Hides Sentence Examples

hides
  • He hides from us too well.

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  • This is a charity that hides a multitude of sins.

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  • The exports include hides, skins, rubber, wax, tobacco and cotton.

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  • Wool forms by far the largest export, and tallow, hides, bones and frozen mutton are also exported.

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  • Next Spanish hides, with the tails still preserving their twist and the angle of elevation they had when the oxen that wore them were careering over the pampas of the Spanish Main--a type of all obstinacy, and evincing how almost hopeless and incurable are all constitutional vices.

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  • For a time this was a profitable pursuit, as the horse hides brought good prices.

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  • Corn, raw cotton, hides, wool, nuts and dried fruit are exported.

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  • The principal products are rice, oil-seeds, lac, tussur silk, horns, hides, wax and a little iron.

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  • Wool is also exported to France, and hides to Turkey.

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  • There are different types of animal hides used to make leather.

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  • The chief exports are raw cotton, rice, wheat, oil-seeds, hides and lac. The exports of wheat are liable to extreme fluctuations, especially during famine periods.

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  • The important exports are gums and resin, fibre, hides, ivory, ostrich feathers, coffee, ghee, livestock, gold ingots from Abyssinia and mother-of-pearl; the shells being found along the coast from Zaila to beyond Berbera.

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  • The exports are chiefly coffee, hides, ivory (all from Abyssinia), gum, mother-of-pearl and a little gold; the imports cotton and other European stuffs, cereals, beverages, tobacco and arms and ammunition for the Abyssinians.

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  • The surrounding district is mainly agricultural and pastoral, producing oats, maize, cotton, olive oil, cattle, sheep, skins, hides and butter.

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  • The staple articles of export are hides, wool and dates.

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  • Walrus tusks and walrus hides, which in the days of the old Norse settlements were the chief articles of export, are now of little importance.

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  • Callias And Hipponicus The exports from Callao are guano, sugar, cotton, wool, hides, silver, copper, gold and forest products, and the imports include timber and other building materials, cotton and other textiles, general merchandise for personal, household and industrial uses, railway material, coal, kerosene, wheat, flour and other food stuffs.

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  • Tea makes up nearly one-half of the imports, the other commodities being silks, cottons, hides and wool; while cottons and other manufactured wares constitute considerably over 50% of the exports.

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  • Bradford appears as a borough in the Domesday survey, and is there assessed at 42 hides.

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  • The exports cover a wide range of agricultural, pastoral and natural productions, including coffee, rubber, sugar, cotton, cocoa, Brazil nuts, mate (Paraguay tea), hides, skins, fruits, gold, diamonds, manganese ore, cabinet woods and medicinal leaves, roots and resins.

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  • These harbours on the eastern side of Sydney are mainly frequented by cargo boats trading in coal, corn, frozen meat, wool, hides and various ores.

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  • The chief exports, not all products of the province, are coal, wool, mohair, hides and skins, wattle bark, tea, sugar, fruits and jams. The import trade is of a most varied character, and a large proportion of the goods brought into the country are in transit to the Transvaal and Orange Free State, Natal affording, next to Delagoa Bay, the shortest route to the Rand.

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  • The bulk of these exports are to the Transvaal and neighbouring countries, and previously figure as imports, other exports, largely wool and hides, are first imported from the Transvaal.

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  • Next in value came wool (£226,000), horses and mules (£110,000), skins, hides and horns (£106,000), tobacco (£89,000), tin, coal, copper and lead.

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  • It was assessed at 50 hides in the Domesday survey and was then held by the bishop of Lincoln.

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    Advertisement
  • The principal exports were coffee, cacau, divi-divi, rubber, hides and skins, cattle and asphalt.

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  • The exports include cattle, hides, coffee, rubber, fruit and salt.

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  • Slaves, beeswax, coffee, cotton and hides were formerly the chief articles of commerce.

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  • The island imports wines, spirits, tissues, clothing and ironmongery; and exports ores, nickel, cobalt and chrome (which represent over three-quarters of the total exports in value), preserved meats and hides, coffee, copra and other colonial produce.

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  • It hides by day under stones or From Strasburger's Lehrbuch der Botanik, by permission of Gustav Fischer.

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  • The principal exports are olive oil, wheat, esparto grass, barley, sponges, dates, fish (especially tunny), hides, horses, wool, phosphates, copper, zinc and lead.

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  • The chief breeding industry is that of the llama, alpaca and vicuiiaanimals of the Auchenia family domesticated by the Indians and bred, the first as a pack animal, and the other two for their wool, hides and meat.

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  • The principal articles imported are cotton and cotton goods, coffee, coal, cereals, hides, fruit and tobacco; the principal articles exported are wool and woollen goods,.

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  • Cereals, cotton, forest products, cattle, and hides, and brass and copper vessels are the chief exports from the district.

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  • Cotton yarn and cloth, petroleum, timber and furs are among the chief imports; copper, tin, hides and tea are important exports; medicines in the shape not only of herbs and roots, but also of fossils, shells, bones, teeth and various products of the animal kingdom; and precious stones, principally jade and rubies, are among the other exports.

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  • The rodents are represented by an abundance of rats, with comparatively few mice, and by the ordinary squirrel, to which the people give the name of tree-rat (ki-nezumi), as well as the flying squirrel, known as the momo-dori (peach-bird) in the north, where it hides from the light in hollow tree-trunks, and in the south as the ban-tori (or bird of evening).

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  • Use has been made of electrolysis in tanning operations, the current being passed through the tan-liquors containing the hides.

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  • According to Domesday, Ashburton was held in chief by Osbern, bishop of Exeter, and rendered geld for six hides.

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  • The principal exports from Maracaibo are coffee, hides and skins, cabinet and dye-woods, cocoa, and mangrove bark, to which may be added dividivi, sugar, copaiba, gamela and hemp straw for paper-making, and fruits.

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  • Sugar, wheat, alfalfa, Indian corn, tobacco and hides are the principal products, and cotton, which was grown here under the Incas, is still produced.

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  • Besides coffee there is a large trade in durra, the kat plant (used by the Mahommedans as a drug), ghee, cattle, mules and camels, skins and hides, ivory and gums. The import trade is largely in cotton goods, but every kind of merchandise is included.

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  • The cultivated products include coffee, the Coco-nut palm, tobacco, sugar-cane, cotton, vanilla, sorghum, earthnuts, sesame, maize, rice, beans, peas, bananas (in large quantities), yams, manioc and hemp. Animal products are ivory, hides, tortoiseshell and pearls.

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  • The chief exports are sisal fibre, rubber, hides and skins, wax, ivory, copra, coffee, ground-nuts and cotton.

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  • The commerce consists principally in wine, hides, horses, coal, wood and cereals.

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  • The articles exported were ivory, rubber, skins and hides, and livestock (for consumption in East Africa).

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  • The exports consist chiefly of cereals, cattle, horses, sheep, wine, fish and hides.

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  • A protective tariff was imposed in early colonial times and protection was generally approved in the state until toward the close of the 19th century, when a strong demand became apparent for reciprocity with Canada and for tariff reductions on the raw materials (notably hides) of Massachusetts manufactures.

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  • The exports are chiefly phosphates and other minerals, cereals, olive oil, cattle, hides, sponges and wax.

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  • In this way there arose central boards for wool, cotton, oil and fat, hides and leather, and various metals - to name only the more important materials.

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  • The city is an important railway centre, has extensive railway repair shops and stock-yards, and exports large quantities of live-stock, hides and wool.

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  • Iannina had previously been one of the chief centres of the Thessalian grain trade; it now exports little except cheese, hides, bitumen and sheepskins to the annual value of about £120,000; the imports, which supply only the local demand for provisions, textile goods, hardware, &c., are worth about double that sum.

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  • The exports, which comprise coffee, bananas, cocoa, cabinet-woods and dye-woods, with hides and skins, mother-of-pearl, tortoiseshell and gold, were officially valued at £1,398,000 in 1904; and in the same year the imports, including foodstuffs, dry goods and hardware, were valued at £1,229,000.

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  • The exports include gold, silver, copper, coffee, henequen or sisal, ixtle and other fibres, cabinet woods, chicle, rubber and other forest products, hides and skins, chickpeas, tobacco and sugar.

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  • The greater part is consumed in the country, but there is a considerable export of cattle to the United States, Cuba and Central America, and of hides and skins to the United States and Europe.

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  • The exports also include hides, mangabeira rubber, piassava fibre, diamonds, cabinet woods and rum.

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  • Bismarck is the headquarters for navigation of the upper Missouri river, is situated in a good agricultural region, and has a large wholesale trade, shipping grain, hides, furs, wool and coal.

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  • Manufacture of woollens, cottons, Russia leather and embroidery is carried on, and there is trade in cattle, wine, tobacco, hemp, hides and grain.

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  • The exports which come next in value are opium, wood-oil, hides, beans, cotton yarn and raw silk.

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  • The imports consist principally of machinery, coal, grain, dried fish, tobacco and hides, and the exports of hemp, hides, olive oil, soap, coral, candied fruit, wine, straw hats, boracic acid, mercury, and marble and alabaster.

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  • Its exports include coffee, sugar, hides, cabinet woods, tobacco and cigars, tapioca, gold, diamonds, manganese and sundry small products.

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  • In the fiscal year 1908, 359,4 1 3 lb of wodl (valued at $58,133) and 928,599 lb of raw hides (valued at $87,599) were shipped from the Territory to the United States.

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  • The usual size of such districts in early times seems to have been 300, 600 or 1200 hides.

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  • If the lord was a king this provision took the form of a grant, perhaps normally ten hides, from the royal lands.

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  • The former consisted of persons who possessed, whether as individuals or families, at least five hides of land - which practically means a village - while the latter were landless, i.e.

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  • In Ine's Laws (cap. 70) we find a list of payments specified for a unit of ten hides, perhaps the normal holding of a twelfhynde man - though on the other hand it may be nothing more than a mere fiscal unit in an aggregate of estates.

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  • The regulation that every five or six hides should supply a warrior was not a product of the Danish invasions, as is sometimes stated, but goes back at least to the beginning of the 9th century.

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  • In the 10th century the sulung seems to have been identified with the hide, but in earlier times it contained apparently two hides.

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  • In the neighbourhood there are large cocoa plantations; and the city has a thriving trade in cocoa, coffee, hides, cotton, native tobacco and indigo.

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  • Bridport was evidently of some importance before the Conquest, when it consisted of 120 houses rated for all the king's services and paying geld for five hides.

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  • The veil that hides the negotiations which, during the closing months of the Franco-German War, were carried on between Bismarck and the pope, through the agency of Cardinal Bonnhose, has not yet been lifted, and perhaps never will be.

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  • The exports include cattle, hides, skins, wool and ostrich feathers.

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  • The exports, which include beans, almonds, maize, chick-peas, wool, hides, wax, eggs, &c., were valued at 360,000 in 1900, £364,000 in 1904, and £248,000 in 1906.

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  • In spite of the Roman remains on Borough Hill, nothing is known of the town itself until the time of the Domesday Survey, when the manor consisting of eight hides belonged to the countess Judith, the Conqueror's niece.

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  • A dangerous bar at the mouth of the river permits the entrance only of the smaller coasting steamers, but the port is an important commercial centre, and exports considerable quantities of cotton, hides, manicoba, rubber, fruit, and palm wax.

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  • There are exports of hides, cedar and fruit, and the adjacent district of Tabares produces cotton, tobacco, cacao, sugar cane, Indian corn, beans and coffee.

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  • The neighbouring country is devoted principally to raising horses, mules and cattle; and in addition to hides and leather, it exports rubber and other forest products.

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  • There is a large trade in cattle with Petropavlovsk, and considerable export of grain, tallow, meat, hides, butter, game and fish, there being three large fairs in the year.

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  • The staple export trade is in fish and their products; other exports are butter, copper ore and hides.

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  • The principal articles imported are textiles, hardware, wines, rice, flour, canned goods and general provisions; the exports are yerba mate, hides, hair, dried meat; wood, oranges, tobacco.

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  • Commercially, Cologne is one of the chief centres on the Rhine, and has a very important trade in corn, wine, mineral ores, coals, drugs, dyes, manufactured wares, groceries, leather and hides, timber, porcelain and many other commodities.

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  • The exports are chiefly coal, sheep, tallow, wool, frozen meat and hides.

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  • For transit they are packed twelve together in hides sewn up while moist, which contract to make a strong tight package of 60 to 70 lb weight.

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  • The principal exports of the province are coarse wool, hides, dates and horses.

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  • Implements of chipped stone for the purposes of boring and scraping suggest that man worked hides for clothing.

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  • The capture of that island had caused an immigration of Spanish refugees to Santiago that greatly increased its importance; and the illicit trade to the same island - mainly in hides and cattle - that flourished from this time onward was a main prop of prosperity.

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  • The exports include gold, silver, hides and pearls.

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  • Gum, ivory, hides, and ostrich feathers from the Sudan, cotton and sugar from Upper Egypt, indigo and shawls from India and Persia, sheep and tobacco from Asiatic Turkey, and European manufactures, such as machinery, hardware, cutlery, glass, and cotton and woollen goods, are the more important articles.

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  • Of less importance are the exports of hides and skins, eggs, wheat and other grains, wool, quails, lentils, dates and Sudan produce in transit.

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  • These were (1) the division of the fyrd or national militia into two parts, relieving each other at fixed intervals, so as to ensure continuity in military operations; (2) the establishment of fortified posts (burgs) and garrisons at certain points; (3) the enforcement of the obligations of thanehood on all owners of five hides of land, thus giving the king a nucleus of highly equipped troops.

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  • The exports consist chiefly of grain, timber, flax, hides, wool, a species of anchovy, and hemp, and the imports of manufactured goods and machinery.

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  • The exports include sugar, rum, cotton, hides, skins, rubber, wax, fibres, dyewoods, cacau, mandioca flour, pineapples and other fruits.

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  • In the Domesday Survey Caine appears as a royal borough; it comprised forty-seven burgesses and was not assessed in hides.

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  • Trade is large and increasing, the chief exports being copra, coir and other coco-nut products, pepper, tea, sugar, areca-nuts, timber, hides, coffee, &c. The capital is Trivandrum.

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  • The trade of Budapest is mainly in corn, flour, cattle, horses, pigs, wines, spirits, wool, wood, hides, and in the articles manufactured in the town.

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  • After Wilfrid's exertions in relieving a famine which occurred in Sussex the king granted to him eighty-seven hides in and near the peninsula of Selsey which, with a lapse until 709 after Wilfrid's retirement, remained the seat of the South Saxon bishopric until the Norman Conquest.

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  • The blood is converted into clarifying material, the entrails are used for sausage coverings, the hoofs and small bones furnish the raw material for the manufacture of glue, the large bones are carved into knife handles, and the horns into combs, the fats are made to yield butterine, lard and soap, and the hides and hair are used in the manufacture of mattresses and felts.

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  • These imports include horses, cattle, fruits, grain, wool, silk, hides, tobacco, drugs and provisions (ghi, &c.).

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  • The chief exports are raw cotton, cotton goods and yarn, rice, wheat, oil-seeds, raw jute and jute-manufactures, hides and skins, tea, opium and lac. In1905-1906there was great activity in both the cotton and jute industries.

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  • The chief exports are coffee, rubber, wax, palm kernels and palm-oil, cattle and hides and dried or salt fish.

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  • The exports consist chiefly of livestock, jerked beef, hides, wool, and other animal products, wheat, flour, corn, linseed, barley, hay, tobacco, sealskins, fruit, vegetables, and some minor products.

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  • Besides camels and oxen, sheep and goats are numerous, and meat, hides and butter are articles of local trade.

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  • Hides are the principal export (about £50,000 a year).

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  • They are killed for their flesh, hides and horns, and little attention is paid to their milkgiving properties.

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  • The neat cattle, which are of Australian and Indian origin, are raised chiefly for beef, their hides and their horns; about nine-tenths of them were destroyed by the rinderpest and the war at the close of the 19th century.

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  • In the Algol variables one of the component stars is dark (that is to say, dark in comparison with the other), and once in each revolution, passing between us and the bright component, partially hides it.

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  • The principal exports are oil-seeds, hides and jute.

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  • Coal and limestone are found in the vicinity, and much live stock is raised, wool and hides being shipped from Chillicothe.

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  • The trade in hides is also of considerable value.

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  • They have greatly increased since hunting them for their hides and oil ceased to be profitable, and thousands sometimes gather on the Farallones, off the Golden Gate.

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  • Staple products have changed with increasing knowledge of climatic conditions, of life-zones and of the fitness of crops; first hides and tallow, then wool, wheat, grapes (which in the early eighteen-nineties were the leading fruit), deciduous orchard fruits, and semi-tropical citrus fruits successively.

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  • Hides and tallow were the sum and substance of Californian economy.

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  • Cereals replaced hides and tallow in importance after 1848.

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  • At them the neophytes worked up wool, tanned hides, prepared tallow, cultivated hemp and wheat, raised a few oranges, made soap, some iron and leather articles, mission furniture, and a very little wine and olive oil.

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  • Besides, the hides and tallow yielded by the great herds of cattle at the missions were the support of foreign trade and did much toward paying the expenses of the government.

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  • The trade supplied almost all the clothing, merchandise and manufactures used in the province; hides and furs were given in exchange.

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  • Cattle-rearing is successfully pursued, live cattle and hides being important articles of export.

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  • The principal exports are (in order of value) coffee, bananas, gold, rubber, cattle and hides, dye-woods and cabinet woods.

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  • Coffee and hides are also exported, but the trade of the city has been greatly impeded by difficulties of transportation.

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  • Great numbers of cattle are reared; and cheese, butter and hides, as well as salted meat and fish, are exported.

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  • There is a fair local trade in wheat and agricultural produce, also sheep and cattle, wool, hides and furs for export.

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  • The first wine receptacles were made of skins or hides, treated with oil or resin to niake them impervious.

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  • The goods transmitted in largest quantity are fish, metals, manufactured wares, hides, flax, timber, cereals, petroleum, oils and salt.

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  • Owing to its position at the junction of several routes, Kerkuk has a brisk transit trade in hides, Persian silks and cottons, colouring materials, fruit and timber; but it owes its principal importance to its petroleum and naphtha springs.

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  • The principal exports are grain, live stock and fruit; cement, coal, iron, machinery, flour, raw cotton and hides are imported.

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  • The export trade is chiefly in esparto grass, cereals, wines, olive oil, marbles, cattle and hides.

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  • The sea-borne exports consist chiefly of jute, other items being tea, raw cotton, rice and hides.

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  • There is still a considerable export of cattle, hides and skins, but no effort is made to develop the production of jerked beef on a large scale.

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  • The city exports coal, wool, coke, horses, cattle, frozen meat, silver, lead, copper, tallow, hides and country produce.

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  • Silver is still exported, in addition to hides, timber, coffee and indigo, and there are valuable fisheries.

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  • In ealdorman Alfred's will the testator disposes freely of his bookland estates in favour of his sons and his daughter, but to a son who is not considered as rightful offspring five hides of folkland are left, provided the king consents.

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  • Its fair is one of the most important in the southern Ural region for cattle, hides, furs, grain, tea, manufactured articles, crockery, &c., which are sold to the annual value of X500,000.

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  • The imports were raw and manufactured cotton, wool and silk, wheat and maize, coal, iron and machinery, dried codfish, sugar, rice, hides and skins, oils.

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  • The hides are exported.

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  • These revenues are derived from a lighting tax, leases and ground rents, cemetery fees, consumption and market taxes, licences, tolls, taxes on hides and skins, personal and various minor taxes.

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  • Among the exports are coffee, cacao, dyewoods, hides, skins, and copper ores.

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  • Skins, hides and maize are also exported.

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  • Wheat, barley, eggs, butter, oilcake, hides, tallow, leather, tobacco, rugs, feathers and other items add considerably to the total value of the exports, which increased from 14 million sterling in 1851-1860 to 8-14 millions sterling in 1901-1905.

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  • The principal exports of Cayenne are gold, cocoa, phosphates, hides, woods and spices.

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  • It hides itself in the ground during the winter, and in the spring it passes into the pupa stage, from which it emerges about August as the full-grown insect.

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  • The inhabitants are mostly Sarts and Tajiks, trading in cattle, horses and hides.

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  • Exports are granite and timber; imports, coal, flour, provisions, hides and machinery.

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  • In the simple arts of broiling and roasting meat, the use of hides and furs for covering, the plaiting of mats and baskets, the devices of hunting, trapping and fishing, the pleasure taken in personal ornament, the touches of artistic decoration on objects of daily use, the savage differs in degree but not in kind from the civilized man.

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  • A considerable trade is carried on with Russia; raw cotton, raw silk, tobacco, hides, sheepskins, fruit and cotton and leather goods are exported, and manufactured wares, textiles, tea and sugar are imported and in part re-exported to Kashgaria and Bokhara.

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  • In the Woldeba district hermits dress in ochre-yellow cloths, while the priests of some sects wear hides dyed red.

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  • The articles dealt in are wine, oil, spirits, drugs, tobacco, chemicals, hemp, cotton, wool, silk, timber, paper, leather and hides, metal, glass, cereals and live animals.

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  • The principal imports are cotton piece goods, railway materials, metals and machinery, oils, sugar, cotton, twist and salt; and the principal exports are jute, tea, hides, opium, rice, oil-seeds, indigo and lac. The inter-provincial trade is mostly carried on with Eastern Bengal and Assam, the United Provinces and the Central Provinces.

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  • From the United Provinces come opium, hides, raw cotton, wheat, shellac and oil-seeds; and from Assam, tea, oil-seeds and jute.

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  • The town has manufactures of silk, muslin and blankets, and an export trade in hides and cardamoms; and there is a large native Christian population, with two churches.

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  • The principal imports are metals and machinery (£5,510,000 in 1908), textiles, silk, wool, hair and hides.

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  • It manufactures sugar, woollen goods and pottery, and exports Peruvian bark (cinchona), hats, cereals, cheese, hides, &c. It was founded in 1 557 on the site of a native town called Tumibamba, and was made an episcopal see in 1786.

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  • Grain, fish, linseed, rapeseed, wool and hides are also exported.

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  • Other local products are carpets (silk and felt), silk goods, hides, grapes, rice and other cereals, fruits, tobacco, opium and cotton.

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  • Live cattle, to a limited extent, are exported to Cuba and other West Indian markets, but the chief produce from this industry is hides.

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  • The imports include wheat flour, rice, barley, prepared foods, sugar, coal, kerosene, beer, wines and liquors, railway equipment, machinery and general hardware, fence wire, cotton and other textiles, drugs, lumber, cement, paper, &c., while the exports comprise coffee, bananas, hides and skins, tobacco, precious metals, rubber, cabinet woods, divi-divi, dye-woods, vegetable ivory, Panama hats, orchids, vanilla, &c.

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  • The public revenues are derived from import duties on foreign merchandise, from export duties on national produce, from internal taxes and royalties on liquors, cigarettes and tobacco, matches, hides and salt, from rentals of state emerald mines and pearl fisheries, from stamped paper, from port dues and from postal and telegraph charges.

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  • Game and trout are plentiful; milk, butter, hams, hides and wool are exported, principally to France.

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  • The staple exports are diamonds, gold (from the Witwatersrand mines), wool, copper ore, ostrich feathers, mohair, hides and skins.

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  • The system of intercalation in the lunar calendar of the heathen Arabs was designed to secure that the feast should always fall at the time when the hides, fruits and other merchandise were ready for market, 4 and the Meccans, who knew how to attract the Bedouins by hospitality, bought up these wares in exchange for imported goods, and so became the leaders of the international trade of Arabia.

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  • When we turn to the social divisions we find in Domesday and other documents classes of society in these districts bearing purely Norse names, dreng, karl, karlman, bonde, thrall, lysing, hold; in the system of taxation we have an assessment by carucates and not by hides and virgates, and the duodecimal rather than the decimal system of reckoning.

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  • The pectoral and ventral fins are so articulated as to perform the functions of feet, the fish being enabled to move, or rather to walk, on the bottom of the sea, where it generally hides itself in the sand or amongst sea-weed.

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  • The name (Yah[weh] " hides" or " treasures "; there is a similar Phoenician compound of Baal) is borne by various individuals, in Jer.

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  • The document which defines their duties and privileges sets forth that every ceorl who throve so that he had fully five hides of land, and a helm, and a mail-shirt, and a sword ornamented with gold, was to be reckoned gesithcund.

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  • A second draft allowed the man who had the military equipment complete, but not fully the five hides of land, to slip into the list, and also the merchant who has fared thrice over the high seas at his own expense.

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  • A considerable amount of trade is done in the export of wool, hides, cotton, carpets, silks, felts, cereals (wheat, barley, maize, rice), sheep, fruit and vegetables, and in tea, silver, porcelain and opium imported from China, cloth and groceries from India, and cloth, cottons, silks, sugar, matches and leather from West Turkestan and Russia.

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  • Besides bananas the largest exports are hides, rubber, coco-nuts, limes, native curios and quaqua bark.

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  • The exports include hides, skins, cotton, sugar and tobacco.

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  • The discovery of the so-called evolution of morality out of non-moral conditions is very frequently an unconscious subterfuge by which the evolutionist hides the fact that he is making a priori judgments upon the value of the moral concepts held to be evolved.

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  • The principal native products exported are live sheep, horses, salt meat, wool and hides, to which must be added the fish products - cod, train-oil, herring and salmon - eiderdown and woollen wares.

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  • Grazing receives considerable attention in the uplands, where the temperature is favourable and the pastureage good, and hides are largely exported.

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  • Large quantities of prunes, grain, meat, raw hides, eggs and copper are exported, chiefly to Austria-Hungary, Germany and Turkey.

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  • The principal items of import are cotton yarns, metals, sugar, petroleum and coal; of export, silk, representing in value 34% of the total exports, cotton, tea, rice, hides and skins, wool, wheat and beans.

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  • At the time of the Domesday Survey, the church of Avebury (Avreberie, Abury), with two hides attached, was held in chief by Rainbold, a priest, and was bestowed by Henry III.

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  • The rearing of cattle and the dressing of hides, the collection of rubber and bee culture are important industries.

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  • About 1870 india-rubber began to be exported in considerable quantities, and cattle, rubber and hides continue staple products.

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  • Wares that can be safely purchased by sample appear at the fairs in steadily diminishing quantities, while others, such as hides, furs and leather, which require to be actually examined, show as marked an increase.

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  • The principal commodity is furs (chiefly American and Russian), of which about one and a quarter million pounds worth are sold annually; other articles disposed of are leather, hides, wool, cloth, linen and glass.

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  • The curing of hides, the catching and drying of fish, boat-building, and especially the weaving of cotton into cloths called "pagns," afford employment to a considerable number of persons.

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  • Formerly the principal exports, besides slaves, were gold-dust, wax and hides, the gold being obtained from the Futa Jallon district farther inland.

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  • The export of hides received a severe check in 1892-1893 through the death of nearly all the cattle, but after an interval of seven or eight years the industry gradually revived.

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  • The value of hides exported increased from £520 in 1902 to £9615 in 1907.

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  • Hides, and skins, mangabeira rubber, cabinet woods, castor beans and rum are also exported.

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  • The exports, sent chiefly to Great Britain, are cocoa, spices, wool, cotton, coffee, live stock, hides, turtles, turtle shell, kola nuts, vanilla and timber.

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  • Cotton, cotton-seed and grain (durra, wheat, barley) sesame, livestock, hides and skins, beeswax, mother-of-pearl, senna and gold are also exported.

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  • The exports include logwood, cotton, hides, wax, tobacco, salt and cigars of local manufacture.

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  • It is a native of Australia, where it chiefly abounds in New South Wales, inhabiting rocky and mountainous districts, where it burrows among the loose sand, or hides itself in crevices of rocks.

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  • The principal articles of import are coffee, cotton-piece goods, &c., grain, hides, coal, opium, cottontwist and yarn.

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  • The city has no large commercial houses, and only an insignificant export trade, chiefly hides and forest products from the wooded mountain slopes near by.

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  • In these the variety of tannic acid is not exactly the same, but although there are slight chemical differences, they all possess the power of tanning raw hides and of preserving albuminous tissues.

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  • Bideford (Bedeford, Bydyford, Budeford, Bytheford) is not mentioned in pre-Conquest records, but according to Domesday it rendered geld for three hides to the king.

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  • Right. I think the consensus is that they were called buffs by Europeans because of the color of cured hides and that evolved to buffalo.

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  • Cynical opportunism often hides the despair.

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  • Made from pine with a warm antique finish, the bedstead hides a second full-size single bedstead below.

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  • Made from pine with a warm antique finish, the bedstead hides a second full-size single bedstead hides a second full-size single bedstead below.

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  • A raised boardwalk, through shady Pines, lead to hides overlooking a large lagoon.

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  • These are regions steeped in history, whose every village seemingly hides an architectural treasure, from Romanesque chapels to crumbling castles.

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  • Currently I've been working on a blind that entirely hides my shape under a huge goose decoy.

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  • It may be better undertaken during the cover of darkness as this hides many of the sheer drops!

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  • She hides my pile ointment behind the mirror on the window sill, and she sprays air freshener and perfume about the place.

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

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  • In the time of King Edward it paid geld for 5 hides.

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  • But when He hides His face, then trouble becomes more grievous.

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  • This script hides the image caption block if there is nothing in it.

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  • This was done by man handling the hides through a row of pits filled with tanning liquor.

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  • There is also a large green moray that hides in the area.

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  • The aim was to build three game hides in the far northeast of Namibia, near to the border with Botswana.

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  • However, the curious can watch wild ospreys, without fear of breaking the law, from properly constructed hides at the following places.

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  • It's a birdwatchers Paradise, with over a dozen bird hides, many of which are wheelchair accessible.

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  • A glass top on a stone plinth hides the head of a 49 feet deep well over a bubbling spring.

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  • Behind a frowning providence He hides a smiling face.

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  • The hides are then impregnated with Teflon to make them stain resistant.

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  • The slogan ' Europe of a Hundred Flags ' sounds appealing but hides the racial separatism assumed in Fascist decentralization.

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  • Some Highlanders used the hides of small animals to make sporrans.

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  • So today's teens the dealer hides even includes a dejanews index all.

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  • A young bird twitters And hides its head; A little wind suddenly Breathes, and is dead.

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  • The crinkle viscose fabric is super for traveling, as it both hides and resists creasing.

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  • The export of raw hides and wool is considerable; in 1898 these commodities were valued respectively at £90,400 and f 24,000.

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  • Glycerin acts as a preservative against decomposition, owing to its antiseptic qualities, which also led to its being employed to preserve untanned leather (especially during transit when exported, the hides being, moreover, kept soft and supple); to make solutions of gelatin, albumen, gum, paste, cements, &c. which will keep without decomposition; to preserve meat and other edibles; to mount anatomical preparations; to preserve vaccine lymph unchanged; and for many similar purposes.

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  • Gall nuts, gathered on the neighbouring Kurdish mountain slopes, are mostly exported, but are also made use of by native dyers; and hides, wax, cotton and gum are sold.

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  • I had learned a new lesson--that nature "wages open war against her children, and under softest touch hides treacherous claws."

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  • There is even now a shrewd suspicion that ' Isa Craig ' hides a name much less obscure.

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  • The framework of the siege tower was covered in animal hides.

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  • So today 's teens the dealer hides even includes a dejanews index all.

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  • The spectacular natural beauty of the islands hides a treacherous coastline that has seen many ships founder.

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  • And skylarks break from their hides in the tufted grass, as if drawn up on shining threads, their wings splashed with gold.

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  • Animal skins and hides were the first natural material modified by man.

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  • The most popular is cattle, since they are notable for thicker and durable hides.

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  • About 65 percent of leather items are produced with cattle hides.

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  • Their hides are much more delicate and are used mostly for linings and bookbinding.

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  • Top grain steer hides make strongest, most durable types of leather.

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  • Whenever Phebe hisses and swats and I yell, she runs and hides!

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  • Not only does this help keep the litter off the floor, it keeps the room from smelling and hides the soiled litter.

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  • Greg hides but is happily relieved to come out and find that the rumor that spread wasn't the real "secret" but some story about Greg and a girls' locker room.

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  • It's a myth that goldenseal hides the use of narcotics.

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  • A flat finish hides flaws such as bumps and cracks since it does not reflect light.

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  • Real hides are beautiful, however, many people feel the hide looks best while it's on the animal.

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  • For instance, a chat room that hides users' IP addresses can make it harder for someone to figure out the location of another chatter.

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  • Incorporating cardio exercise into your toning routine will help shed the fat that often hides those curved muscles.

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  • A suspended ceiling hangs and hides pipes, ducts, wires, etc., but it also takes away eight inches from the height of the room.

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  • There are now ceramic tiles that look and feel like granite, marble, leather, stone, and even animal hides (more so the look than the feel).

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  • Geocaching is when one person hides an object at specific coordinates with GPS technology, then posts about it online.

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  • Doublets were made of thicker wool or rough-sewn leather hides, designed to be tough enough to last for a long time.

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  • You also need a good push-up bra for an empire dress, but it hides any imperfections while drawing attention where you want it.

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  • The wider skirt hides a larger lower body.

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  • The high-seamed waist with its flowing long, loose skirt beautifully hides a large tummy.

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  • This grain hides the flaws and imperfections.

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  • If you have an hourglass shape, the belt on a safari dress will accentuate it, while the simple cut of a sheath dress hides wide hips and thighs.

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  • While some people are tempted to go with an empire waist because they think it hides their midsection, that is a mistake.

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  • While the Eskimos designed parkas made from animal hides or fur, today's plus size hooded parkas are available in casual lightweight fabrics like nylon.

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  • Even a sheer robe hides bulges and streamlines the figure, and can help to emphasize your most flattering silhouette.

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  • Our product literally hides the panels on the inside of the vest, and thus the only thing anyone pays attention to is the child in the cute fish-designed vest.

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  • Make sure that your field of vision is not obscured and that the hat hides whatever you are trying to hide, such as a bald spot.

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  • Hides or shows the different meters and effects in the game, such as the skill meter.

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  • There's a pause button in Action mode, but - curses! - it also hides the screen.

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  • Known as a "swapping" puzzle game, Bejeweled's simple exterior hides an immensely addictive game just beneath.

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  • A house drops down and hides them and then people leave and enter and you need to keep track of how many people are in the house after about ten seconds.

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  • Some dry brush left of the gate hides the second lever.

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  • While the current PSP has its controls on either side of a widescreen display, the PSP Go hides its controls in a portion that slides out the bottom.

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  • In addition, the herpes virus can infect a cell, and instead of making the cell produce new viruses, it hides inside the cell and waits.

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  • The herpes virus hides in the nervous system.

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  • The expression "mad as a hatter" comes from the mercury poisoning prevalent in seventeenth-century France among hat makers who soaked animal hides in a solution of mercuric nitrate to soften the hair.

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  • The classic bang looks youthful and fresh and hides the small brow lines that accompany age.

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  • It effectively hides any bulges or overlaps around the waistline.

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  • Side shirring hides any bulges, giving you an hourglass figure.

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  • The tonga sheer bikini hides absolutely nothing and is sure to attract a lot of attention for those brave enough to wear one.

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  • It's also worth noting that this particular bikini hides more of the body than the metallic suits, but upon closer inspection, it too is see through.

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  • The teardrop bikini, named so for its tear-like shape, is but a scrap of material that, truth be told, hides very little of the wearer's body!

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  • Lord & Taylor - The swimwear stock here is specifically for the sophisticated woman aho wants to ensure that her suit hides flaws and flatters her curves.

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  • The Breville Indoor BBQ Grill has a powerful 1500-watt heating element that hides inside a beautiful stainless steel exterior.

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  • A woman who is wearing a Halloween costume that completely hides her nine-month pregnant stomach will receive comments like, "You don't even look pregnant!"

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  • The half flap hides two inside compartments that close with magnetic snaps.

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  • Just as Cancer hides passion behind a shell, the Virgo lover keeps her heart well away from her sleeve.

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  • The padded collar has the Achilles cut out to allow for a fully articulated pointe and the mesh tongue pocket hides laces for a clean look.

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  • George hides the fact he didn't pass his exam.

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  • Clocky - This unique and fun clock actually jumps off your nightstand and runs and hides from you.

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  • A simple black case hides pocket-sized technology like AM/FM stereo and shortwave radio, digital function display, analog tuner and lighted digital alarm capabilities.

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  • Its brown case hides the latest clock technology as well as convenience options like separate snooze and sleep bars, easy volume control and radio or buzzer alarms.

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  • Its retro-look hides a bevy of surprisingly precise functions such as night vision backlight, water resistance, a chronograph and countdown heat timer.

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  • Hides your PC on the Internet, providing protection from hackers and blocks access to hackers, Trojans, and worms.

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  • If you've made your scarf out of fun fur or another novelty yarn that hides the stitches, don't worry about whether the sides are perfectly even.

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  • If your body is dehydrated, it will retain water and give you a bloated appearance that further hides your abdominal muscles.

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  • The famous Spanx brand has proven once again to be a woman's best friend; this cami hides your tummy!

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  • With so much sexy lingerie available virtually everywhere you look, why opt for something that hides so much more than it reveals?

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  • Wearing the traditional style of flannel pajamas hides your body in a lump of heavy fabric.

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  • Looking for something that covers the same amount of thigh, but hides your tummy too?

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  • Satin gowns are a great buy for curvy women--sultry tops accentuate your assets while the flowing gown hides flaws, making you look like nothing short of a goddess!

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  • The doubling method hides the breasts a little.

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  • Our community of professional writers knows all the ins and outs of what hides behind your television screen.

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  • Elliot, played by Henry Thomas, hides E.T. in his home, while authorities scour the surrounding area for evidence of the alien incursion.

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  • So he hides his error and steals another brain that just happens to be laying about, and of course, it is an 'abnormal' brain, the brain of a criminal.

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  • It is also a look at layers of deception as power hunger Kraven betrays his own kind as easily as he hides the betrayals of his superiors.

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  • This changes the account settings on your page and hides your groups on your profile, similar to the control panel method.

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  • He hides the bike on the beach, maybe with some clothes.

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  • We'll see them coming before they arrive, but the forest hides the armies south and north of the city too well.

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  • Among the exports may be noticed minerals, wines and spirits, tobacco, hides, live animals; and among the imports, groceries, cotton and cereals.

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  • Excellent fruits are produced in its vicinity, and its exports include cacao, coffee, sugar, hides, tobacco and sundry products in small quantities.

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  • Vessels of light draught easily ascend the Orinoco to this point, and a considerable trade is carried on, the exports being cocoa, sugar, cotton, hides, jerked beef and various forest products.

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  • The town is noted for its fruit, especially its vines; and it exports tissues, carpets, hides, yellow berries and dried fruit.

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  • The rapid development of the foreign trade of the republic since 1881 is due to settled internal conditions and to the prime necessity to the commercial world of many Argentine products, such as beef, mutton, hides, wool, wheat and Indian corn.

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  • Hides, tanned or curried 4,037 4,321 4,753

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  • Forwards it covers, and has driven asunder, the optic lobes; backwards it hides the much shortened medulla oblongata.

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  • With regard to the imports into Russia-they consist mainly of raw materials and machinery for the manufactures, and of provisions, the principal items being raw cotton, 17% of the aggregate; machinery and metal goods, 13%; tea, 5%; mineral ores, 5%; gums and resins, 4%; wool and woollen yarns, 32%; textiles, 3%; fish, 3%; with leather and hides, chemicals, silks, wine and spirits, colours, fruits, coffee, tobacco and rice.

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  • There are flour-mills and a trade in cereals, wool, tallow and hides.

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  • The state includes the oldest settlements in Venezuela, and was once very prosperous, producing cattle and exporting hides, but wars and political disorders have partly destroyed its industries and impeded their development.

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  • Fibres and vegetable grasses, wool, hides and skins, cotton, sugar, iron and steel and their manufactures, chemicals, coal, and leather and its manufactures are the leading imports; provisions, leather and its manufactures, cotton and its manufactures, breadstuffs, iron and steel and.

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  • It exports filberts (for which product it is the centre), walnuts, hides and timber.

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  • Other articles of export are silk cocoons, wool, hides, sponges, eggs and fruits (oranges, almonds, raisins and the like); the amounts of cotton, tobacco and wine sent out of the country are small.

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  • The finest agricultural land in the United States is near the lake, and there is an immense trade in all grains, fruits, livestock and lumber, and in products such as flour, pork, hides, leather goods, furniture, &c. Rich lead and copper mines abound, as also salt, iron and coal.

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  • Indian corn, flour, cattle, horses, mules and hides are exported to the neighbouring states.

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  • Of the Cyclostomidae only one species, Cyclostoma elegans, Muller, is British; it hides under stones and roots.

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  • Other articles of export are wine, brandy, hides and tobacco.

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  • Stock-raising receives some attention and hides and cattle are exported.

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  • Wool and hides are the principal exports.

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  • The mantle-skirt is always long, and hides the rest of the animal from view, its dependent margins meeting in the middle line below the ventral surface when the animal is retracted; it is, as it were, slit in the median line before and behind so as to form two flaps, a right and a left; on these the right and the left calcareous valves of the shell are borne respectively, connected by an uncalcified part of the shell called the ligament.

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  • Although the technique of growing cowpox on cow hides would come, transporting it was difficult due to lack of refrigeration.

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