Gross Sentence Examples

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  • The gross revenue of all the states is estimated at 24 millions sterling.

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  • See what gross inconsistency is tolerated.

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  • That's kind of gross, isn't it?

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  • Let me tell you, it was pretty gross.

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  • The gross revenue derived from the trunk services was £480,658, being an average of 5.82d.

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  • A puritan may go to his brown-bread crust with as gross an appetite as ever an alderman to his turtle.

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  • She described the skeleton as gross, with dead stuff clinging to some of the bones.

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  • The gross income for the year 1907 amounted to £2,702,228, of which £257,920 was paid to the Post Office in respect of royalties.

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  • The Italian parishes had in 1901 a total gross revenue, including assignments from the public worship endowment fund, of 1,280,000 or an average of 63 per parish; 51% of this gross sum consists of revenue from glebe lands.

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  • In 1822 it was $100,000; in 1850, $6,195,144; in 1886, $24,712,820; in 1904, $58,216,725; in 1907, $70,781,969 (gross debt, $104,206,706)-this included the debt of Suffolk county which in 1907 was $3,517,000.

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  • Tobacco slightly diminished in weight at a little over I lb per head, while the gross receipts are considerably increasedby over 23/4 millions sterling since 1884-1885---showing that the quality consumed is much better.

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  • All the evidence in Barclay's own work goes to prove that he was sincere in his reproof of contemporary follies and vice, and the gross accusations which John Bale 1 brings against his moral character may be put down to his hatred of Barclay's cloth.

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  • This valuation list contains the gross estimated' rental and rateable value of all rateable property in the parish.

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  • The gross estimated rental is the rent at which a property might reasonably be expected to let from year to year, the tenant paying tithes, rates and taxes.

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  • The efforts of the best minds in zoology had been directed for thirty years or more to ascertaining with increased accuracy and minuteness the structure, microscopic and gross, of all possible forms of animals, and not only of the adult structure but of the steps of development of that structure in the growth of each kind of organism from the egg to maturity.

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  • No careful and competent student of his works has ever failed to correct this gross misapprehension.

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  • The gross earnings of all the lines during the fiscal year I 9051906 were 7 millions sterling, approximately, and the gross expenses (including the payment of interest on loans and debentures) were under 31/8 millions, so that there remained a net profit of 31/8 millions, being at the rate of a little over 81/8% on the invested capital.

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  • The facts that the outlays averaged less than 47% of the gross income, and that accidents and irregularities are not numerous, prove that Japanese management in this kind of enterprise is efficient.

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  • It is not true, as is sometimes said, that the difference between the two is that between gross and polished vice.

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  • The gross selfishness of the Spartans, herein exemplified, was emphasized by their capture of the Theban citadel, and, after their expulsion, by the raid upon Attica in time of peace by the Spartan Sphodrias, and his immunity from punishment at Sparta (summer of 378 B.C.).

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  • The gross errors of his policy - the renewal of the war with Holland in 1621, the persistence of Spain in taking part in the Thirty Years' War, the lesser wars undertaken in northern Italy, and the entire neglect of all effort to promote the unification of the different states forming the peninsular kingdom - were shared by him with the king, the Church and the commercial classes.

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  • The principal industry was the manufacture of iron and steel products, which, including steel and rolling mills, car, foundry and machine shops, and shipyards, represented more than 30% of the total capital, and approximately 25% of the total gross product of the manufactures in the state.

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  • The tanning, currying and finishing of leather ranks second in importance, with a gross product ($10,250,842) 9% greater than that of 1900, and constituting about one-fourth of the gross factory product of the state in 1905; and the manufacture of food products ranked third, the value of the products of the fruit canning and preserving industry having more than doubled in the decade 1890-1900, but falling off a little more than 7% in 1900-1905.

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  • But in the histories of the wars with his vassals he is often little more than a tyrannical dotard, who is made to submit to gross insult.

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  • His first tractate (1535, first printed 1627) is directed against the "horrible and gross blasphemy of John of Leiden" - though the genuineness of this tract has been doubted.

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  • In 1905 the gross value of the manufactured product (of establishments on the factory system) was $160,572,313, as against $132,870,865 in 1900, an increase of 20.8%; whereas, even including the products of smaller establishments not technically factories, the value of the product in 1850 was only $3,551,783, and in 1880 was only $71,045,926.

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  • This battle is often called Gross Gorschen.

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  • His short administration was one of the most disgraceful and incompetent in English history, originating in an accident, supported only by the will of the sovereign, by gross corruption and intimidation, the precursor of the disintegration of political life and of a whole series of national disasters.

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  • The gross value of agricultural products is not great compared with that of other industries, but they are of great importance in the economy of the state.

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  • Then it follows the Spree for 12 m., and at Gross Tranke (121 ft.) passes out and goes.

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  • The gross amount insured by policies in life insurance offices (ordinary and industrial) was over £29,000,000, of which the state office claimed two-fifths.

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  • The gross public debt had reached £66,500,000 in 1908.

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  • The revenue for state, county and municipal purposes is derived principally from a general property tax, a privilege tax levied on the gross receipts of express companies and private car companies, an inheritance tax and licence fees for the sale of intoxicating liquors.

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  • He accused the bishop of favouring the Christological heresies of the Monarchians, and, further, of subverting the discipline of the Church by his lax action in receiving back into the Church those guilty of gross offences.

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  • The estimated gross revenue is £17,000 and the tribute £2500.

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  • Estates belonging to the house of Habsburg-Lorraine, property illegally acquired, as well as the property of persons who during the war were guilty of gross offences against the Czechoslovak nation are taken for a compensation paid to the Reparation Commission at Vienna.

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  • The internal taxes of the war were applied not only in the form of income taxes, stamp taxes, licence and gross receipts taxes, but also as direct excise taxes on many commodities.

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  • Next comes the distinction of the gross national revenue from the net - the first being the whole produce of the land and labour of a country, the second what remains after deducting the expense of maintaining the fixed capital of the country and that part of its circulating capital which consists of money.

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  • In 1566 he was summoned before a newly erected tribunal and condemned to death for gross neglect of duty, though not one of the frivolous charges brought against him could be substantiated.

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  • In 424 B.C. it surrendered to the Spartan Brasidas without resistance, owing to the gross negligence of the historian Thucydides, who was with the fleet at Thasos.

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  • The gross value of manufactures rose in the same interval from $1,019,106,616 to $13,010,036,514; of farm products, from $2,212,540,927 in 1880 to $6,309,000,000 in 1900.

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  • Measured by the gross value of products, wholesale slaughtering and meat packing was the most important industry in 1903.

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  • These figures are of gross indebtedness.

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  • The Ill valley is bounded south by the snowy chain of the Rhatikon (highest point, the Scesaplana, 9741 ft., a famous view-point), and of the Silvretta (highest point, Gross Piz Buin, 1 0,880 ft.), both dividing Vorarlberg from Switzerland; slightly to the north-east of Piz Buin is the Dreilanderspitze (10,539 ft.), where the Vorarlberg, Tirolese and Swiss frontiers unite.

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  • It is now universally admitted to be a gross forgery.

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  • Speaking generally, they are characterized by a stilted, affected style and a tone of gross adulation.

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  • The most important manufacturing industries are those that depend upon cotton for raw material, with a gross product in 1900 valued at $26,521,757.

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  • In that year 1 there were 67 mills engaged in the manufacture of cotton goods, with a capital of $24,158,159, and they yielded a gross product valued at $ 18, 457, 6 45; the increase between 1900 and 1905 was actually much larger (and proportionately very much larger) than between 1890 and 1900; the number of factories in 1905 was 103 (an increase of 53.7% over 1900); their capital was $42,349,618 (75.3% more than in 1900); and their gross product was valued at $35,174,248 (an increase of 90 6% since 1900).

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  • As national income increases in a given country, the size of government as a portion of gross national product (GNP) rises and the range of services people expect the government to offer rises.

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  • Kindred to this latter view was the position of sundry sects of English fanatics during the Commonwealth, who denied that an elect person sinned, even when committing acts in themselves gross and evil.

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  • The Russians offered a strenuous resistance, defending Seidnitz, Gross Dobritz and Reick with their usual steadiness, and Ney was so far advanced that several generals at the Allied headquarters suggested a counter-attack of the centre by way of Strehlen, so as to cut off the French left from Dresden.

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  • She is accused by Dio Cassius and Capitolinus of gross profligacy, and was reputed to have instigated the revolt of Avidius Cassius against her husband.

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  • The Saxon ministers, after protesting against the new arrangement, arrested Patkul and shut him up in the fortress of Sonnenstein (Dec. 19, 1705), altogether disregarding the remonstrances of Peter against such a gross violation of international law.

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  • The eastward direction is maintained and the watershed (though not the chief Alpine watershed) continues through the Greater Tauern Alps, culminating in the Gross Venediger (12,008 ft.), for the Gross Glockner (12,461 ft.) rises to the south.

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  • Strong-growing pears, for instance, are grafted on the quince stock in order to restrict their tendency to form " gross " shoots and a superabundance of wood in place of flowers and fruit.

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  • The removal of weakly, sickly, overcrowded and gross infertile shoots is usually, however, a matter about which there can be few mistakes when once the habit of growth and the form and arrangement of the buds are known.

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  • Tomatoes should be tied up to trellises or stakes if fine-flavoured and handsome fruit is desired, for if left to ripen on the ground they are apt to have a gross earthy flavour.

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  • Advowsons are divided into two kinds, appendant and in gross.

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  • An advowson may also be partly appendant, and partly in gross, e.g.

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  • Commissioners (now the board of agriculture) are appointed to execute the acts; a rent charge on all lands liable to tithes at the time of the passing of the first act is substituted for those tithes, of which the gross amount is ascertained either by voluntary parochial agreement, or, failing that, by compulsory award confirmed by the commissioners; and the value of the tithes is fixed in the latter case by their average value in the particular parish during the seven years preceding Christmas 1835, without deduction for parochial or county and other rates, charges and assessments falling on tithes, the rent charge being liable to all the charges to which tithes were liable.

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  • Arguing in the Lessons that a mathematical point must have quantity, though this were not reckoned, he had explained the Greek word UTCy v, used for a point, to mean a visible mark made with a hot iron;; whereupon he was charged by Wallis with gross ignorance for confounding artypii and o - y,ua.

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  • On four works of this class were spent Rx.1,649,823, which in1896-1897irrigated 200,733 acres, a valuable return then, although in an ordinary year their gross revenue does not cover their working expenses.

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  • No opulent gentleman commoner, panting for oneand-twenty, could have treated the academical authorities with more gross disrespect.

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  • Already he had shown his capacity as a forcible and able debater; aroused to new activity upon the passage of the Kansas-Nebraska Bill, which he regarded as a gross breach of political faith, he now entered upon public discussion with an earnestness and force that by common consent gave him leadership in Illinois of the opposition, which in 1854 elected a majority of the legislature; and it gradually became clear that he was the only man who could be opposed in debate to the powerful and adroit Douglas.

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  • Germans of all states and ranks were indignant at so gross a humiliation, but even the loss of Strassburg did not suffice to move the diet.

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  • The gross immoralities connected with prostitution in Berlin had been disclosed in the case of a murderer called Heinze ifl 1891; and a bill to strengthen the criminal law on the subject was introduced but not carried.

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  • Vineyards give an annual gross return of between £II and £13 per acre, and orange and lemon groves between £32 and £48 per acre.

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  • In 1904, 75,779 Sicilians were registered as seamen, and Ito steamships with a gross tonnage of 145,702 were registered in Sicily.

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  • His rule was not merely the rule of a stranger king surrounded by stranger followers; the degradation of the island was aggravated by gross oppression, grosser than in the continental lands.

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  • A gross case of insult offered by a Frenchman to a Sicilian woman led to the massacre at Palermo, and the like scenes followed elsewhere.

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  • The inquiry revealed the gross cruelty and injustice with which the natives had been often treated.

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  • If not written at the command of Justinian (as some have supposed), it is evidently grounded on official information, and is full of gross flattery of the emperor and of the (then deceased) empress.

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  • The principal text is the Rhind Mathematical Papyrus in the British Museum, written under a Hyksos king c. 1600 B.C.; unfortunately it is full of gross errors.

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  • His internal administration was marked by gross extravagance, which led to his viziers being forced to practise violent extortion for which they afterwards suffered.

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  • In man, actually gross sensory defects follow even limited lesions of the cortex.

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  • The gross revenue of the state is estimated to have risen threefold.

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  • According to the reports of the Inland Revenue Commissioners, the gross income derived from the ownership of lands in Scotland was returned in1879-1880at £7,7 6 9,3 0 3.

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  • Douglas was succeeded in his earldom by his grandfather, Sir James the Gross, an unwieldy veteran.

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  • In the effects of exercise, of physiological activity and the gross results of such external agencies as food, temperature, climate, light, pressure and so forth the intrinsic factor appears to become more important.

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  • It is strongly fortified by forts and guns of modern type upon which large sums have been expended by the imperial government, aided by a heavy annual military contribution payable by the colony and fixed at 20% of its gross revenue.

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  • Among other sources of revenue are an inheritance tax, which yields approximately $1,000,000 a year, and 7% of the annual gross earnings of the Illinois Central railway, given in return for the state aid in the construction of the road.

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  • The excavations (at Gezer, Megiddo, Jericho, &c.) indicate a persisting gross and cruel idolatry, utterly opposed to the demands of the law and the prophets.'

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  • The denunciations in the prophetical writings of gross injustice, oppression and maladministration seem to presuppose definite laws, which either were ignored or which fell with severity upon the poor and unfortunate.

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  • The average number of vessels entering the port annually in the ten years from 1864 to 1873 was 1981 (771,196 tons), and the average entries in the five years 1902-1906 were 3698 of 3,904,906 gross tons (coast trade alone, 2162 of 333,795 tons).

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  • Fatteh Khan, however, excited the king's jealously by his powerful position, and provoked the malignity of the king's son, Kamran, by a gross outrage on the Saddozai family.

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  • Under the Mogul empire, as organized by Akbar the Great, the share of the state was fixed at one-third of the gross produce of the soil; and a regular army of tax-collectors was permitted to intervene between the cultivator and the supreme government.

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  • Lastly, a rate is fixed upon every field, which may be regarded as roughly equal to one-third of the gross and one-half of the net produce.

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  • That in areas where the State takes the land revenue from the cultivators, the proposal to fix the assessment at one-fifth of the gross produce would result in the imposition of a greatly increased burden upon the people.

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  • In1907-1908the gross yield of the salt duty was 3,339,000, of which more than one-fourth was derived from imported salt.

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  • In1907-1908the total gross revenue from excise amounted to £6,214,000, of which more than two-thirds was derived from spirits and toddy.

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  • In1907-1908the gross receipts from income tax amounted to £1,504,000.

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  • With regard to the land revenue, the essence of his procedure was to fix the amount which the cultivators should pay at one-third of the gross produce, leaving it to their option to pay in money or in kind.

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  • The gross rental at first payable to the company was £53,000, but within a period of ten years it had risen to X 146,000.

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  • All looked peaceful until Lord Auckland, prompted by his evil genius, attempted by force to place Shah Shuja upon the throne of Kabul, an attempt which ended in gross mismanagement and the annihilation of the British garrison in that city.

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  • Such a gross violation of their caste prejudices would alone be sufficient to account for the outbreak that followed.

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  • In 1909 free trade was established between the United States and the Philippines in all goods which are the growth, product or manufacture of these countries, with the exception of rice, except that a limit to the free importation from the Philippines to the United States in any one year is fixed on cigars at 15,000,000; on wrapper tobacco and on filler tobacco, when mixed with more than 15% of wrapper tobacco, at 300,000 th; on filler tobacco at 1,000,000 lb and on sugar at 300,000 gross tons.

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  • When one of the latter, Fernan Sanchez, who had behaved with gross ingratitude and treason to his father, was slain by the legitimate son Pedro, the old king recorded his grim satisfaction.

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  • One was the strict limitation of corporal punishment to offences of mutiny and gross personal violence to officers, where previously it might be inflicted for many forms of misconduct, and it can only now be adjudged under great restrictions.

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  • Such treatment of dogs would be gross cruelty."

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  • The gross expenditure was £524,289 for 1896-1897, as against £615,656 for 1903-1904.

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  • All protests against gross misgovernment during many years having proved useless, Oudh was annexed in 1856 and constituted a separate chief commissionership. Then followed the Mutiny, when all signs of British rule were for a time swept away throughout the greater part of the two provinces.

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  • Elaborate legal machinery was devised, though its provisions were constantly violated by the imperial will and the gross corruption of officials.

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  • This gross misrepresentation has made hypothesis a kind of logical fashion.

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  • These seven "principles," starting from the most gross - the physical body, or "Riipa" - become more and more subtle and attenuated until we reach the Universal Self "Atma," the centre as also the matrix of the whole, both individual and universal.

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  • The value of gross manufactured products increased 41.9% from 1889 to 1899.

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  • In the latter year California ranked 12th among the states in the gross value of all manufactures ($302,874,761); the per-capita value of manufactured and agricultural products being $293, - $89 of the latter, $204 of the former.

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  • The principal sources of revenue are a general property tax, a tax on the gross receipts of express companies, a tax on the gross products of mines, an inheritance tax, a poll tax and the sale of liquor licences.

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  • Further, to make out a case for dependence at all, one must assume the mistaken order (as it may be) in Gamaliel's speech as due to gross carelessness in the author of Acts - an hypothesis unlikely in itself.

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  • Relations between Polygons of Loads and of Resistances.In a structure in which each piece is supported at two joints only, the well-known laws of statics show that the directions of the gross load on each piece and of the two resistances by which it is supported must lie in one plane, must either be parallel or meet in one point, and must bear to each other, if not parallel, the proportions of the sides of a triangle respectively parallel to their directions, and, if parallel, such proportions that each of the three forces shall be proportional to the distance between the other two,all the three distances being measured along one direction.

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  • Further, at any one of the centres of load let PL represent the magnitude and direction of the gross load, and Pa, Pb the two resistances by which the piece to which that load is applied is supported; then wifl those three lines be respectively the diagonal and sides of a parallelogram; or, what is the same thing, they will be equal to the three sides of a triangleS and they must be in the same plane, although the sides of the polygon of resistances may be in different planes.

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  • All the more are, however, the gross stimulants, connected with the adoration of his consort, calculated to work up the carnal instincts of the devotees to an extreme degree of sensual frenzy.

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  • Metal sheathing shall be dealt with, by allowing in full the cost of a weight equal to the gross weight of metal sheathing stripped off, minus the proceeds of the old metal.

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  • Beneath the surface of brilliant social culture lurked gross appetites and savage passions, unrestrained by medieval piety, untutored by modern experience.

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  • The German aristocracy, as Aeneas Sylvius had noticed, remained for the most part barbarous, addicted to gross pleasures, contemptuous of culture.

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  • The gross income from the state railways is 26,607,622, and the net income 4,684,856 marks.

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  • Some of them are ` memorials of the best men of the time written by the best scholars of the time,'" (C. Gross, The Sources and Literature of English History, p. 34, London, 1900).

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  • In practice the expenditure is somewhat greater than this; in large works the gross horse-power required for the refining itself and for power and lighting in the factory may not exceed 0.19 to 0.2 (or in smaller works 0.25) horse-power hours per pound of copper refined.

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  • The development of tramway enterprise in the United Kingdom, as shown by the mileage open, the paid-up capital, gross receipts, working expenses and number of passengers carried, has been as follows 1900, 1,749,804 * Excluding season-ticket holders, whose number in 1880 was 502,174; in and in England and Wales alone, in 1880, 449, 82 3; in 1900, 1,610,754.

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  • It was probably mainly on account of this money-lending that the Jews were so heartily detested and liable to such gross ill-treatment by the people.

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  • Another characteristic of the de la Gardie government was its gross corruption, which made Sweden the obsequious hireling of that foreign power which had the longest purse.

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  • That he changed the system of blinding his relatives from passing a hot metal over the open eye to an extraction of the whole pupil is indicative of gross brutality.

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  • For an account of the "degeneration of craftgilds" a general reference may be made to Brentano, On Gilds (1870), and C. Gross, The Gild Merchant (2 vols., 1890).

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  • That the popular religion contained gross errors hardly needed to be pointed out.

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  • Of the two last, the former sings of love well and sincerely, while the latter is represented by love songs replete with false sentiment and by some rather gross songs of maldizer, a form which, if it rarely contains much poetical feeling or literary value, throws considerable light on the society of the time.

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  • The statement, moreover, that some eight millions of Indians perished through forced labour in the mines is a gross exaggeration.

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  • The population in 1901 was 137,268, showing a decrease of 12% in the decade; the estimated gross revenue is L21,437; the tribute, £310.

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  • Article 7 provided that the decision should be made within three months from the close of the argument, and gave power to the arbitrators to award a sum in gross in the event of Great Britain being adjudged to be in the wrong.

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  • Mainly through the efficiency of this board the assessed value of the taxable property of the state was increased from $968,189,087 in 1899 to $1,418,251,858 in 1902, or 46.4%, and the taxes levied on railways, which had hitherto been assessed on their gross earnings, were increased from $1,483,907 in 1901 to $3,288,162 in 1902, or 121 6%.

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  • A few years after the establishment of the "Abode of Love," a peculiarly gross scandal, in which Prince and one of his female followers were involved, led to the secession of some of his most faithful friends, who were unable any longer to endure what they regarded as the amazing mixture of blasphemy and immorality offered for their acceptance.

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  • The population in 1901 was 100,430, being a decrease of 17% during the decade; the estimated gross revenue is £25,412; and the tribute £600.

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  • There is not in his history a trace of that rather gross adulation in which even Virgil does not disdain to indulge.

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  • Gross exaggerations, such as those in which Valerius Antias indulged, he roundly denounces, and with equal plainness of speech he condemns the family vanity which had so constantly corrupted and distorted the truth.

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  • Domestic telegraph, telephone, express, cable, parlourand sleeping-car, gasand electric-lighting, oil and pipe line companies, and several classes of insurance companies, are taxed on the amount of their gross receipts.

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  • Several gross errors which had appeared in the Latin version, and had been since exposed, were corrected in this edition.

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  • The gross blunders due to carelessness have often been exposed, and there is no doubt that Foxe was only too ready to believe evil of the Catholics, and he cannot always be exonerated from the charge of wilful falsification of evidence.

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  • In 1845 Marx wrote of the Young-Hegelians that to separate history from natural science and industry was like separating the soul from the body, and "finding the birthplace of history, not in the gross material production on earth, but in the misty cloud formation of heaven" (Die heilige Familie, p. 238).

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  • An incumbent, once inducted, can only be disturbed by complicated and extremely costly processes of law; in effect, except in cases of gross 1 Certain great offices of state are closed to Roman Catholics.

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  • The grounds for divorce in the state are adultery, impotence, extreme cruelty, desertion for three consecutive years next preceding the application, gross and confirmed habits of intoxication, cruel and abusive treatment, or a husband's gross or wanton refusal or neglect to provide a suitable maintenance for his wife.

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  • To his high connexions and his adroitness, as well as to the gross mistakes of his rival, Clement owed the immediate support of Queen Joanna of Naples and of several of the Italian barons; and the king of France, Charles V., who seems to have been sounded beforehand on the choice of the Roman pontiff, soon became his warmest protector.

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  • No attempt, in fact, had been made to exclude the fat of cows and pigs, and apparently no one had realized that a gross outrage was thus being perpetrated on the religious feelings of both Hindu and Mahommedan sepoys.

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  • In 1907 the port received 7,542,149 gross tons of iron ore, and shipped 2,632,027 net tons of soft coal.

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  • With his fierce hatred of what he recognized as injustice, it was impossible that he should not feel exasperated at the gross misgovernment of Ireland for the supposed benefit of England, the systematic exclusion of Irishmen from places of honour and profit, the spoliation of the country by absentee landlords, the deliberate discouragement of Irish trade and manufactures.

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  • Human nature indignantly rejects her portrait in the Yahoo as a gross libel, and the protest is fully warranted.

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  • The payers of income tax, unfortunately, are not one class but many, and although the rate of duty is the same, the definition of income seems imperfect, so that many pay on a much larger assessment of income than seems fair in comparison with other incomes of nominally the same amount, but really of much greater value when all deductions from the gross sum are fairly reckoned.

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  • Within its borders or close about them are the centres of total and of improved farm acreage, of total farm values, of gross farm income, of the growth of Indian corn, of wheat, and of oats.

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    0
  • In 1904 the gross valuation of all taxable wealth was put at $1,155,402,647, and taxation for state purposes aggregated $0.17 per $1000.1 In the years1851-1857a debt of $23,701,000 was incurred in aiding railways, and all the roads made default during the Civil War.

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    0
  • The gross earnings in 5905 were £4,047,065 (as compared with £3,390,093 in 1895); the expenses £3,076,920 (as compared with £1,596,013 in 1895).

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    0
  • The most important manufacturing centres are Indianapolis, Terre Haute, Evansville, South Bend, Fort Wayne, Anderson, Hammond, Richmond, Muncie, Michigan City and Elwood, each having a gross annual product of more than $6,000,000.

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    0
  • This gross outrage led to fresh measures of coercion.

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    0
  • The result of the trial (1875) was a failure to obtain a unanimous verdict on the charge of poisoning; the viceroy, Lord Northbrook, however, decided to depose Malhar Rao on the ground of gross misgovernment, the widow of his brother and predecessor, Khande Rao, being permitted to adopt an heir from among the descendants of the founder of the family.

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  • The gross revenue of the state is more than a million sterling.

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    0
  • He was orderly and temperate, they were gross and debauched; he was a deist, they were atheists.

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    0
  • An acre thus produces $11.60,.making a gross profit of $5.60.

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    0
  • When this is deducted from the gross profits of $5.60 prices found above, We have a net profit of $3.32 an acre, not an exorbitant one by any means.

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    0
  • We find that this antithesis, as exaggerated by some of the Gnostic sects of the and and 3rd centuries A.D., led, not merely to theoretical antinomianism, but even (if the charges of their orthodox opponents are not entirely to be discredited) to gross immorality of conduct.

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    0
  • Among the grounds for a divorce are adultery, extreme cruelty, habitual drunkenness, gross neglect of duty and imprisonment for felony.

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    0
  • There is a tax on the gross receipts of corporations, a graduated land tax on all holdings exceeding 640 acres, a tax on income exceeding $3500, and a tax on gifts and inheritances.

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    0
  • He has been freely charged with gross misrepresentation, an accusation to which he laid himself open, for instance, in the account of the birth of James, the Old Pretender.

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    0
  • The total gross receipts from all sources of traffic in 1905 were £4, 0 43,3 68, of which £2,104,108 was derived from passenger traffic and £1,798,520 from goods traffic. The total number of passengers carried (exclusive of season and periodical ticketholders) was 27,950,150.

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  • With a vertex much more distant the desired effect would be impaired, and with one nearer neither of the poles would be seen, whilst the exaggeration of China would have been too gross for a professed representation of the hemisphere.

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    0
  • Married to a woman of loose morals, and afterwards to a devout Italian, he was gross and vulgar in his appetites and pleasures.

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    0
  • To counteract the influence of Jerusalem he established golden calves at Dan and Bethel, an act which to later ages was as gross a piece of wickedness as his rebellion against the legitimate dynasty of Judah.

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    0
  • Popular Protestant feeling ran very high at the time, partly in consequence of the recent establishment of a Roman Catholic diocesan hierarchy by Pius IX., and criminal proceedings against Newman for libel resulted in an acknowledged gross miscarriage of justice.

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    0
  • Mining.-Mining is now the foremost industry, the gross production in 1905 being valued at £1,858,218 as compared with £1,500,000, the value of agricultural production, which is next in importance.

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    0
  • The capital expended on government lines up to 1905 was £3,920,500; the gross earnings in that year were £ 2 43,5 66, and the working expenses £171,630; leaving £71,936 as.

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    0
  • The gross revenue (1901-1902) was Rs.

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    0
  • Kant has pointedly declared that it would be a gross absurdity to suppose that in his view separate, distinct things-in-themselves existed corresponding to the several objects of perception.

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    0
  • In Germany, Ips and Passau on the Danube, and Gross Almerode in Hesse, are the best known localities producing fireclay goods, the crucibles from the last-mentioned place, known as Hessian crucibles, going all over the world.

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    0
  • Additionally, hounding her is a gross disservice to law enforcement because her help will cease if someone discovers her identity.

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    0
  • The dictionary definition of a blunder is "a gross mistake."

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    0
  • They also paid her an extra $50 for the gross inconvenience she had suffered.

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    0
  • Gross international happiness is a new concept in economic thinking aimed at replacing the western paradigm of economic productivity and well-being.

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    0
  • The gross proceeds were $6.3M with a loss on disposal of $3.5M, of which $2.8M was written off at the half-year.

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    0
  • Gross deficiency of dietary selenium may cause many heart problems, including arrhythmia.

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    0
  • On an average scenarios with genetically modified herbicide tolerant sugar beet led in an increased gross margin.

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    0
  • We've seen here plans to begin coveted gold bracelet a gross prize.

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    0
  • The touches are seldom light, or delicate; the brush is heavy, the color loaded; the picture appears a gross caricature.

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    0
  • This leads to gross errors in size constancy, particularly at far viewing distances.

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    0
  • Such claims were obviously thought too gross for a domestic audience; they would strain the credulity of ordinary Bosnian Serb peasants.

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    0
  • Some patients are not particularly conscious of even quite gross planovalgus deformity and complain mainly of pain.

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    0
  • Rather, a gross dereliction of duty or recklessness is needed.

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    0
  • Other possible instances would be gross discourtesy to an owner or repeatedly ignoring communications from the FRC.

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    0
  • Judging gross disproportion HSE has not provided any specific guidance, but the disproportion must be gross for all possible options.

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    0
  • To call it surreal would be to do the word surreal a gross disservice.

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    0
  • Inviting people to rifle through her underwear drawer was pretty gross.

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    0
  • Great spot to races a troop pamela gross Edward.

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    0
  • This includes all emoluments that form the gross taxable pay including guaranteed commission.

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    0
  • Once again the profit margins returned from the bulls have been a real eye-opener with a top gross of just under £ 2200.

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    0
  • To receive interest gross in the future you will need to complete Inland Revenue form R40.

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    0
  • In this case the tenant pays the agent gross.

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    0
  • A spokeswoman for the museum said, " Overall, we are all pretty gross.

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    0
  • The alchemist is ' working upon things terrene or of too gross or heavy a substance ' .

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    0
  • Also, of course, they're so gross.

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    0
  • There are few prosecutions, suggesting that action is taken only when misconduct is particularly gross.

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    0
  • It shows you are managing to diminish the really gross emotions that were swamping them!

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    0
  • Standard duty covers virtually all highway applications all the way to maximum legal gross weights.

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    0
  • Processes active in hydrothermal plumes modify the gross flux from hydrothermal plumes modify the gross flux from hydrothermal venting to the oceans.

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    0
  • The real causes include political illegitimacy, corruption and gross macroeconomic mismanagement.

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    0
  • Thirdly, the gross inaccuracy of " without the economic support of England, you would be nothing " .

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    0
  • He will be a completely gross, vulgar farmer, totally inattentive to appearances, and thinking of nothing but profit and loss.

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    0
  • Imagine putting a whole year's gross income into your pension!

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    0
  • By 1992 world indebtedness exceeded even the total gross domestic product of the richest (OECD) countries.

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    0
  • It is an offense for anyone to commit an act of gross indecency with a child under the age of 17.

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  • Help us reverse this act of gross public indecency.

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    0
  • The grant could not have been refused without gross injustice.

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    0
  • It was a gross insult to the competitors every single one of them.

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    0
  • Payphone operators usually negotiate rents with private landlords based on a percentage of gross receipts and install the kiosks at their own expense.

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    0
  • The wines spent 6 months in barrel on the gross lees with regular lees stirring.

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    0
  • Smaller unincorporated bodies will be covered by the common law offense of gross negligence manslaughter.

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    0
  • Serious cases, which constitute gross misconduct, are likely to lead to dismissal.

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    0
  • The sacked worker had been found guilty of gross misconduct for playing a leading role in the walk out.

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    0
  • However, in the case of a gross mismatch i think that the coaches would not conceed the contest beforehand.

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    0
  • This interpretation is based on a gross misunderstanding of what the term unlettered actually means.

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    0
  • Such gross somatic mosaicism was not observed in three other lines examined, further emphasizing a role for flanking DNA in modulating repeat stability.

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    0
  • A weak case for a plaintiff is not gross negligence.

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    0
  • Increasing numbers of so-called low biomass oilseed rapes now rank in the premier gross output division.

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    0
  • We have received a profit of £ 5,000 on a capital outlay of £ 10,000 - 50% gross return on capital.

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    0
  • We believe it to be a gross overestimate for the reasons set out below.

    0
    0
  • Column E = Projected Gross Domestic Product in millions of 1990 purchasing power parity US$, for the year 2015.

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    0
  • Both males and hermaphrodite seam cell lineages are affected although the hermaphrodites do not exhibit any obvious gross morphological phenotype.

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    0
  • Processes active in hydrothermal plumes modify the gross flux from hydrothermal venting to the oceans.

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    0
  • There was a decline in gross national product and in per capita income.

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    0
  • Our retail energy supply gross profit grew by 14% to £ 95 million.

    0
    0
  • The basis of an assessment is the gross rents receivable less any allowable expenses incurred by the landlord in any income tax year.

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    0
  • The level of fees is fixed according to the amount of gross premium income receivable by an insurance company in a financial year.

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    0
  • The gross rental at that date was about £ 72,500 a year, well over twice the estimated yield in 1800.

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    0
  • Estimated gross proven and probable recoverable reserves for the field are currently 15.2 million barrels of oil.

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    0
  • Income The questionnaire asked respondents to classify their current personal annual gross income within brackets ranging from under £ 5,000 to over £ 80,000.

    0
    0
  • Payroll Giving takes money directly from your gross salary.

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    0
  • Heat inactivated serum did not produce any clinical signs, nor gross or microscopic lesions.

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    0
  • Now you have your " gross " opening cut through your roof sheathing.

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    0
  • Also gross stupidity should be a crime punishable by death.

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    0
  • Butler's fine of a little under a pound in 1881 is likely to have been smaller than his gross takings for that day.

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    0
  • They are the largest tax shelter adviser in the UK placing around £ 200 million in gross tax shelter investment.

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    0
  • Grace Line built four sisters in 1918, all 360 feet long and around 4800 gross tons.

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    0
  • She is 49 meters in length with a gross tonnage of 561.

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    0
  • Such damage could be produced by a previous viral infection, leaving functional defects unaccompanied by any gross histological changes.

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    0
  • A straight line extension of the curve can lead to a gross underestimate.

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    0
  • A color duplex Doppler ultra sound revealed gross short saphenous vein (SSV) reflux.

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    0
  • Clearly a gross violation of the law of conservation of momentum is implied.

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    0
  • There is concern, however, that some loads may exceed the gross vehicle weight, axle specific weights, or both.

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    0
  • Dividends received from other countries will be reported gross only to the extent that they have suffered a withholding tax.

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    0
  • Gross margins were up, reflecting reasonable dial-up modem margins and reduced inventory write-downs.

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    0
  • Net Lending Figures refer to gross lending less repayments and other adjustments (e.g. for bad debt write-offs ).

    0
    0
  • Gross rental yields on capital values are virtually unchanged, slipping only from 7.3% to 7.2% .

    0
    0
  • There is no supernatural, says the yogi, but there are in nature gross manifestations and subtle manifestations.

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    0
  • From the moment that he became primate of Ireland, Stone proved himself more a politician than an ecclesiastic. "He was said to have been selfish, worldly-minded, ambitious and ostentatious; and he was accused, though very probably falsely, of gross private vice."

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  • Denver is the seat of the Jesuit college of the Sacred Heart (1888; in the suburbs); and the university of Denver (Methodist, 1889), a co-educational institution, succeeding the Colorado Seminary (founded in 1864 by John Evans), and consisting of a college of liberal arts, a graduate school, Chamberlin astronomical observatory and a preparatory school - these have buildings in University Park - and (near the centre of the city) the Denver and Gross College of Medicine, the Denver law school, a college of music in the building of the old Colorado Seminary, and a Saturday college (with classes specially for professional men).

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  • Electric traction was first used in Buenos Aires in 1897, since when nearly all the lines of that city have been reconstructed to meet its requirements, and subways are contemplated to relieve the congested street traffic of the central districts; the companies contribute 6% of their gross receipts to the municipality, besides paying $50 per annum per square on each single track in paved streets, 5 per thousand on the value of their property, and 33% of the cost of street repaving and renewals.

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  • Compared with the principal countries of the world, Australia does not take a high position in regard to the gross value of the produce of its tillage, the standard of cultivation being for the most part low and without regard to maximum returns, but in value per inhabitant it compares fairly well; indeed, some of the states show averages which surpass those of many of the leading agricultural countries.

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  • Taking the year 1905, the gross earnings amounted to £11,892,262; the working expenses, exclusive of interest, £ 7,443,54 6; and the net earnings £4,44 8, 7 16; the latter figure represents 3.31% upon the capital expended upon construction and equipment; in the subsequent year still better results were obtained.

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    0
  • This publication, which amounted to a gross breach I of diplomatic confidence, might have endangered the cordiality of Anglo-Italian relations, had not the esteem of the British government for General Ferrero, Italian ambassador in London, induced it to overleok the incident.

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  • He divorced his first wife, a daughter of James MacDonnell, and treated his second, a sister of Calvagh O'Donnell, with gross cruelty in revenge for her brother's hostility; Calvagh himself, when Shane's prisoner, he subjected to continual torture; and Calvagh's wife, whom he made his mistress, and by whom he had several children, endured ill-usage at the hands of her drunken captor, who is said to have married her in 1565.

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    0
  • An abundance of lean meat and a moderate amount of fat well distributed constitutes a better carcase, and a more economical one for the consumer, than a carcase in which gross accumulations of fat are prominent.

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  • Among the grounds on which a divorce may be obtained are adultery, extreme cruelty, fraud, abandonment for three years, gross neglect of duty, habitual drunkenness, a former existing marriage, procurement of divorce without the state by one party, which continues marriage binding on the other, and imprisonment in a penitentiary.

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    0
  • The city is divided by the Rhine into Gross Basel (south) and Klein Basel (north), the former being by far the larger.

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    0
  • In accordance with primitive notions of analogy,3 which assume that it is possible to control or aid the powers of nature by the practice of "sympathetic magic" (see Magic), the cult of the baals and Ashtaroth was characterized by gross sensuality and licentiousness.

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  • Its objects embrace (a) admonition to those who fail in the payment of their just debts, or otherwise walk contrary to the standard of Quaker ethics, and the exclusion of obstinate or gross offenders from the body, and, as incident to this, the hearing of appeals from individuals or meetings considering themselves aggrieved; (b) the care and maintenance of the poor and provision for the Christian education of their children, for which purpose the Society has established boarding schools in different parts of the country; (c) the amicable settlement of " all differences about outward things," either by the parties in controversy or by the submission of the dispute to arbitration, and the restraint of all proceedings at law between members except by leave; (d) the " recording " of ministers (see above); (e) the cognizance of all steps preceding marriage according to Quaker forms; (f) the registration of births, deaths and marriages and the admission of members; (g) the issuing of certificates or letters of approval granted to ministers travelling away from their homes, or to members removing from one meeting to another; and (h) the management of the property belonging to the Society.

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  • The severity of this measure led to gross abuses and defeated its purpose; the number of abolitionists increased, the operations of the Underground Railroad became more efficient, and new Personal Liberty Laws were enacted in Vermont (1850), Connecticut (1854), Rhode Island (1854), Massachusetts (1855), Michigan (1855), Maine (1855 and 1857), Kansas (1858) and Wisconsin (1858).

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  • They are A Demonstration of the Gross and Fundamental Errors of a late Book called "A Plain Account, &c., of the Lord's Supper" (1737); The Grounds and Reasons of the Christian Regeneration (1739); An Appeal to all that Doubt and Disbelieve the Truths of Revelation (1740); An Earnest and Serious Answer to Dr Trapp's Sermon on being Righteous Overmuch (1740); The Spirit of Prayer (1749, 1752); The Way to Divine Knowledge (1752); The Spirit of Love (1752, 1754); A Short but Sufficient Confutation of Dr Warburton's Projected Defence (as he calls it) of Christianity in his "Divine Legation of Moses" (1757); A Series of Letters (1760); a Dialogue between a Methodist and a Churchman (1760); and An Humble, Earnest and Affectionate Address to the Clergy (1761).

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  • Moreover, in order to meet to some extent the deficit arising as well from the accumulation of arrears of state departments since 1300 (1884) as, to a large degree, from gross deficiencies due to the neglect of the civil officials of the government to encash the revenues - to meet, further, the needs of the central administration, and above all, the urgent military expenses of the empire, and to provide a guarantee for bankers and merchants in business relations with the government and the treasury, part of the revenues of 1304 were perforce spent in 1303.

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  • The terrible rapacity of its representatives in Bohemia, which increased in proportion as it became more difficult to obtain money from western countries such as England and France, caused general indignation; and this was still further intensified by the gross immorality of the Roman priests.

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  • Lipsius shows that in the present form of the book there is side by side a strange " admixture of intimate knowledge and gross ignorance of Jewish thought and custom," and that accordingly we must " distinguish between an original Jewish Christian writing and a Gnostic recast of it."

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  • Strong opposition was at first experienced from the gross ignorance of First Jes u it the Indians, and the depravity of the Portuguese, missions.

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    0
  • Under such guides as these the lower clergy erred deplorably, and drunkenness, gross immorality, brawling and manslaughter were common occurrences in the lives of the parish priests.

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  • These defects are an almost total absence of any comprehension of what has since been called the philosophy of history, the constant presence of gross prejudice, frequent inaccuracy of detail, and, above all, a complete incapacity to look at anything except from the narrow standpoint of a half-pessimist and half self-satisfied philosophe of the 18th century.

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    0
  • In 1466 the abbess of St Croix of Poitiers received a gross of glasses from the glass-works of La Ferriêre, for the privilege of gathering fern for the manufacture of potash.

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  • After the fall of Acre he inflicted a gross insult upon Leopold of Austria; and his relations with Philip were so strained that the latter seized the first pretext for returning to France, and entered into negotiations with Prince John (see John, king of England) for the partition of Richard's realm.

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  • The deficiencies in such returns are gross and notorious, but the census office feels obliged to seek for them and to report what it finds, however incomplete or incorrect the results may be.

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    0
  • In Arabic it is such an easy thing to accumulate masses of words with the same termination, that the gross negligence of the rhyme in the Koran is doubly remarkable.

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  • The Moors are temperate in their diet and simple in their dress, though among the richer classes of the towns the women cover themselves with silks, gold and jewels, while the men indulge to excess their love of fine horses and splendid arms. The national fault is gross sensuality.

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  • The distinction between villeins in gross and villeins regardant, of which much is made by modern writers, was suggested by modes of pleading and does not make its appearance in the Year-Books before the r 5th century.

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  • They were, however, fated to fall far short of such a consummation; and at all times orthodox Brahmanism has had to wink at, or ignore, all manner of gross superstitions and repulsive practices, along with the popular worship of countless hosts of godlings, demons, spirits and ghosts, and mystic objects and symbols of every description.

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  • Their filthy habits and disgusting practices of gross promiscuous feeding, even to the extent of eating offal and dead men's flesh, look almost like a direct repudiation of the strict Brahmanical code of ceremonial purity and cleanliness, and of the rules regulating the matter and manner of eating and drinking; and they certainly make them objects of loathing and terror wherever they are seen.

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  • Charles used his influence to carry through parliament the act of indemnity, and the execution of some of the regicides was a measure not more severe than was to be expected in the times and circumstances; but that of Sir Henry Vane, who was not a regicide and whose life Charles had promised the parliament to spare in case of his condemnation, was brought about by Charles's personal insistence in revenge for the victim's high bearing during his trial, and was an act of gross cruelty and perfidy.

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  • This enthusiasm for Rome and for Roman virtues is, moreover, saved from degenerating into gross partiality by the genuine candour of Livy's mind and by his wide sympathies with every thing great and good.

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    0
  • When, however, the Southern envoys were taken by force from the " Trent," a British packet, Palmerston did not hesitate a moment to insist upon a full and complete reparation for so gross an infraction of international law.

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    0
  • The right of presentation to some 850o benefices or " livings " is in the hands of private persons; the right is regarded in law as property and is, under certain restrictions for the avoidance of gross simony, saleable (see Advowson).

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    0
  • Kansas City, Topeka, Wichita, Leavenworth and Atchison were the only cities which had manufactures whose gross product was valued in 1905 at more than $3,000,000 each; their joint product was valued at $126,515,804, and that of Kansas City alone was $9 6, 473, 0 5 0, almost half the output of the state.

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  • The principal grounds for a divorce in Kansas are adultery, extreme cruelty, habitual drunkenness, abandonment for one year, gross neglect of duty, and imprisonment in the penitentiary as a felon subsequent to marriage, but the applicant for a divorce must have resided in the state the entire year preceding the presentment of the petition.

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  • Often the poor man is not so cold and hungry as he is dirty and ragged and gross.

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  • It contains about 468 acres of ratable land, of which the gross estimated rental is £ 749.

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  • It seeks to make the offense of involuntary manslaughter clearer by defining two new offenses of reckless killing and killing by gross carelessness.

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  • Similarly, Israel has been exiled for gross misconduct - idolatry, immorality, persistent refusal to hear YHWH calling her back to obedience.

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  • But for more accurate measurements of mass, composition and gross structure, space rendezvous missions are needed.

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    0
  • Gross rental yields on capital values are virtually unchanged, slipping only from 7.3% to 7.2 %.

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  • But will such a huge Box Office gross entice the cast and crew to reunite for a fourth time?

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  • The sailors looked to me gross and slovenly men, and the shipping struck me as clumsy, ugly, old, and dirty.

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  • Virgin Record Stores do n't do a ' good deal ' on a gross of stinger missiles to the Arabs, or Iraqis.

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    0
  • This research demonstrates how reparation for victims of gross and systematic human rights violations differs from reparation for isolated violations.

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    0
  • Only those business activities, which directly produce the gross profits, are taken into consideration in determining the source of profits.

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    0
  • Butler 's fine of a little under a pound in 1881 is likely to have been smaller than his gross takings for that day.

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    0
  • They must enter the weight found in the gross or tare box on the weighbridge ticket as appropriate.

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  • She is the longest, broadest, and tallest passenger vessel ever launched, with an unprecedented gross tonnage of 150,000 tons.

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    0
  • Recently, Stubbings (1996) estimated the effect of toxoplasmosis in a flock on gross margins.

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    0
  • Upcoming circuit buy-in gross prize money limit texas hold.

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  • That there is an atmosphere, or an orb of gross vaporous air, immediately encompassing the body of the moon.

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  • What we have is a gross failure to adapt the water collection system to seasonal variations in rainfall.

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    0
  • Net Lending Figures refer to gross lending less repayments and other adjustments (e.g. for bad debt write-offs).

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  • Face Painting Follow the yucky facts around the Aquarium to see what gross things our creatures do.

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  • Push toys are perfect for helping toddlers develop their gross motor control, as well as their sense of independence.

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  • Many toddlers still put things in their mouths and are still developing their fine and gross motor control; therefore, pay attention to the recommended age on the label.

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    0
  • Most people have heard of left brain and right brain functions, but to understand gross motor skills, it's important to understand how the brain works in relation to these skills.

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    0
  • What is considered normal covers a wide range of ages, and gross motor skills are only one area of development.

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  • Baby development cases point out that if gross motor skills are the only area of development lagging in your child's progress, then most often there is no need for concern.

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    0
  • Nationally, track the Gross National Product and the Confidence Index as well as the stock market.

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  • Experts evaluate a debt burden as 40 percent of household gross income.

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    0
  • Most states will require at minimum the number of children involved, net or gross income of parents, and who pays the insurance premiums.

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    0
  • In addition to the items listed above, "Hardship Deductions" may be made from gross income.

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    0
  • In cases where alimony and child support are ordered, the same gross income calculation is used to create both separate payments.

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    0
  • The gross income used in the initial maintenance order shall not be modified to reflect income earned after the divorce is finalized.

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  • In addition, if both child support and alimony payments are ordered, a deduction will be made from the gross income used in the second support calculation to reflect the amount of maintenance already scheduled to be paid.

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  • New reform would cap the alimony amount ordered at 30 to 35 percent of the payer's gross income.

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    0
  • The net income for the paying parent and the recipient is calculated by deducting the allowable deductions from each party's gross income.

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    0
  • Most of the things that end up in our recycle bins could have been used a few more times before they got gross and had to be thrown away.

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  • As faithful purveyors of monsters and mayhem, most of us want to throw a shindig that can scare and entertain and one sure fire way to do that is to come up with gross recipes for Halloween.

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    0
  • Sweets are probably the easiest thing to make when gross recipes for Halloween are needed.

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  • Not the tidiest of cakes, but the effect is cool and very gross.

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  • But gross recipes for Halloween are not all about the cake.

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  • Eyeballs, fingers, and even kitty litter can all become recipes to gross out your friends.

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  • Never forget about the snot or brain matter Jell-o, which are simple items with strong innuendo that just screams gross.

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  • Presentation can also go a great distance to promote the gross factor in your food this Halloween season.

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  • Consider exactly what makes something gross but keep in mind that what you find sick is not always in line with the thinking of others.

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  • Just make sure the gummy critter is small enough to fit in a shot glass, making your Halloween drinks scary and deliciously gross.

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  • Discount websites like Wrap With Us have collections of charms, buttons and rhinestones you may buy by the gross.

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  • While he has denied the incident has had a negative impact on his 10-year relationship with Kenny Gross, their impeding nuptials have been put on hold.

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  • The film's gross receipts for its opening weekend landed it at the number four spot, with $21.5 million.

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  • Some grant programs require applicants to submit tax returns or provide information about gross income and itemized deductions.

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  • With a gross tonnage of 160,000 GT, the ship is nearly 9,000 GT greater than the Queen Mary 2.

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  • At 101,000 gross tons, it was the world's largest passenger ship that year.

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  • They are also gross feeders and impoverish the soil.

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  • Moutans are gross feeders, and amply repay generous treatments with occasional top-dressings of half-decomposed cow manure.

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  • Prices are reasonable, too, with a standard gross of 144 picks starting at $40.00, less shipping, for single-sided printing.

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  • The site outlines which pick materials work best with the personalization method, but the prices are about the same as other shops - approximately $40.00, less shipping, for one gross of single-sided picks.

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  • Total spending in 2004 for health care was $1.9 trillion, which was 16 percent of the United States' gross national product.

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