Set out Sentence Examples

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  • She sighed as she set out the supper dishes.

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  • He picked up the newspaper she had set out for him and started to read.

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  • Claustrophobic in the dark cave that had become her home, she grabbed her coat and purse and set out into the cold, brisk evening.

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  • With the laundry washing and the sun peeping through curtainless panes, she set out to explore the house.

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  • He found the caterer's boxes and set out collecting all the dishes, glasses and silverware.

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  • She opened a bottle of Jack Daniels and set out three glasses.

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  • Lori nodded assent and Alex set out to determine if anything needed to be done before they left.

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  • After clamping on their skies and hoisting day-packs, they set out on the groomed path.

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  • Dean put away the groceries and set out a tray of afternoon brownies for the returning guests.

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  • The children ran upstairs and Alex set out to check the bathroom for leaks.

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  • Alexander left the conquered portion of India east of the Indus to be governed under Porus, Omphis of Taxila, and Abisares, the country west of the Indus under Macedonian governors, and set out to explore the great river The g ?

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  • Don't feed the trees, Gabriel had told her when they set out.

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  • The king set out for Rome to secure his coronation, but Venice refused to let him pass through .her territories; and at Trant, on the 4th of February 1508, he took the important step of assuming the title of Roman Emperor Elect, to which he soon received the assent of pope Julius II.

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  • Accordingly, in May 1617, Descartes set out for the Netherlands and took service in the army of Prince Maurice of Orange.

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  • The Greek hippodrome was usually set out on the slope of a hill, and the ground taken from one side served to form the embankment on the other side.

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  • After a journey into Spain he set out once more for Central Africa in 1352, and reached Timbuktu and the Niger, returning to Fez in 1353.

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  • In 1152, accompanied by Eudoxia, he set out for an important command in Cilicia.

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  • Most guys don't intentionally set out to hurt girl's feelings.

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  • Back at Fairhaven they had lunch, then set out gutting the two pumpkins.

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  • His instincts warned him there was no stopping someone like General Greene, once he set out to find someone.

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  • The challenge he presents is often too great for most women to ignore and they set out to discover that secret that makes him so powerful and intriguing.

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  • Immediately on the fall of Pembroke Cromwell set out to relieve Lambert, who was slowly retreating before Hamilton's superior forces; he joined him near Knaresborough on the 12th of August, and started next day in pursuit of Hamilton in Lancashire, placing himself at Stonyhurst near Preston, cutting off Hamilton from the north and his allies, and defeating him in detail on the 17th, 18th and 19th at Preston and at Warrington.

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  • On his recovery he set out on a military expedition, but at the end of the first day's march he fell ill, and had to stay at Spoleto and return to Assisi.

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  • After another period of preaching in Italy and watching over the development of the order, Francis once again set out for the East (1219).

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  • The evidence as set out by Darwin has been added to enormously; new knowledge has in many cases altered our conceptions of the mode of the actual process of evolution, and from time to time a varying stress has been laid on what are known as the purely Darwinian factors in the theory.

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  • Among these was Benjamin of Tudela, who set out from Spain in i 160, travelled by land to Constantinople, and having visited India and some of the eastern islands, returned to Europe by way of Egypt after an absence of thirteen years.

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  • The recital of their travels fired the youthful imagination of young Marco Polo, son of Nicolo, and he set out for the court of Kublai Khan, with his father and uncle, in 1265.

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  • Odoric set out on his travels about 1318, and his journeys embraced parts of India, the Malay Archipelago, China and even Tibet, where he was the first European to enter Lhasa, not yet a forbidden city.

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  • In 1534 Jacques Cartier set out to continue the discoveries of Verazzano, and visited Newfoundland and the Gulf of St Lawrence.

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  • In February 1770 he set out again from Fort Prince of Wales; but, after great hardships, he was again forced to return to the fort.

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  • With the same object Alexander Mackenzie, with a party of Canadians, set out from Fort Chippewyan on the 3rd of June 1789, and descending the great river which now bears the explorer's name reached the Arctic sea.

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  • When the midsummer vacation arrived, he was preparing to set out with his family to Fox How in Westmoreland, where he had purchased some property and built a house.

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  • When he set out on his return to Italy he was the happy possessor of two cases of precious Greek MSS.

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  • In each of these two cases the resistance can of course be analysed into the six components set out in the above list.

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  • Accordingly, Xavier devoted himself for nine weeks to the hospital for incurables, and then set out with eight companions for Rome, where Pope Paul III.

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  • Rodrigues set out at once for Lisbon to confer with the king, who ultimately decided to retain him in Portugal.

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  • Xavier complied, merely waiting long enough to obtain the pope's benediction, and set out for Lisbon, where he was presented to the king, and soon won his entire confidence, attested notably by procuring for him from the pope four briefs, one of them appointing him papal nuncio in the Indies.

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  • The first recorded person of European descent to enter the limits of Nevada was Francisco Garces (1738-1781), of the Order of St Francis, who set out from Sonora in 1775 and passed through what is now the extreme southern corner of the state on his way to California.

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  • Alexander summoned his mercenaries, and 6000 Jews were killed before he set out on his disastrous campaign against an Arabian king.

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  • In 530, having appointed his son Cambyses king of Babel, he set out for a new expedition against the East.

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  • He declined on the score of ill-health, but set out for Paris in May, along with Marmont, Junot and Louis Bonaparte.

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  • On the morrow (12th of June) he set out for the northern frontier.

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  • Manuel subsequently set out in person to seek help from the West, and for this purpose visited Italy, France, Germany and England, but without material success; the victory of Timur in 1402, and the death of Bayezid in the following year were the first events to give him a genuine respite from Ottoman oppression.

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  • First, however, Charles cleared Livonia of the invader (July 1701), subsequently occupying the duchy of Courland and converting it into a Swedish governor-generalship. In January 1702 Charles established himself at Bielowice in Lithuania, and, after issuing a proclamation declaring that "the elector of Saxony" had forfeited the Polish crown, set out for Warsaw, which he reached on the 14th of May.

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  • The party set out about the 16th of February 1249, with letters from King Louis and the papal legate, and rich presents, including a chapel-tent, lined with scarlet cloth and embroidered with sacred pictures.

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  • From Sackett's Harbor American expeditions against York (now Toronto) and Fort George respectively set out in April and May 1813; though scantily garrisoned it was successfully defended by General Jacob Brown (who had just taken command) against an attack, on the 29th of May, of Sir George Prevost with a squadron under Sir James Lucas Yeo.

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  • From Antioch Hadrian set out for Dacia to punish the Roxolani, who, incensed by a reduction of the tribute hitherto paid them, had invaded the Danubian provinces.

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  • The next year was spent at Rome, and, after a visit to Africa, he set out on his second great journey (September 128).

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  • Having passed the winter at Antioch, he set out for the south (spring, 130).

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  • He soon distinguished himself both as scholar and preacher, and had every inducement to remain in his monastery, but in 716 he followed the example of other Saxon monks and set out as missionary to Frisia.

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  • In the year of his death he set out on an expedition against the last-named, but.

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  • Ignatius remained at Manresa for about a year, and in the spring of 1523 set out for Barcelona on his way to Rome, where he arrived on Palm Sunday.

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  • Ignatius returned to Venice in the middle of January 1524; and, determining to devote himself for a while to study, he set out for Barcelona, where he arrived in Lent.

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  • When Theseus set out for Crete to deliver Athens from the tribute to the Minotaur he promised Aegeus that, if he were successful, he would change the black sail carried by his ship for a white one.

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  • Alexander, who set out as king of the Macedonians and captaingeneral of the Hellenes, assumed after the death of Darius the.

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  • Charles rapidly advanced southward, and after a short stay in Florence set out for Rome (November 1 494).

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  • As France and Spain were quarrelling over the division of Naples and the Campagna barons were quiet, Cesare set out once more in search of conquests.

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  • He began his public ministry in 1647, but there is no evidence to show that he set out to form a separate religious body.

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  • Her husband having meanwhile died, she set out in 1768 on an extended tour through Europe.

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  • It set out also at length the very defective and disorderly condition of the state accounts.

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  • Suleiman determined to support the claims of Zapolya's infant son, John Sigismund, and in 15 4 set out in person.

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  • In the spring of 1548 he set out on his eleventh campaign, which ended in the capture of Erzerum (August 16) and the conquest of Armenia and Georgia.

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  • She stayed there as usual for the summer, and then set out once more for Germany, visiting Mainz, Frankfort, Berlin and Vienna.

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  • She journeyed slowly through Russia and Finland to Sweden, making some stay at St Petersburg, spent the winter in Stockholm, and-then set out for England.

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  • In October, after Waterloo, she set out for Italy, not only for the advantage of her own health but for that of her second husband, Rocca, who was dying of consumption.

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  • Late in 1839 Fellows, under the auspices of the British Museum, again set out for Lycia, accompanied,by George Scharf, who assisted him in sketching.

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  • Reformation; and most of them were Jesuits, the order that set out to be nothing Protestantism was, and everything that Protestantism was not.

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  • He now set out once more for Scotland, but was intercepted by the Florentine cardinal Luigi Capponi, who induced him to remain at Bologna as professor of Humanity.

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  • Returning to Europe in an English vessel, he spent some time in London and Oxford, and then set out for France.

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  • Farewell was not daunted, and in September 1829 set out to return overland to Port Natal.

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  • One of them, Facts Addressed to Landholders, &c. (1780), written by Horne in conjunction with others, criticizing the measures of Lord North's ministry, passed through numerous editions; the other, A Letter on Parliamentary Reform (1782), addressed by him to Dunning, set out a scheme of reform, which he afterwards withdrew in favour of that advocated by Pitt.

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  • Carinus at once left Rome and set out for the East to meet Diocletian.

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  • A new and most important feature in organic development makes its appearance when we set out the facts of man's evolutional history.

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  • In 1714 he set out to seek his fortune in Russia, and unsuccessfully solicited a place at the shabby court of the princess Sophia Charlotte, the consort of the tsarevich Alexius.

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  • After his father's death he set out for Sicily, where an Armenian named Mizizius had been declared emperor.

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  • For some time afterwards he lived at home, reading romantic and poetical literature, but in 1811 he set out for Italy, where he seems to have sojourned nearly two years.

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  • In 1832 he set out with his wife and daughter for Palestine, having been unsuccessful in his candidature for a seat in the chamber.

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  • His visiting espionage, as unkind critics put it - his secret diplomatic mission, as he would have liked to have it put himself - began in the summer of 1722, and he set out for it in company with a certain Madame de Rupelmonde, to whom he as usual made love, taught deism and served as an amusing travelling companion.

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  • He laid out the ground of the several proprietors in the rebuilding of the city, and had no rest early or late from persons soliciting him to set out their ground for them at once.

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  • The seed is sown in nursery beds, and the plants set out in the field later.

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  • They must be well hardened off before being set out in the open.

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  • During the transplanting, preferably done on cloudy days or during light rains, the plants must be handled very carefully; machines are now available which can set out and water plants over from two to six acres in a working day.

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  • The method of cultivation in Turkey is simple, and the plants are set out close together.

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  • In his company the Blunts set out from Damascus, and travelled across the Syrian desert by the Wadi Sirhan to Jauf.

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  • For several months early in the War of Inde - pendence the Committees of Safety and Correspondence made Watertown their headquarters and it was from here that General Joseph Warren set out for Bunker Hill.

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  • On special occasions a sacrificial meal of cooked food was set out for the heroes, of which they were solemnly invited to partake.

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  • On the 16th of the month Maimacterion, a long procession, headed by a trumpeter playing a warlike air, set out for the graves; wagons decked with myrtle and garlands of flowers followed, young men (who must be of free birth) carried jars of wine, milk, oil and perfumes; next came the black bull destined for the sacrifice, the rear being brought up by the archon, who wore the purple robe of the general, a naked sword in one hand, in the other an urn.

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  • In September 1883 Tennyson and Gladstone set out on a voyage round the north of Scotland, to Orkney, and across the ocean to Norway and Denmark.

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  • Vessels set out to the fisheries, as far as Spitsbergen and the Kara Sea; and trade is brisk, not only Norwegian and Danish but British, German and particularly Russian vessels engaging in it.

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  • Having been redeemed by his order in 1596, he spent some years in mission work on the west coast of India, and it was not until 1603 that he again set out for Abyssinia, and landed at the port of Massawa.

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  • On the 30th of June 1688 Admiral Herbert, disguised as a bluejacket, set out from England with a letter from seven influential Englishmen, asking William to "bring over an army and secure the infringed liberties" of England.

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  • Though Samos was not apparently one of the allies, this latter action could not but remind the allies of the very dangers which the second confederacy had set out to avoid.

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  • In 1656 he was appointed governor of Tripoli; but before he had set out to his new post he was nominated to the grand vizierate at the instance of powerful friends.

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  • The declining state of Shaftesbury's health rendered it necessary for him to seek a warmer climate, and in July 1711 he set out for Italy.

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  • He found it expedient to leave Rome, and set out for the East in 385.

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  • In September 1689 he reached Batavia; spent the following winter in studying Javanese natural history; and in May 1690 set out for Japan as physician to the embassy sent yearly to that country by the Dutch.

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  • Being, however, required to resume his power, and retain it until the independence of the country had been completely established, he reorganized his troops, and set out from Angostura, in order to cross the Cordilleras, effect a junction with General Santander, who commanded the republican force in New Granada, and bring their united forces into action against the common enemy.

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  • Accordingly, having entrusted the government to a council nominated by himself, with Santa Cruz at its head, Bolivar set out from Lima in September 1826, and hastening to Bogota, arrived there on the 14th of November.

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  • Charlemagne's march on Saragossa, and the capture of Huesca, Barcelona and Girone, gave rise to La Prise de Pampelune (14th century, based on a lost chanson); and Gui de Bourgogne (12th century) tells how the children of the barons, after appointing Guy as king of France, set out to find and rescue their fathers, who are represented as having been fighting in Spain for twenty-seven years.

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  • There must be considerable dissociation of molecules, and as a first approximation it may be taken that of io molecules of most of the components about 9 (or in the case of magnesium sulphate 5) have been separated into their ions, and that it is only during slow concentration as in a natural saline that the ions combine to produce the various salts in the proportions set out in the above table.

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  • The situation proved unsuitable; the lady, as Kuno Fischer says, "required greater submission and better French" than Fichte could yield, and after a fortnight's stay Fichte set out for Konigsberg to see Kant.

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  • No attempt will be made to follow the historic order of development, but the present theory will be set out in its most logical form and order.

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  • The king granted it and the young prince set out for Spain, where he fought with such gallantry at the storming of the Trocadero (1st of September 1823) that the French soldiers proclaimed him the "first Grenadier of France."

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  • In August 1136, attended by a large army, Lothair set out upon his second Italian journey.

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  • In 1563 a second Book of Homilies was submitted along with the 39 Articles to convocation; it was issued the same year under the title The second Tome of Homilies of such matters as were promised and instituted in the former part of Homilies, set out by the authority of the Queen's Majesty, and to be read in every Parish Church agreeably.

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  • In tracing the growth of Persia from a petty subject kingdom to a vast dominant empire, he has occasion to set out the histories of Lydia, Media, Assyria, Babylon, Egypt, Scythia, Thrace, and to describe the countries and the peoples inhabiting them, their natural productions, climate, geographical position, monuments, &c.; while, in noting the contemporaneous changes in Greece, he is led to tell of the various migrations of the Greek race, their colonies, commerce, progress in the arts, revolutions, internal struggles, wars with one another, legislation, religious tenets and the like.

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  • In the first year of the war (1755) expeditions set out against Fort Duquesne (on the site of Pittsburg) and Fort Niagara and Crown Point, on the New York frontier.

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  • After a fourth Easter synod in 1053 Leo set out against the Normans in the south with an army of Italians and German volunteers, but his forces sustained a total defeat at Astagnum near Civitella (18th June 1053); on going out, however, from the city to meet the enemy he was received with every token of submission, relief from the pressure of his ban was implored and fidelity and homage were sworn.

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  • By his advice Octavian at once set out for Rome.

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  • When the Jews in Jerusalem, stirred to revolt by the outrages of the Roman procurators, had seized the fortress of Masada and treacherously murdered the garrison of the palace of Herod, Gallus set out from Antioch to restore order.

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  • After being minister of Ceres in Fife for three years, in 1566 he set out for Paris as tutor to the eldest son of Sir James Macgill, the clerk-general.

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  • In 39 he set out with an army to Gaul, nominally to punish the Germans for having invaded Roman territory, but in reality to get money by plunder and confiscation.

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  • When Frederick finally set out the following June without making submission to the pope, Gregory raised an insurrection against him in Germany, and forced him in 1230 to beg for absolution.

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  • He offered himself to the Church Missionary Society and sailed on the 17th of May 1882, at the head of a party of six, for Zanzibar, and thence set out for Uganda; but, prostrated by fever and dysentery, he was obliged to return to England in 1883.

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  • Then, filled with the idea of opening a new route to Uganda, he set out and reached a spot near Victoria Nyanza in safety.

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  • In the autumn of 1096 the nobles of France and Italy, joined by the Norman barons of England and Sicily, set out to wrest the Holy Land from the unbelievers; and for more than a century the cry, " Christ's land must be won for Christ," exercised an unparalleled power in Western Christendom.

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  • When therefore she set out for her new home in June 1625, she had already pledged the husband to whom she had been married by proxy on the 1st of May to a course of action which was certain to bring unpopularity on him as well as upon herself.

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  • In July 1662 she set out again for England, and took up her residence once more at Somerset House.

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  • He did his best to stem the Turkish advance, pledging one-fifth of the papal income to the crusade which set out in.

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  • The first expedition against the Wends, conducted by Absalon in person, set out in 1160, but it was not I.

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  • The leading troops of the Army of the Potomac were now landed, and set out to join Pope's army, which faced Longstreet and Jackson on the Rappahannock between Bealton and Waterloo.

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  • It was at this same time that Sherman broke up his railway communication, destroying Atlanta as a place of arms, and set out on his adventurous expedition.

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  • Thereafter his pilot, Pedro Fernandez de Quiros, set out with the remainder of the company to make for the Philippines, and on the way discovered Ponape of the Caroline Islands, some of which group, however, had been known to the Portuguese as early as 1527.

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  • When his father set out with the expedition of the Seven against Thebes, which he knew would be fatal to him, he enjoined upon his sons to avenge his death by slaying Eriphyle and undertaking a second expedition against Thebes.

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  • For common weights and measures this margin (tolerance, remedy or allowance, as it is also called) has been set out by the Board of Trade for all the various kinds of weights and measures in use for commercial purposes in the United Kingdom, and similar margins of error are recognized in other countries.

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  • When Justinian issued the edict for the suppression of the school, Damascius along with Simplicius (the painstaking commentator on Aristotle) and five other Neoplatonists set out to make a home in Persia.

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  • Now, in so far as both Neoplatonism and the church dogmatic set out from the felt need of redemption, in so far as both sought to deliver the soul from sensuality and recognized man's inability without divine aid - without a revelation - to attain salvation and a sure knowledge of the truth, they are at once most intimately related and at the same time mutually independent.

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  • During his term of office there took place the troubles in Rome concerning the English college and the subsequent Jesuit rule over that institution; and in 1580 the first Jesuit mission, headed by the redoubtable Robert Parsons and the saintly Edmund Campion, set out for England.

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  • He set out for France, consecrating the cathedral of Pisa on the way, and arrived at Marseilles in October.

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  • When his brother-in-law, the emperor Henry, died without sons in 1216, Peter was chosen as his successor, and with a small army set out from France to take possession of his throne.

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  • When the news reached Rome of the martyrdom of Adalbert, bishop of Prague (997), Bruno determined to take his place, and in 1004, after being consecrated by the pope as archbishop of the eastern heathen, he set out for Germany to seek aid of the emperor Henry II.

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  • The national government set out in 1790 with a revolutionary debt of about 75 millions of dollars.

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  • After this Suleiman set out to subdue his brother Masud Shah, at Angora, who was finally taken prisoner and treacherously murdered.

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  • On the very eve of the war, immediately after the rising of the Chambers on July 15 1914, Poincare set out on a State visit to Russia and the Scandinavian countries, arriving at Kronstadt on July 20.

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  • On the 10th of March 1697 this embassy, under the leadership of Lefort, set out on its travels.

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  • He then, in 1564, being nineteen years of age, set out for France to perfect his education at the university of Paris.

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  • September of that year found the missionary at Dolon Nor occupied with the final arrangements for his journey, and shortly afterwards, accompanied by his fellow-Lazarist, Joseph Gabet, and a young Tibetan priest who had embraced Christianity, he set out.

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  • He then set out to establish his authority in Spoleto, but on the way was seized with paralysis.

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  • In their first journey the travellers set out from Jongri in Sikkim, and traversing the north-east corner of Nepal, crossed into Tibet by the Chatang la, and travelled northwards to Shigatse and Tashilhunpo.

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  • Thorold, of the India Medical Service, and a native sub-surveyor, Captain Hamilton Bower, I.S.C., set out from Leh on the 1st of June 1891, and crossed the Lanak la and the Ladak frontier on the 3rd of July.

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  • In the autumn he set out to visit western Inverness, the islands of Skye, North and South Uist and Benbecula.

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  • In August 1209 the king set out for Italy.

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  • In 1618 Prince Maurice set out on a sort of pacific campaign, disbanding the civic guards in the various cities of Guelders, Holland and Zeeland, and occupying the places with troops on whom he could rely.

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  • On his return to Severus in Gaul he was ordained; and, having soon afterwards inherited means through the death of his father, he set out for Palestine, where he was received with great respect by Jerome at Bethlehem.

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  • Cook and William Peterson, set out from the gold-fields of Montana with the express purpose of verifying or refuting the rumours, and they returned full of enthusiasm.

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  • When the greenhouse is not to be used during the summer months, camellias, azaleas and plants of that character should be set out of doors under partial shade; but most of the other plants usually grown in the conservatory or window garden in winter may be set in the open border.

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  • Gregory determined personally to undertake the conversion of Britain, and with the pope's consent actually set out upon the mission, but on the third day of his journey he was overtaken by messengers recalling him to Rome.

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  • But a fairly exact statement of the numbers sold in the great public trade auction sales in London during the year 1905-1906 is herewith set out.

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  • Dupuis set out on the 9th of February 1820, and on the 28th arrived at Kumasi.

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  • In a few months he found " the scene wholly unsuitable " to him, and about the middle of 1734 set out for France, resolved to spend some years in quiet study.

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  • Fifteen years later, according to this account, Leif Ericsson set out from Greenland in search of the lands that Biarni had seen, found them and named them - Helluland (Flat-stone-land), Markland (Forestland) and Vinland.

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  • According to the Vinland saga in Hank's Book, Leif Ericsson, whose father, Eric the Red, had discovered and colonized Greenland, set out on a voyage, in 999, to visit Norway, the native land of his father.

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  • Later, in 1003, an Icelander, Thorfinn Karlsefni, who was visiting the Greenland colony, and who had married Gudrid, the widow of Leif's brother Thorstein, set out with four vessels and 160 followers to found a colony in the new lands.

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  • Berryer attempted to turn her from her purpose; and failing in this he set out for Switzerland.

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  • The sky was speedily full of clouds and a great rain was falling when Ahab, to escape the storm, set out in his chariot for Jezreel.

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  • He set out with a few guineas, three acts of his tragedy of Irene in manuscript, and two or three letters of introduction from his.

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  • He fancied that he should be able to draw his breath more easily in a southern climate, and would probably have set out for Rome and Naples but for his fear of the expense of the journey.

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  • He then visited Athens, and towards the end of winter (440) arrived in Constantinople, whence he set out on his homeward journey.

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  • Having suppressed a rising at Mainz Frederick set out in the autumn of 1163 for Italy, which country was now distracted by a papal schism.

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  • Francis Cabot Lowell's son, John Lowell (1799-1836), was born in Boston, travelled in India and the East Indies on business in 1816 and 1817, in 1832 set out on a trip around the world, and on the 4th of March 1836 died in Bombay.

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  • He took up the project with characteristic ardour, and set out at once for Europe to investigate the problem.

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  • Ultimately, however, he was induced to assent to and confirm the decrees of the council, and was allowed after an enforced absence of seven years to set out for Rome.

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  • Ten thousand fellahin, collected in March 1883, mainly from Arabis former forces, set out from Duem, 100 m.

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  • When Horus grew ie set out to avenge his fathers murder, and after terrible ggles finally conquered and dispossessed his wicked uncle; is another version relates, the combatants were separated by th, and Egypt divided between them, the northern part ng to Horus and the southern to Seth.

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  • Meanwhile the force under Haesten set out to march up the Thames valley, possibly with the idea of assisting their friends in the west.

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  • Together with his wife and her maid he set out in July for the Netherlands in order to be present at the coronation of the young emperor Charles V., and if possible to conciliate the good graces of the all-powerful regent Margaret.

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  • He never attained entire independence of Luther, though he gradually modified some of his positions from those of the pure Lutherism with which he set out.

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  • They set out in 1064, with a company whose numbers exceeded seven thousand.

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  • In the first of these, called the Anguttara Nikaya, all those points of Buddhist doctrine capable of expression in classes are set out in order.

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  • And in the Anguttara we find set out in order first of all the units, then all the pairs, then all the trios, and so on.

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  • There have also been added to the canonical books seven works on A bhidhamma, a more elaborate and more classified exposition of the Dhamma or doctrine as set out in the Nikayas.

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  • Deploring the necessity for taking up arms against his trusted officer, Aurelius set out for the east.

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  • After staying there eleven days, he set out for Europe by Beyrout, but at Nazareth he was attacked by fever; and he died at Damascus on the 29th of May 1862.

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  • But Egmont depends for its interest almost solely on two characters, Egmont himself and Klarchen, Gretchen's counterpart; regarded as a drama, it demonstrates the futility of that defiance of convention and rules with which the Sturm and Drang set out.

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  • In September, 1786 Goethe set out from Karlsbad - secretly and stealthily, his plan known only to his servant - on that memorable journey to Italy, to which he had looked forward with such intense longing; he could not cross the Alps quickly enough, so impatient was he to set foot in Italy.

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  • The Church responded, and under Peter's leadership a motley crowd, principally of French origin, set out in 1096 for the Holy Land.

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  • Finally, when Sultan Murad was about to set out for the Persian War, the patriarch was accused of a design to stir up the Cossacks, and to avoid trouble during his absence the sultan had him killed by the Janissaries (June 1637).

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  • Sir Frederick Roberts at once set out from Kabul with io,000 men to its relief, reached Kandahar after a rapid march of 313 miles, attacked and routed Ayub Khan's army on the 1st of September, and restored British authority in southern Afghanistan.

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  • Louis set out to govern his principality as though it were an independent state.

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  • Dressed in grey like a pilgrim, and accompanied by five or six trustworthy servants, he would set out on his interminable travels, "ambling along on a good mule."

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  • In 1682 he set out with his army on his victorious march into the Deccan, and from that time until his death in 1707 he never again returned to Delhi.

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  • Keohane set out from Hut Point and got as far as Corner Camp, where he turned, being satisfied that Scott's party must have perished.

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  • Wright as guide, with seven mules and the dogs, set out from Hut Point, and on Nov.

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  • According to the commonest account, on the 23rd of August of that year Pliny the elder, who had command of the Roman fleet at Misenum, set out to render assistance to a young lady of noble family named Rectina and others dwelling on that coast, but, as there was no escape by sea, the little harbour having been on a sudden filled up so as to be inaccessible, he was obliged to abandon to their fate those people of Herculaneum who had managed to flee from their houses, overwhelmed in a moment by the material poured forth by Vesuvius.

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  • On the 8th of Dhu'l-Hijja Hosain set out from Mecca with all his family, expecting to be received with enthusiasm by the citizens of Kuf a, but on his arrival at Kerbela west of the Euphrates, he was confronted by an army sent by Obaidallah under the command of Omar, son of the famous Sa`d b.

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  • Ziyad set out with the purpose of subduing Mesopotamia and marching thence against Irak.

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  • Having made himself master of Algeciras and thereby secured his communication with Africa, Tariq set out at once in the direction of Cordova.

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  • The caliph's hope that Rafi` would submit on condition of receiving a free pardon was not fulfilled, and he resolved to set out himself to Khorasan, taking with him his second son Mamun.

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  • Having sent before him his son Abbas to make Tyana a strong fortress, he set out for Asia Minor to put himself at the head of the army, but died of a fever brought on by bathing in the chill river, Pedendon, 40 m.

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  • With the mountain-traversed region he had been exploring acquired by the United States, Fremont was eager for a railway from the Atlantic to the Pacific, and in October 1848 he set out at his own and Senator Benton's expense to find passes for such a railway along a line westward from the headwaters of the Rio Grande.

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  • Passionately enamoured of the princess of Conde, he set out reluctantly to Warsaw, but, on the death of his brother Charles IX.

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  • In December 1146 the king himself took the cross, secured the election and coronation of his young son Henry as his successor, appointed Henry I., archbishop of Mainz, as his guardian, and set out for Palestine in the autumn of 1147.

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  • Stricken by illness, Conrad returned to Constantinople at Christmas 1147, but in March 1148 set out to rejoin his troops.

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  • He was asked to edit the Univers, and to take a chair in the university of Louvain, but he declined both appointments, and in 1838 set out for Rome, revolving a great scheme for christianizing France by restoring the old order of St Dominic. At Rome he donned the habit of the preaching friar and joined the monastery 'of Minerva.

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  • In 1838 Sir James Brooke, an Englishman, whose attention had been turned to the state of affairs in the Eastern Archipelago, set out for Borneo, determined, if possible, to remedy the evil.

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  • As has been seen, the British connexion with northern and north-western Borneo terminated with the 18th century, nor was it resumed until 1838, when Raja Brooke set out for Brunei and Sarawak.

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  • Sedoff set out for the Pole with two companions and 24 dogs.

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  • In July 1914 Vilkitski set out again with the same vessels.

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  • In 1625 he set out again, accompanied by Mendez, the patriarch of Ethiopia, and eight missionaries.

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    0
  • Hence set out the possible direction of Bs motion in the velocity diagram, namely cbi, at right angles to CB.

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  • Having married in due time, and a second time after the death of his first wife, he lived as a "householder" (grihastha) till the age of 24, when he renounced his family ties and set out as a religious mendicant (vairagin), visiting during the next six years the principal places of pilgrimage in northern India, and preaching with remarkable success his doctrine of Bhakti, or passionate devotion to Krishna, as the Supreme Deity.

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  • In June 1158 Frederick set out upon his second Italian expedition, which was signalized by the establishment of imperial officers called podestas in the cities of northern Italy, the revolt and capture of Milan, and the beginning of the long struggle with pope Alexander III., who excommunicated the emperor on the 2nd of March 1160.

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  • They would feel bound to disregard their sporadic intuitions, and act only for reasons that would be clearly set out in black and white.

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  • In April 1754 he set out with two companies for the Ohio, defeated (28th May) a force of French and Indians at Great Meadows (in the present Fayette county, Pennsylvania), but at Fort Necessity in this vicinity was forced to capitulate (3rd July), though only after a vigorous defence.

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  • He was commissioned on the 17th of June 1775, set out at once for Cambridge, Mass., and on the 3rd of July took command of the levies there assembled for action against the British garrison in Boston.

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  • Brutus refused to surrender the province, and Antony set out to attack him in October 44, But at this time Octavian, whom Caesar had adopted as his son, arrived from Illyria, and claimed the inheritance of his "father."

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  • The conquest of the Seven Cities was determined upon, and a band of adventurers, led by Francisco Vasquez de Coronado, set out in 1539.

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  • From Missouri caravans of pack animals, and later wagon trains, set out in May of each year on the Boo m.

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  • On the death of Charles he set out with an army apparently to seize Naples for his nephew if not for himself.

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  • In 1803 the Schopenhauers and their son set out on a lengthened tour, of which Johanna has given an account, to Holland, England, France and Austria.

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  • In May 1822 he set out by way of Switzerland for Italy.

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  • She set out on the 24th October with a staff of thirty-seven nurses, partly volunteers, partly professionals trained in hospitals.

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    0
  • The tiles coated with lime are set out on the shore near the lowwater mark of spring tides, at the beginning of the spatting season.

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  • The collectors are not set out before the middle of July.

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  • Aga Mahommed determined to restore the whole province to Persia, and, after a brief residence in Teheran on his return from the Georgian expedition, he set out for Meshed.

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  • A military council was held at Shahrud, when it was decided to return to the capital and set out again in the spring.

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  • He again set out in the summer, and, invading the Herat territory in November 1837, began the siege on the 23rd of that month.

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  • In April 1889 the shah set out upon his third voyage to Europe.

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  • In front of the couch, which was placed in the open street, a meal was set out on a table.

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  • Transport to Algiers by sea from this place would have occasioned a weary stay of three months; Arago, therefore, set out for it by land under conduct of a Mahommedan priest, and reached it on Christmas day.

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  • In the summer of 1853 he was advised by his physicians to try the effect of his native air, and he accordingly set out for the eastern Pyrenees.

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  • He then set out to complete his education by travel, and on the 28th of October 1792 arrived in Baltimore, Maryland, where he finally decided to enter the priesthood.

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  • Accordingly, in i 13cj, Malachy set out from Ireland with the purpose of soliciting from the pope the pallium (the token of archiepiscopal subjection to Rome) for the archbishop of Armagh.

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  • On his release he again set out for Texas, and founded at San Antonio the communistic colony of La Reunion.

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  • The facts of Byng's life are fairly set out in Charnock's Biogr.

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  • Immediately after the murder of their officers, the rebel soldiery set out for Delhi, about 35 m.

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  • The consuls set out for Mutina, where Antonius was besieging Decimus Brutus.

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  • It was in both characters together that he set out in 488, by commission from the emperor Zeno, to recover Italy from Odoacer.

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  • Although it is certain that the four great geographical landmarks which to-day serve to keep Hudson's memory alive, namely the Hudson Bay, Strait, Territory and River, had repeatedly been visited and even drawn on maps and charts before he set out on his voyages, yet he deserves to take a very high rank among northern navigators for the mere extent of his discoveries and the success with which he pushed them beyond the limits of his predecessors.

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  • The entire income of the borough council is paid into the borough fund, and that fund is charged with certain payments, which are specifically set out in the 5th schedule to the act of 1882.

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    0
  • The orders of the Local Government Board as to these matters are set out in the Statutory Rules and Orders.

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  • About 332 he set out against the rebellious tribes of Thrace; but before this insurrection was quelled, the Spartan king Agis had risen against Macedonia.

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  • When it became known in France that Peter of Courtenay was dead, his eldest son, Philip, marquess of Namur, renounced the succession to the Latin empire of Constantinople in favour of his brother Robert, who set out to take possession of his distracted inheritance, which was then ruled by Conon of Bethune as regent.

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

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  • He resolved to quit his captial Debra-Tabor, which he burned, and set out with the remains of his army for Magdala.

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  • The definition of life must really be a description of the essential characters of life, and we must set out with an investigation of the characters of living substance with the special object of detecting the differences between organisms and unorganized matter, and the differences between dead and living organized matter.

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  • He then set out for Hungary in order to combat the insurgents in that country; but his means proving insufficient, he effected nothing of importance.

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  • Upon this Gilpin prepared for martyrdom; and, having ordered his house-steward to provide him with a long garment, that he might "goe the more comely to the stake," he set out for London.

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  • June Sir Henry Havelock, who had been appointed to the command of the relieving column, arrived at Allahabad from Calcutta, and on the 7th of July he set out for the relief of Lucknow.

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  • Eldad first set out to visit his Hebrew brethren in Africa and Asia.

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  • The London Building Acts do not set out any special requirements, but suggestions have been made at the Royal Institution of British Architects for the regulation of skeleton buildings and they are drawn up upon a more scientific basis than the bulk of the existing acts.

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  • In June 1713 he set out to take possession of his dignity, and encountered a very cold reception from the Dublin public. The dissensions between the chiefs of his party speedily recalled him to England.

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  • When, however, in September the English (under the earl of Salisbury) invested Orleans, the key to the south of France, she renewed her efforts with Baudricourt, her mission being to relieve Orleans and crown the dauphin at Reims. By persistent importunity, the effect of which was increased by the simplicity of her demeanour and her calm assurance of success, she at last prevailed on the governor to grant her request; and in February 1429, accompanied by six men-at-arms, she set out on her perilous journey to the court of the dauphin at Chinon.

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  • With some difficulty the dauphin was then persuaded to set out towards Reims, which he entered with an army of 12,000 men on the 16th of July, Troyes having yielded on the way.

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  • In 1905 Dr. Hyde set out on a tour through America to collect money for the League, and returned after seven months with £Ii,000.

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  • The next day, therefore, Gotama set out at the usual hour, carrying his bowl to beg for a meal.

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  • He certainly set out for Rome from the south of Italy (where he remained as proconsul) at the bidding of the aristocratic party, when the city was threatened by Marius and Cinna, but he displayed little energy, and the engagement which he fought before the Colline gate, although hotly contested, was indecisive.

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  • In 48 B.C. during the civil war he commanded his father's fleet in the Adriatic. After the battle of Pharsalus he set out for Africa with the remainder of the Pompeian party, but, meeting with little success, crossed over to Spain.

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  • Caesar, who regarded him as a formidable opponent, set out against him in person.

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  • He set out for Germany with a view to further philosophical study.

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  • Pizarro set out in September 1532, and made for Caxamarca, where the Inca was.

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  • Before he set out on his expedition he killed his brother Bardiya (Smerdis), whom Cyrus had appointed governor of the eastern provinces.

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  • The Chartists derived their name from the charter which set out their demands.

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  • Handing over the reins of government to his mother, he set out in 213 for Raetia, where he carried on war against the Alamanni; in 214 he attacked the Goths in Dacia, whence he proceeded by way of Thrace to Asia Minor, and in 215 crossed to Alexandria.

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  • Father Marquette, forced in 1671 by Indian wars to abandon his post on Chequamegon Bay, settled with the Huron at the Straits of Mackinac, whence in May 1673 accompanied by Louis Joliet he set out for the Mississippi river.

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  • From Bombay he set out for Bushire, bearing letters from Sir John Malcolm to men of position there, as also at Shiraz and Isfahan.

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  • With the run of his father's library, and the benefits of that born bookman's guidance, he now set out to educate himself.

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  • The mysterious malady continued, and Disraeli set out with William Meredith, who was to have married Sarah Disraeli, for Travel.

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    0
  • So Balaam, still without consulting Yahweh, saddled his ass and set out for Moab, attended only by two servants.

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  • Mechithar set out for Rome in 1695 to make his ecclesiastical studies there, but he was compelled by illness to abandon the journey and return to Armenia.

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  • In 1788 she set out on a lengthened tour through Italy, accompanied by Goethe.

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  • In company with his friend Louis du Tillet, whom he had again gone to Angouleme to visit, he set out for Basel.

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  • In the autumn of 1783 he set out with Pitt on a tour in France; and after his return his eloquence proved of great assistance to Pitt in his struggle against the majority of the House of Commons.

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  • For a time he thought of responding to the appeal of some of the Polish revolutionaries, but Warsaw succumbed (September 1831) before he could set out.

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  • On the 28th of July father and son set out for the army.

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  • With great difficulty he obtained a reluctant permission to leave, and in October 1097 he set out for Rome.

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  • Henry, however, remained firm, and at last, in 1103, Anselm and an envoy from the king set out for Rome.

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    0
  • In 1026 Conrad set out for Italy, and supported by Heribert, archbishop of Milan, assumed the Lombard crown in that city, and afterwards overcame the resistance which was offered by Pavia and Ravenna.

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  • After these fools bargains the paladin set out for Naples in 1494.

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  • He set out early in 1835, but returned almost immediately to secure other workers.

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  • Having set out to embody the mysteries of faith in human language, it had fallen a victim to the excellence of its own methods; language proved too strong for mystery.

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  • They had set out to reform the Church of Rome; they ended by having to fight hard for a doubtful foothold within it.

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  • In February 1822 he set out on his return to Sennar and Dongola, having received reports of risings against Egyptian authority.

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  • His views on this head are set out with great force in his pamphlet, La defaicte des Tartares et Turcs (Lyons, 1590).

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  • Having thus secured the Rhine and Danube frontiers, he turned his energies towards the east, and in 271 set out on his expedition against Zenobia, queen of Palmyra.

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    0
  • Colour, dress, attitude, grouping of figures are all dictated by traditional rules, set out in regular manuals.

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  • In August 1220 Frederick set out for Italy, and was crowned emperor at Rome on the 22nd of November 1220; after which he repeated the undertaking he had entered into at Aix la Chapelle in 1215 to go on crusade, and made lavish promises to the Church.

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  • Meanwhile the crusade was postponed again and again; until under a threat of excommunication, after the fall of Damietta in 1221, Frederick definitely undertook by a treaty made at San Germano in 1225 to set out in August 1227 or to submit to this penalty.

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  • On the summit of a fire-girt hill Sigurd found the Valkyrie Brunhild in an enchanted sleep, and ravished by her beauty awakened her; they plighted their troth to each other and, next morning, Sigurd left her to set out once more on his journey.

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  • But Kriemhild was not destined, like Gudrun, to set out on further adventures.

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  • In 1778, James Robertson (1742-1814), a native of Virginia, who had been prominent in the Watauga settlement, set out with a small party to prepare the way for permanent occupation.

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  • Accordingly, he set out for the Rhine, taking Marienberg and Frankfort on his way, and on the 10th of December entered Mainz, where he remained throughout the winter of 1631-1632.

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  • In 1815 he was with the Allies in Paris, and in the following year set out on the grand tour, visiting Moscow and the western provinces of Russia, Berlin (where his engagement to Princess Charlotte Louise, daughter of Frederick William III., was arranged) and England, where his handsome presence and charming address created a profound impression.'

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  • Yet the newly organized squadron which in 1827 set out on the cruise which ended at Navarino only reached Plymouth with difficulty, and there had to be completely refitted.

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  • As our most enthusiastic dream team member, she set out the chores for all of us as we gathered about the oak table.

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  • That said, he would set out the broader context for manufacturing.

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  • This elaborates the themes set out in Benjamin's previous benchmark book.

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  • He set out the various vicissitudes in addressing the contract.

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    0
  • The father's account is set out in his second affidavit of August 2005.

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    0
  • That is clearly set out in the coroner's first affidavit.

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  • Otherwise, the bulk of the report was to be made public with the exempt information set out in a confidential annex.

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  • I set out here the report of the Ombudsman's independent professional nursing assessor.

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  • Qualifying Policy A life assurance policy which meets rules set out in Taxes Act 1988.

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  • We got an open barouche and a wild, boisterous driver, and set out.

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  • The draft bill, with notes, is set out at Annex 2.

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  • A step-by-step calculation process is set out and illustrated with a worked example.

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  • Although they are not lined we can lay carpeting and install lighting and set out tables and chairs.

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  • The slipway is located at the end of a long causeway set out into a bay on the south of the island.

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    0
  • Historians still debate whether the german chancellor, Bismarck, deliberately set out to provoke Austria.

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    0
  • In this case the cancelation charges set out in clause 6 below will be payable.

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    0
  • We have a number of pieces, like those in drafts, set out on an infinite chessboard.

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  • In Iran, the fundamentalist cleric Ayatollah Khomeini set out to restore a regime that had last existed almost 1,300 years ago.

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  • In the 1960s the American sociologist Stanley Milgram set out to investigate the nature of the surprisingly close-knit human world.

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  • The helm seats set out to the cockpit coamings provide the ideal position for steering.

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  • Terraced houses crammed close with a rainbow of laundry set out to dry, a colorful scrap collage filling in back gardens.

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  • We will fulfill the commitment set out in the Lisbon Agenda.

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  • We see a royal coronation set out for us in 38 scenes.

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  • In order to whet your appetite, some issues are set out below which, it is hoped, will stimulate debate.

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  • They set out to win the decathlon of automotive performance. ' Honest.

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  • There has been good debate about the concept of ' double devolution ' that I set out in my NCVO speech on Tuesday.

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  • The regulations for approval of purchases set out in Section 3 above apply also to petty cash disbursements.

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  • You then set out across the snow, possibly spotting elks as you explore.

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  • The facts of the case are set out in Box 1. Do we need new legislation to cover embryology?

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  • If you set out to discuss etymology, you are likely to find yourself also discussing semantics.

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  • However Reverse Therapy has never set out to find scientific evidence of the chemical problems inherent in the conditions.

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  • The effect of the various exemptions is set out in Section 2. Some confer an " absolute exemption " .

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  • Those set out in Appendix 1 are examples of more commonly found types, but the list provided should not be regarded as exhaustive.

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  • I want to use the rest of my time with you to set out my Party's plans to help farmers.

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    0
  • On 15th November 1577 Drake, with the approval of Queen Elizabeth 1, set out from Plymouth Sound with his small flotilla.

    0
    0
  • This attempt floundered in bad weather and the following year the Harriers once again set out from Edale with renewed determination.

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    0
  • With this in mind, the team set out to create a front-end which would simplify things.

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  • We started with some polystyrene dummy cakes to get the right shape and then set out to make the actual fruitcakes.

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  • The first is Saint James in his pilgrim's garb, as if about to set out for Santiago de Compostella.

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  • During my summer holiday I set out to get myself back in single seater gliders.

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  • Follow the same techniques as for a seed sown wild flower grassland set out above.

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  • We had set out the reasons why we had wanted to include the measures on religious hatred.

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    0
  • In reaching his/her decision he/she should be guided by the principles set out in Chapter 2.

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  • The poem is set out in stanzas of regular length and a loosely iambic meter.

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  • Having been often importuned to preach at Cowbridge, this morning I set out with sister Jones and others.

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  • As one who set out to chart the history of human interrelations with planet Earth, he may be called the founder of ecology.

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  • Many packages rely on very low-level functionality to be able to do the tasks they set out to do.

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  • It therefore violates the guidelines set out in the Convention on Human Rights and Biomedicine, and constitutes medical malpractice by the State.

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  • He set out to find dyes that would destroy other infectious microbes within the body.

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  • They must be able to undertake a range of military tasks to fulfill the missions set out below, matched to changing strategic circumstances.

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  • Now with his own moniker, ' The Lightning Seeds ' he set out to further his quest to produce perfect pop to go.

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  • Their design set out to avoid the monotony of the uniform grid plans of the nineteenth century housing.

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  • Mighty Ephesus With plenty of time at Selcuk, we set out to visit nearby Ephesus.

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    0
  • On the morning of Friday 12 December last year the combined forces of the English and Language Departments set out to invade northern France.

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