in each direction, and this area, which is for the most part level, is enclosed by well-marked boundaries - by the Cambunian Mountains on the north, and by Othrys on the south, while on its western side runs the massive chain of Pindus, which is the backbone of this part of Greece, and towards the east Ossa and Pelion stand in a continuous line; at the north-eastern angle is Olympus, the keystone of the whole mountain system.

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  • This war marks the beginning of that systematic struggle on the part of Russia to recover her natural and legitimate southern boundaries.

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  • The stars are supposed to be generally spherical, like the sun, in form, and to have fairly well-defined boundaries; while the nebulae are generally irregular in outline and have no well-defined limits.

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  • Visual proof was thus, it might be said, afforded of the harmonious working of a single principle to the uttermost boundaries of the sun's dominion.

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  • The land within certain boundaries belongs to the tribe, but a member may take possession of any unappropriated portion.

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  • She next went to Seville to found a house, thus overstepping for the first time the boundaries of the Castiles, to which her authorization limited her.

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  • The persons detained have complete liberty of movement, subject to the two conditions that they are under the supervision of guardians and are not allowed to cross the boundaries of the settlement.

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  • The Quadruple or Grand Alliance of 1814, defined in the treaty of Chaumont, between Great Britain, Austria, Russia and Prussia, had for its object the overthrow of Napoleon and his dynasty, and the confining of France within her traditional boundaries.

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  • At Cambridge he was strongly influenced by the philosophical views of Ralph Cudworth and Henry More, who proposed an unusual degree of toleration within the boundaries of the church and the limitations imposed by its liturgy and episcopal government; and his intercourse in Holland with foreign divines of different Protestant sects further encouraged his tendency to latitudinarianism.

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  • The administrative and fiscal duties previously exercised by the grand jury in each county were transferred to a county council, new administrative counties being formed for the purposes of the act, in some cases by the alteration of existing boundaries.

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  • Its boundaries were extended by the acquisition of Burgundy and the reconquest of Lusatia; disturbances of the peace became fewer and were more easily suppressed than heretofore; and three of the duchies, Bavaria, Franconia and Swabia, were made apanages of the royal house.

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  • There are no distinctly marked boundaries between any of these tribal territories; and west of Imerina and Betsileo there is a considerable extent of country with hardly any population, a kind of " no-man'sland."

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  • It accords with this that the elaborate tribal-lists and boundaries prove to be of greater value for the geography than for the history of Palestine, and the attempts to use them as evidence for the early history of Israel have involved numerous additional difficulties and confusion .3 The book of Joshua has ascribed to one man conquests which are not confirmed by subsequent history.

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  • Meantime the French from Senegal pushed their frontier close to the British settlements, so that when the boundaries were settled by the agreement of the 10th of August 1889 with France, Great Britain was able to secure only a ten-kilometre strip on either side of the river.

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  • But if ease of communication is favourable to the rise of large 'states and the cultural progress that usually accompanies it, it is, nevertheless, often fatal to the very culture which, at first, it fostered, in so far as the absence of natural boundaries renders invasion easy.

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  • The capitals of these four kingsCharibert, who died in 567, Guntram, Sigebert and Chilpericwere Paris, Orleans, Reims and Soissons all near one another and north of the Loire, where the Germanic inhabitants predominated; but their respective boundaries were so confused that disputes were inevitable.

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  • The war of independence over, after a century of fatigue, regrets and doubts, royalty and the nation, now more united and more certain of each other, resumed the methodic and utilitarian war of widening boundaries.

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  • Not only did pillaging take place; the boundaries or property were also ignored, and people no longer held themselves bound to pay taxes.

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  • The boundaries between Kesteven and Holland were a matter of dispute as early as 1389 and were not finally settled until 1816.

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  • The great dodecahedron is determined by the intersections of the twelve planes which intersect the Platonic icosahedron in five of its edges; or each face has the same boundaries as the basal sides of five covertical faces of the icosahedron.

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  • On all sides except that of Portugal the boundaries of continental Spain are natural, the Peninsula being separated from France by the Pyrenees and on every other side being surrounded by the sea.

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  • Four floral regions lying in north to south belts across the state, and closely corresponding to - though in boundaries by no means coinciding with - its great topographic divisions are distinguished in the regions of the Missouri border, the prairies, sand-hills and foot-hills.

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  • A Seneca Beloit mbeilin a 0 n p lank into English Miles County Seats County Boundaries.....

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  • Armenia is now divided between Persia, Russia and Turkey, and the three boundaries have a common point on Little Ararat.

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  • The object employed must have distinct boundaries.

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  • The city is situated on the old boundary line between Indian Territory and Oklahoma Territory, where the boundaries of the Cherokee, Creek and Osage nations intersected.

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  • His master mind, soaring high, sees one vast connected whole, and, alive with enthusiasm, with smiling face and sparkling eye, he shows the panorama to his pupils, pointing out the similarities and differences of its parts, the boundaries of our knowledge, and the regions of doubt and speculation.

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  • The boundaries of the old ecclesiastical parishes are usually identical with those of the township or townships comprised within its precinct; they are determined by usage, in the absence of charters or records, and are evidenced by perambulations, which formerly took place on the "gang-days" in Rogation week, but are now, where they still survive, for the most part held triennially, the Poor-Law Act of 1844 permitting the parish officers to charge the expense on the poor-rate, "provided the perambulations do not occur more than once in three years."

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  • The select committee of 1873, appointed to inquire into parochial boundaries, reported to the effect that the parish bears no definite relation to any other administrative area, except indeed to the poor-law union.

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  • The boundaries of the old ecclesiastical parish were nowhere recorded, and the descriptions in the titles of private properties which appear to lie in the parish have sometimes to be taken as evidence, and sometimes the fact that the inhabitants attended a particular church or made payments in favour of a par - ticular minister.

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  • Where there has been a union or disjunction and erection of parishes the evidence of the boundaries is the relative statute, order in council, or decree of commission or of court of teinds.

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  • This was accomplished by the royal charter of 1662, which defined the boundaries of Connecticut as extending from Massachusetts south to the sea, and from Narragansett bay west to the South Sea (Pacific Ocean).

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  • Difficulty with Rhode Island was caused by the conflict between that colony's charter and the Connecticut charter regarding the western boundary of Rhode Island; and the encroachment of outlying Connecticut settlements on Dutch territory, and the attempt to extend the boundaries of New York to the Connecticut river, gave rise to other disputes.

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  • In former times when maps were rare it was usual to make a formal perambulation of the parish boundaries on Ascension day or during Rogation week.

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  • The object of taking boys was obviously to ensure that witnesses to the boundaries should survive as long as possible.

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  • It is thought that it may have been derived from the Roman Terminalia, a festival celebrated on the 22nd of February in honour of Terminus, the god of landmarks, to whom cakes and wine were offered, sports and dancing taking place at the boundaries.

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  • This clerical side of the parish bounds-beating was one of the religious functions prohibited by the Injunctions of Queen Elizabeth; but it was then ordered that the perambulation should continue to be performed as a quasi-secular function, so that evidence of the boundaries of parishes, &c. might be preserved (Gibson, Codex juris Ecclesiastici Anglicani (1761) pp. 213-214).

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  • However, there are boundaries to your gift that I must give you now.

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  • He wanted to be different than the other deities who didn't respect any boundaries, even if he was breaking Immortal Laws right and left to try to salvage his underworld.

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  • It was abnormal in Anshan, even if her society held no such apparent boundaries.

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  • Rhyn approached the boundaries of his newest prison – the one meant to keep everyone else on the Caribbean Sanctuary safe from the magic he couldn't control.

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  • How far could he push the boundaries of Tiyan?

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  • Xander made it clear who taught lessons to the Guardians who failed to respect the boundaries.

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  • Halliday sets the boundaries of successful modern revolution at 1789 and 1989, when Soviet power virtually abdicated.

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  • There was an emphasis on teamwork that crosses old professional boundaries to deliver seamless care.

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  • For convenience of discussion, assume that query predicates are such that the lower boundaries of these fall on partition boundaries.

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  • Over the same interval Type A sequence boundaries become angular rather than parallel unconformities, suggesting increased tilting of the basin margin.

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  • Thus, the rate of diffusion of ions in grain boundaries is strongly anisotropic.

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  • There are few boundaries to smart home automation - the only limit is your imagination.

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  • A stream socket provides bidirectional, reliable, sequenced, and unduplicated data flow without record boundaries.

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  • His energy and enthusiasm for pushing the boundaries of the possible are seemingly boundless.

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  • Insulators are DNA elements that defend genes from surrounding chromatin by setting the boundaries of independent chromatin domains.

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  • Several large-scale mining and logging concessions exist or are being awarded close to the boundaries of the nominated site.

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  • Postcode sectors are not contiguous with health board or council boundaries.

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  • The productive forces are in irreconcilable contradiction not only with private property but also with national state boundaries.

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  • Grain boundaries in polycrystals can be considered as two-dimensional defects in the perfect crystal lattice.

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  • At long last the boundaries there defined will be the measure of her territory.

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  • These boundaries are approximate only, and should not be taken as definitive.

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  • In other words, cultures do not have sharply delineated boundaries.

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  • For him this is because Judah has a complete set of boundaries and a clearly distinguished town list.

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  • Complaining about the boundaries is a pointless distraction from the real problems.

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  • The scope of the poetry is not, however, constrained by geographical or even earthly boundaries.

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  • The north and south boundaries are commonly called northings, while the east and west boundaries are called eastings.

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  • This book considers ethnic boundaries in the context of European integration from the perspective of European ethnology.

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  • The hero of this heart-warming tale was a neighboring farmer, checking his own boundaries as a major police search developed.

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  • They want to climb the fence, they want to go outside the boundaries.

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  • Its boundaries seem to be none exist and can feel operatic at one time and like traditional folk music the next.

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  • This, of course, is a vast field that extends far beyond the boundaries of traditional art history or esthetics.

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  • By law, leper hospitals had to be situated outside town boundaries and St. Leonard's was on the Newton side of the beck.

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  • The boundaries of B - independent predicates not only intersect; they intersect wherever they have a point in common.

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  • Schemes that accredit landlords usually require them to submit all of their properties within the boundaries of the scheme for approval.

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  • The study is not strictly limited to county boundaries.

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  • Changing electoral boundaries over the twenty year period have made a longitudinal analysis of ward data virtually meaningless.

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  • The medial moraines mark the boundaries of converging streams of ice.

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  • In these hamlets most boundaries are low picket fences or iron railings sometimes set in low walls.

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  • The aim is to break down territories, boundaries, demarcation lines etc. by creating an interactive regionalism.

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  • The blurring of these boundaries is particularly salient in many African contexts.

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  • Difficult boundaries I accept that the boundaries between legitimate expression of identity and cultural separatism can be hard to draw.

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  • Parishes, it should also be remembered, often straddled county boundaries.

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  • One arises from procedures and jurisdictional boundaries affecting congressional subcommittees and committees and floor action.

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  • We know the subdivision of the wood took place before the twelfth century, as parish boundaries conform to the divisions.

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  • This is not suburban relaxed campus planning, but a limited area of land whose tight boundaries place high value on available land.

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  • More often than not I like surrealism in my anime or humor that goes way beyond certain boundaries.

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  • The world is no longer a plane torus, its boundaries are not connected.

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  • This retaliation is usually transitory, just to test the strength of your boundaries.

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  • However, working with our clients there is also a crucial need to rebuild trusts, and to maintain clear boundaries to the relationship.

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  • The psychological boundaries of the traditional thinker formed a perspective of denying validity to the material world.

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  • If your boundaries are made of high fences they can be easily broken up with flower beds or creeping vines.

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  • It might strengthen the link between communities and electoral representation, as the existing local authority boundaries provide a sound basis for multi-member wards.

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  • A sense of utterly untamed wilderness beckons tantalizingly at the capital's boundaries, reminding the inhabitants of a life that was once theirs.

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  • As a consequence of this, the defined boundaries of the notion of " activity " are so wishy-washy as to be totally incomprehensible.

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  • The war with Paraguay left a legacy of disputes concerning boundaries which almost led to war between the two victorious allies, Argentina and Brazil, but by the exertions of Mitre, who was sent at the close of 1872 as special envoy to Rio, a settlement was arrived at and friendly relations restored.

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  • But heavy expenses had been incurred in putting down revolutionary movements in various parts of the provinces, and war with Chile a corru t government, and hopes were entertained p g p was threatened upon the question of a dispute concerning the boundaries between the two republics.

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  • Even the liberties of her republics in the north hung on the issue of a contest which in the 11th and 12th centuries shook Europe to its farthest boundaries.

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  • In this argument he emphasizes the vagueness of the boundaries which mark off organic species with a view to show that these do not correspond to absolutely fixed divisions in the objective world, that they are made by the mind, not by nature.

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  • The gradual extension of the seaward boundaries of the province owing to the process of littoral deposits may be easily traced, a triple line of sea-dikes in places marking the successive stages in this advance.

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  • Varenius does not treat of special geography, but gives a scheme for it under three heads- (i) Terrestrial, including position, outline, boundaries, mountains, mines, woods and deserts, waters, fertility and fruits, and living creatures; (2) Celestial, including appearance of the heavens and the climate; (3) Human, but this was added out of deference to popular usage.

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  • Arbitrary lines, either traced from point to point and marked by posts on the ground, or defined as portions of meridians and parallels, are now the most common type of boundaries fixed by treaty.

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  • France in 178 9, though its ancient provincial boundaries survived, had long since been welded into a nation conscious of its common interests; Russia remains a vast empire, composed of the most heterogeneous, sometimes even mutually hostile, elements., whose antagonisms were bound to be an element of weakness in any assembly truly representative of all sections of the people.

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  • For the purpose of connecting the greatest possible number of points of concentrated travel, the first railways were laid round the boundaries of areas approximately circular, the theory being that the short walk from the circumference of the circle to any point within it would be no serious detention.

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  • But in the 7th century they were defeated by Heraclius, and shortly afterwards were annihilated before the first impetus of the Mahommedan conquest, which established Islam in Persia and the neighbouring lands, sweeping away old civilizations and boundaries.

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  • Its eastern boundary is in great part a steppe, which breeds population, but, unable to nourish increase, sends it over its boundaries in a constant stream'of migration.

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  • Bartholomew of Edinburgh; (2) political maps, showing political boundaries; (3) ethnological maps, illustrating the distribution of the varieties of man, the density of population, &c.; (4) travel maps, showing roads or railways and ocean-routes (as is done by Philips' " Marine Atlas "), or designed for the special use of cyclists or aviators; (5) statistical maps, illustrating commerce and industries; (6) historical maps; (7) maps specially designed for educational purposes.

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  • The " City," so called both formally and popularly, is a small area (673 acres) on the north bank of the river, forming the heart of the metropolis, and constituting within its boundaries one only, and one of the smallest, of twenty-nine municipal divisions which make up the administrative County of London.

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  • The migration into Babylonia was simple, as there are no natural boundaries to separate it from north-east Arabia, and similar migrations have taken place in historic times.

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  • This book begins with the time when there was only the heaven with its boundaries towards the four winds, but as yet there was no body, nothing that clung to anything else, nothing that balanced itself or rubbed together or made a sound; there was nought below but the calm sea alone in the silent darkness.

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  • This support was purchased by a capitulation s ned by Otto at Neuss, which ratified the independence and de ided the boundaries of the States of the Church, and was the first authentic basis for the practical authority of the pope in c ntral Italy.

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  • Roughly speaking, Phrygia comprised the western part of the great central plateau of Anatolia, extending as far east as the river Halys; but its boundaries were vague, 2 and varied so much at different periods that a sketch of its history must precede any account of the geography.

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  • Under the Roman Empire Paphlagonia, with the greater part of Pontus, was united into one province with Bithynia, as we find to have been the case in the time of the younger Pliny; but the name was still retained by geographers, though its boundaries are not distinctly defined by Ptolemy.

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  • Further, Sweden's new boundaries were of the most insecure description, inasmuch as they were anti-ethnographical, parting asunder races which naturally went together, and behind which stood powerful neighbours of the same stock ready, at the first opportunity, to reunite them.

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  • The civil parish has become more or less divorced in relationship from the Ecclesiastical Parish (a division which probably served in early times for administrative purposes also), owing to successive independent alterations in the boundaries of both (see Parish).

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  • Many of these proposed specific boundaries or at least critiqued specific boundaries, in addition to producing maps and reams of other documentation.

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  • With a water immersion lens however, refraction of the rays occurs on the glass - water boundaries.

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  • Instead of beginning the transition to a new regime, they reinforced existing boundaries.

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  • An approach that seeks to expand the concept of citizenship beyond national boundaries does not have to render the nation state obsolete.

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  • Air pollution, for one, is no respecter of county boundaries.

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  • Self-determination in the world has resulted not in peace but in new boundaries bristling with bayonets.

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  • Yet in doing so he adopts no simple-minded view of what constitutes boundaries or their recognition.

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  • And so they are scandalized when Jesus tramples over their carefully drawn lines, smudges the boundaries, and leaves them in confusion.

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  • Ideally if you want to run a solvated system you should use periodic boundaries.

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  • In some dioceses, particularly those which straddle county boundaries, there may be more than one archeological advisor.

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  • The humanist allegiance in these poems transcends national boundaries.

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  • He is known for his work on the transgression of boundaries, characteristically seen in his World Flag Ant Farm.

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  • The Law created boundaries around Israel to prevent them from becoming unclean through contact with polluted things.

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  • Bringing arts into underrepresented communities must attempt to transcend these terms and boundaries.

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  • The outer field boundaries were either wattle fencing or live hedges.

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  • The Internet has no geographic location and no well-defined boundaries.

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  • A sense of utterly untamed wilderness beckons tantalizingly at the capital 's boundaries, reminding the inhabitants of a life that was once theirs.

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  • Scientists are pushing intellectual boundaries by reearching the possibility of life on otherterrestrialplanets.

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  • She didn't want to go past her boundaries and be presumptuous, but she really wanted to read the classified file on her boss's desk.

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  • Be ready for a challenge, since you built the company without these clear job boundaries and everyone weighed in on everything.

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  • Specialists who operate in the silos of their expertise don't always think beyond their functional boundaries.

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  • He won't understand boundaries and limits for a while, and your older child's possessions will be extremely tempting.

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  • As your new baby becomes more mobile, he won't understand there are boundaries and limits to what he is allowed to do.

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  • However, setting clear boundaries about what kind of clothes are acceptable and how much you are willing to spend will establish limits you can live with.

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  • If you are having trouble setting boundaries regarding what is appropriate to wear, having another parent to talk to can help you hash out the details.

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  • Getting clothes for a teen girl isn't that hard once you set boundaries, a budget and know where to shop.

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  • Surveillance cameras, when used ethically and within the boundaries of the law, do not invade privacy.

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  • Left to their own devices, cats will choose their own territories without any consideration for what humans consider to be the proper "boundaries".

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  • Apply the product to areas you don't wish your cat to go such as patios, furniture, garbage cans and yard boundaries.

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  • Membership is also available to people who do not reside in these counties but who do work, attend school, or attend a church located within the boundaries of these counties.

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  • These attorneys are well-versed in the laws of the state regarding pursuit of debt payments, and if the creditor has been acting outside the boundaries of the laws, then the attorney may suggest a lawsuit.

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  • That respect may relate to personal space and boundaries, lifestyle choices, or minor preferences such as fashion or food.

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  • Many of these natural medicines have crossed the boundaries of culture and time and may offer natural treatment for this common disorder.

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  • The best aspect of 70s' makeup fashion is that you won't be looking at a compact all day in order to ensure that your sirenesque lipstick is not feathering outside the rigid boundaries of your lip liner.

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  • You'll be able to see boundaries and an approximation of how large a city is, but nothing more.

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  • These poses push the boundaries of traditional portrait photography, presenting a fun and fresh take on standard poses.

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  • It recently expanded its boundaries by adding Montezuma Bowl.

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  • If you let others know about your issues, expectations, personal boundaries, and other elements, they will understand you better.

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  • At work, managers and employees must be sure to maintain boundaries even while employing humor to lessen stress.

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  • While it's important to be vigilant, parents and teens should note that some of these signs are normal parts of growing up and testing boundaries.

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  • For that reason, it is important to respect your son's growing and changing relationships, while doing all you can to help him maintain that balance between love's excitement and proper boundaries.

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  • Like smoking cigarettes or experimenting with drugs, sneaking alcohol behind parents' backs is another way teens want to establish their independence and test boundaries.

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  • You also want to make sure you don't cross any boundaries when it comes to how much you should give during this special occasion.

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  • It's important for teens to have boundaries and even though they'll complain, it's nice to know that someone cares.

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  • Keeping boundaries can help to limit the effect music and other forms of media have on teens.

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  • Do you regularly cross personal boundaries or engage in behaviors you normally would not participate in?

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  • Regardless, it's important to set personal boundaries and take care of your own emotional needs.

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  • He claims their relationship never crossed any serious boundaries, though she claims otherwise.

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  • She also starred as a rather saucy, updated version of Princess Jasmine in a pantomime version of Alladin and stretched her boundaries by appearing in the children's miniseries, Wavelength.

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  • Express to her the value of dressing within certain boundaries, and remind her that you are financing the purchase.

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  • The benefit of distance learning is relief from geographic boundaries, travel time and dedicated time away from home, but that provides convenience to the learning, not ease.

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  • Also, when dogs reach adolescence they often test their boundaries.

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  • You must establish firm boundaries that you do not allow your pet to cross, right from the moment he arrives at your home.

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  • You also need to begin setting firm boundaries for her outside of the bedroom as well as in it because she doesn't seem to understand her proper place in your family pack.

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  • This will teach you how to establish some boundaries and manners with her.

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  • By constantly reinforcing the training, the animal will learn the boundaries and ultimately become a welcome addition to the family.

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  • A careful study of their approach to songwriting and their abilities to push the boundaries of their respective instruments will serve any budding musician well.

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  • As a result of their rising popularity, LTJ bought their contract from Capitol and released 2000's Borders and Boundaries on Fat Wreck Records.

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  • Check out his records Breakfast in the Field and Aerial Boundaries to hear a master at work.

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  • It's the netting itself that keeps children of all ages safely enclosed within the boundaries of the trampoline.

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  • There are truly no boundaries to what to serve for a retirement dinner.

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  • When released on the PS One, this racing simulation pushed the boundaries in graphics and gameplay.

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  • There are some boundaries way, way out from the track and they just turn you around and force you to go back to the track.

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  • Through their products the XBOX and XBOX 360 they have begun to blur the boundaries between home consoles and PC's.

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  • The Canadian video game industry is so well integrated into the global market that the international boundaries are blurred.

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  • The appeal of Madame Alexander dolls has no age boundaries.

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  • Lake Tahoe actually spans the boundaries of both Nevada and California, with one-third of the lake in Nevada and two-thirds in California.

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  • Make sure you understand them so you can be certain that your actions are within the boundaries of what is considered to be acceptable for the community that you have chosen to join.

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  • Children need to retain a sense of individuality by developing boundaries with their siblings in terms of possessions, territory, and activities.

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  • For this reason, narcolepsy is more accurately described as a disorder of the normal boundaries between sleep and wakefulness.

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  • Children learn about boundaries, taking turns, teamwork, and competition.

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  • Telecommuting mothers may want to arrange for child care during their working hours and may be interested in establishing boundaries between their work and their family life.

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  • Toddlers who are working out social boundaries may take toys from others or refuse to share or take turns.

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  • Once the recognition of property boundaries develops, stealing becomes an intentional act that must be addressed more deliberately.

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  • If necessary, the parents must be open to establishing new boundaries within the parent-child relationship.

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  • Having a rehearsal space that you can roughly mark out the boundaries of the actual performance space is essential.

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  • In 1787 Congress settled the dispute and set the boundaries by passing the Northwest Ordinance.

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  • These edgy styles can only be worn by someone confident in their personality, someone who doesn't mind pushing fashion boundaries.

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  • If you like to push the boundaries and want to feel like a rock star or A-list celebrity walking the red carpet rather than a prom princess, an edgy party prom updo is definitely your best bet.

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  • They are responsible for taking measurements of the earth's surface and establishing property lines and other legal boundaries.

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  • With mining accidents seen in locations like New Zealand, Kentucky and Chile, miners know that accidents know no boundaries, and can lead to immediate death or disability.

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  • They patrol parks, respond to emergencies and enforce rules within the boundaries of the park.

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  • While it is possible to go beyond these limits and to enter into the realm of jumbo loans, if you want to remain within the monetary boundaries of conventional loans you will not be able to exceed the Fannie Mae limit.

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  • It crosses all racial boundaries and affects people from all walks of life.

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  • They even have mesh bikinis that really pushing the boundaries, but they are perfect for those who like to live on the edge.

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  • If you've seen the movie Borat, its trailers or even a highly edited commercial for the film, you already know that comedian Sasha Baron Cohen knows no boundaries.

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  • This color can also cross seasonal boundaries; a cute red tank and denim mini skirt can look great for summer, while a crisp red blouse makes a stunning choice for fall and a cozy red sweater can see you through winter in style.

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  • Whirlpool Corporation produces some of the most energy-efficient appliances on the market and is taking steps to push the boundaries of energy efficiency even further.

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  • Teens are often tempted to push sexual boundaries, and a camera can be a strong incentive.

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  • As the boundaries between countries and ethnicities are intermingled, more interracial connections are going to occur.

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  • It is also important to set boundaries while flirting.

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  • Just stay within boundaries to avoid complete failure.

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  • Setting boundaries is a good way to introduce your teen to the world of dating.

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  • Are you having trouble establishing professional boundaries with a co-worker?

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  • If this woman is strictly interested in a professional relationship, her lack of professional boundaries may put both you and her at risk of losing your jobs.

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  • In my opinion the lack of professional boundaries, the inappropriate behaviors at work and the double life (she has two cell phones and is married) she lives are all disturbing and alarming.

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  • Are you and a coworker or business partner having trouble with professional boundaries?

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  • As a result, he has no boundaries with you, professional or otherwise (hence talking with you on the phone while using the toilet).

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  • It was created to give transgendered men and women the option to find partners that do not fall within the gender boundaries allowed on most traditional dating sites.

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  • The whole point of this kind of touching is for both parties to enjoy themselves - and that can't happen if physical comfort boundaries aren't fully understood by both parties.

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  • Make sure the person touching knows what parts of the body are ok to explore with his/her hands, and which parts might be overstepping boundaries.

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  • Clothing can be a good way to delineate these boundaries, or to allow parts of the body to be touched without an invasive feeling.

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  • Not only has the giver made the effort, but the receiver has also put themselves in a beautiful and vulnerable state, trusting that boundaries will be respected and paying attention to how they were being touched.

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  • This is a way for him to eliminate physical boundaries and come closer into your space.

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  • It is possible to cheat in a poly relationship, but that would require breaking the boundaries that have been set by the people involved.

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  • While other grains seem to have clear-cut boundaries when it comes to gluten content, the jury is still inconclusive on whether oats are a safe option for a gluten-free lifestyle.

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  • Quilted handbags are available in many brands, from designer styles like Vera Bradley to economical Wal-Mart names like No Boundaries.

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  • Color is one area where Balenciaga handbags appear to have no boundaries.

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  • The demographics of those who carry Pirates bags knows no boundaries.

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  • Urban Boundaries sells a sleek black backpack with foreboding red logo for a drmatic look and cinch enclosure for ease of use.

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  • His love will stretch beyond the boundaries of life and death as the kind of eternal love legends glorify.

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  • As an earth sign, they give stability to their water sign neighbors and create boundaries so water can take form.

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  • Without the earth, water would flow aimlessly through the world, but earth helps create boundaries and disciplines that water so desperately needs to give it form and shape.

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  • Scorpion knows no boundaries, while Virgo creates them with his cautious nature.

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  • However, having a clear discussion before letting your child surf the net can help set some boundaries.

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  • While the use of Internet resources for preschoolers is encouraged, you as the parent or guardian must establish expectations and boundaries for Internet usage.

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  • Don't set limits or boundaries on your love.

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  • Learning how to take small risks - Summer camps are full of small challenges and activities that push your child beyond her normal boundaries.

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  • Set the boundaries of where the kids can go to hide and designate an area as "base".

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  • Permissive parents often "give in" to their children's wishes, hesitating on boundaries as soon as their child protests, gets angry, throws a tantrum, or expresses disapproval in some way.

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  • Despite the good intentions, problems occur when permissive parents fail to set appropriate boundaries for their children.

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  • Children have a need to know what to expect, and in an overly lenient household where very few boundaries or logical consequences exist, children lack the consistency required in their lives for security.

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  • Setting clear boundaries provides consistency that allows children to feel secure.

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  • When children function within determined boundaries, they develop a sense of pride, self-esteem, and citizenship within the family.

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  • Regardless of studies, children gain a sense of security, discipline, and self-worth when parents set understandable and consistent boundaries that lead to logical consequences when breached.

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  • By setting clear boundaries, you can help your children grow into self-sufficient and disciplined adults.

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  • Remember, authoritative parents are just as responsive as the permissive parents, but they do not allow their responsiveness to negate any boundaries that benefit their children.

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  • Authoritative parents provide clear and consistent boundaries, offer love and support, and are responsive to their child's needs without going overboard with what they allow.

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  • From the Tower of London to the Parliament House in Suva, Fiji, ghosts have no boundaries.

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  • The No Boundaries brand of basic flip flops come in a variety of colors, all for less than $5 a pair.

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  • No Boundaries also offers a wedge-type sandal in slightly wilder color combinations like leopard print and technicolor polka dots, but the price is still right for under $10.

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  • Heuer and his company continually pushed back the boundaries of watch technology and were at the forefront of many innovative developments that we find in watches today.

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  • Each person in the room is encouraged to work within their own body and mind, establishing their own safe boundaries within which to practice.

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  • The environment plays a critical part in the way an autistic child learns, and by organizing it with a minimum of distractions and clearly delineated boundaries, the foundation for a learning experience can be built.

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  • To determine if you are within the boundaries of the city of Las Vegas, simply use a map available online to check your business location lies within the city limits.

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  • The trend is to go shorter and smaller, and that leaves many parents and others wondering where are the boundaries.

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  • The desire to implement uniform guidelines is one argument for regulating cheerleading as a sport; then things like uniform length and bare midriffs would have rules and boundaries.

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  • Remember, when it comes to collage, your creativity has no boundaries!

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  • Every state has their own rules and regulations with regards to how insurance companies can operate and what coverage they can offer within the boundaries of the state.

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  • Some gospel lyrics cross the boundaries of faith and have become musical standards while other gospel lyrics have been borrowed for non-religious tracks.

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  • Although the boundaries aren't strict and all Louisiana music genres can be found in all regions, in terms of genre heritage, the boundaries make sense.

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  • Makeshift fencing, using brightly colored rope, can help them decipher boundaries.

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  • Even though tea parties began as formal affairs, you can feel free to push the boundaries and customize your party to suit your needs and tastes.

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  • If kids are playing throughout a neighborhood, be sure they know their boundaries so that they aren't tromping through an unsuspecting neighbor's yard.

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