Split-up Sentence Examples

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

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  • Not only was there in 1918-21 a sharp contrast in policy between the Czechoslovaks and the minority races living within the republic - the Germans and the Magyars - but each nationality was split up into a multiplicity of factions.

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  • At an early date they split up into two main groups, one of which made its way into Italy, the other into Germany.

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  • The societies split up into Harrisites and Rowlandites, and it was only with the revival of 1762 that the breach was fairly repaired.

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  • The monthly meetings are made up of all the officers of the churches comprised in each, and are split up into districts for the purpose of a more local co-operation of the churches.

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  • Grant's other forces were split up into detachments, and when Van Dorn, boldly marching right round Rosecrans, descended upon Corinth from the north, Grant could hardly stir to help his subordinate.

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  • At this time the Guides were split up into numerous detachments, and there was a system of advances which made the accounts very complicated.

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  • On this account the fibres of tussur or tussore silk tend to split up into fine fibrillae under the various preparatory processes in manufacturing, and its riband structure is the cause of the glassy lustre peculiar to the woven and finished fibres.

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  • The spectra experimented on by Paschen were band spectra, but as these split up into fine lines the possibility of homogeneous radiation in pure thermal oscillation may be considered as established.

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  • Europe was being split up under the influence of feudalism; Christendom was assailed by the barbarians, Norsemen, Saracens and Huns; at Rome the papacy was passing into the power of the local aristocracy, with whom after Otto I.

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  • They soon split up into different groups, according as they came to stand nearer to or farther from the original position of Arius.

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  • Silesia, already more than half Germanized, had for generations been the battle-ground between the Luxemburgers and the Piasts, and was split up into innumerable principalities which warred incessantly upon their neighbours and each other.

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  • Eriksson found, for example, that the well-known species Puccinia graminis could be split up into a number of forms which though morphologically similar were physiologically distinct.

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  • On cooling into region 6 or 8 austenite should normally split up into ferrite and cementite, after passing through the successive stages of martensite, troostite and sorbite, Fe 0 C= Fe 3 C +Fe(i 3).

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  • In the black-and-white ground mass the white is the eutectic cementite, and the black the eutectic austenite, now split up into pearlite and pro-eutectoid cementite, which cannot here be distinguished from each other.

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  • Subsequently, as the central power of the German sovereign became weakened, the Rhineland followed the general tendency and split up into numerous small independent principalities, each with its separate vicissitudes and special chronicles.

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  • The tribal dukes had all disappeared, and their duchies were split up into districts ruled by counts (q.v),whose tendencies to independence the emperor tried to check by the visits of the missi dominici.

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  • On this occasion the Fortschrittpartei, already much diminished, split up into two sections.

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  • Within this is usually a sheath of connective tissue, which surrounds a layer of circular muscles; the latter may be split up into separate bundles, but more usually form a uniform sheet.

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  • At some period unknown they split up into two branches - Bituriges Cubi and Bituriges Vivisci.

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  • His friends the Hellenizing Jews had split up into factions.

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  • In these the single method of Bacon is already split up into separate modes.

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  • Eisenach fell to Saxe-Weimar in 1644, and although the enlarged principality of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach was temporarily split up into the lines Saxe-Weimar, Saxe-Eisenach and Saxe-Jena, it was again united under Ernest Augustus, who began to reign in 1728, and the adoption of the principle of primogeniture about this time secured it against further divisions.

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  • Already in 1884 he had warned the French clergy against meddling in royalist intrigues; in 1892 he issued a much more stringent exhortation to French Catholics to rally to the Republic. An idea got abroad that he was looking to the time when the old dream of Lamennais and Gioberti might become a reality, and Italy would split up into a number of republics, amongst which the temporal power of the pope might find a place.

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  • The action of the acid on the carbonate of soda with which the fibre was impregnated caused the fibre to split up into a fine cotton-like mass, which it was intended to manufacture in the same manner as cotton.

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  • Although the whole of Kamrup appears from time to time to have been united into one kingdom under some unusually powerful monarch, it was more often split up into numerous petty states; and for several centuries the Koch, the Ahom and the Chutia powers contested for the Assam valley.

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  • The extension of British rule north of the Orange was opposed by Andries Pretorius, who, being defeated at Boomplaats, withdrew north of the Vaal, where, though not interfered with by the British, the Boers split up into several rival parties.

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  • The elections, though often controlled by the Turkish Divan, were still constitutionally in the hands of the boiars, who were split up into various factions, each with its own pretender to the throne.

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  • It caused the party to split up into factions - Sturdzists, Aurelianists and Flevists, so called after the names of their respective chiefs.

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  • The country was politically split up into little principalities, most of them governed by some petty despot, whose interests were not often the same as those of the community.

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  • The latter can also split up directly into NO and S04H2.

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  • It is a long dead-level of rich fields, with a soil lighter in colour than that of Bengal or Behar; much more friable, and apt to split up into small cubes with a rectangular cleavage.

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  • Thus the sum of 8 and 7 cannot be expressed as ones; we can either form the whole, and regroup it as 10 and 5, or we can split up the 7 into 2 and 5, and add the 2 to the 8 to form io, thus getting 8+7= 8+ (2+5) = (8+2) +5=10+5=15.

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  • When Both The Numbers Are Large, We Split Up One Of Them, Preferably The Multiplier, Into Separate Portions.

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  • It is thus plain that the stream of Protestantism was very early split up into separate channels.

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  • Some of these states might be split up into various parts at certain periods, each part becoming for the time-being an over-kingdom.

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  • The provincial kingdoms had split up into more or less independent principalities, almost constantly at war with each other.

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  • Then followed a time of great ethnical confusion in South Africa, during which tribes flourished, split up and disappeared; but ere this the culture represented by the ruins in Rhodesia had waxed and waned.

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  • The ancient territorial divisions Belgium, Gallia Lugdunensis (Lyonnaise), Gallia Narbonensis (Narbonnaise)were split up into seventeen little provinces, which in their turn were divided into two dioceses.

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  • In the course of the, 4th century the country was in a state of anarchy; petty lordships sprang into existence, the interests of the common weal were forgotten or disregarded, and the people began to be split up into factions, and these were continually carrying on petty warfare with one another.

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  • After Sansandig is passed the banks of The the stream become low and the Niger is split up into a number of channels.

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  • The Pathans are split up into different tribes, each tribe into clans, and each clan into sections, so that the nomenclature is often very puzzling.

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  • Inorganic bodies, such as metals, may enter into albuminous combinations which may greatly modify their effects, and organic substances may be split up into simpler compounds by oxidation or reduction, or may be rendered more complex by synthesis.

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  • And a Spurs fan's resentment of Arsenal means that London should be split up?

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  • The latter may, however, be split up into several sub-generic groups, such as Metachirus, Philander, Marmosa (Micoureus or Grymaeomys), Peramys, Dromiciops, &c. The small South American forms included in Marmosa, which lack the pouch, and have numerous teats, and molar teeth of a primitive type, are doubtless the most generalized representatives of the group (see Opossum; and WATER-Opossum).

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  • Both Servia and Bulgaria were by this time split up into half a dozen principalities which, as much for religious as for political reasons, preferred paying tribute to the Turks to acknowledging the hegemony of Hungary.

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  • This surface may be split up into elements, each of which is equal to a corresponding element of the curved surface of the circumscribing cylinder, so that 3Xa2=curved surface of cylinder=2a.

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  • They split up the wood, pressed it down on the fire, blew at it with their mouths, and fanned it with the skirts of their greatcoats, making the flames hiss and crackle.

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  • And a Spurs fan 's resentment of Arsenal means that London should be split up?

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  • We split up in mid 1981, then reformed briefly in 1985 for a reunion concert.

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  • The large basalt boulders were split up into sizes the knapper could handle by heating, and shattered into fragments with gun-like reports.

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  • The smitten pair - who split up in 2002 - left the club hand-in-hand.

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  • The site is split up into a number of tables.

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  • These costs will vary and are split up with all investors involved with the timeshare.

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  • On the other hand, situations arise in which it's beneficial for both parties to get a legal agreement set forth in divorce court when they decide to split up.

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  • The other great thing about talking to your roommate up front is that you can find out what she can contribute to the room and split up purchasing responsibility.

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  • The race league is split up into ski and snowboard divisions in a giant slalom format for participants ages 18 and up.

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  • Have the players split up into two teams, each team lying on the floor in head-to-foot line.

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  • American Idol Alums Constantine Maroulis and Kellie Pickler have split up.

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  • Though the couple originally denied said rumors, in February, 2006, they officially announced their celebrity shocking split up.

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  • But was it a question of monogamy that lead to this celebrity shocking split up?

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  • Her parents split up when she was still a baby, and Kate was raised by her mother and long-time boyfriend Kurt Russell.

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  • His parents were young when he was born and split up two years later.

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  • Is anyone surprised that Paris and Benji split up?

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  • His parents, Chris Jackman and Grace Watson, split up when Jackman was only eight, leaving him and his siblings to be raised by their father.

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  • Even though the couple has reportedly split up physically, they haven't officially announced their plans to divorce.

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  • Their son Sunny was born in 2004, but the pair split up that same year.

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  • When Sade was four years old, her parents split up and her mother moved back to England with the children.

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  • Its propagation is too easy, for in many soils it is said to split up into offsets instead of growing to a flowering size.

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  • This luscious outfit features an attractive array of embroidered hearts and a split up to there - accented with dainty satin bows - to show off your lovely legs.

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  • The most versatile business suits are solid colors which can be split up and worn as separates.

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  • Girls' groups tend to be split up into subgroups.

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  • Use slash marks to split up the phonemes in each word.

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  • The Toys R Us application is available online and is split up into several sections so that you only apply for the types of jobs you're interested in acquiring.

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  • Try taking them with meals to avoid stomach issues, and be sure to split up your dose if you are taking more than 500 mg per day.

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  • The cost of the appliance is $199 payable in one direct payment or split up into four equal payments.

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  • While Michael and Ridegley remain close friends to this day, it became apparent that Michael was the musical heavyweight of the pair, and the band split up in 1986.

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  • And again, if you thought people talked about your relationship while you were dating, wait until they find out the two of you have split up.

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  • Remember, if you were not providing steak-size gossip, the gossip hounds won't be that interested when you split up.

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  • That survival meant men and women needed to split up responsibilities in order to exist.

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  • A few lobby sets are also available; these are only split up for individual sale if any of the components are missing.

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  • Will Blair and Todd stay together or split up (again)?

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  • Though she did marry him, Izzy couldn't handle her emotions after the baby was born, and she and Ben eventually split up.

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  • Many high schools and universities will split up their squad to cheer at other sports events throughout the year.

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  • In most cases you'll also have the opportunity to interact with other cheer teams and split up into special interest seminars.

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  • If you're attending camp as an individual, you'll most likely be split up into different teams to work on your skills and gain experience in a cheer team setting.

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  • Many individuals choose to split up their workouts into strength and cardiovascular training routines.

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  • If you strength train more than two days each week, you may want to split up your workout into body-part specific routines.

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  • If you're training four or more days a week, split up your workout into bodypart-specific chunks.

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  • Unfortunately, after the reunion show was filmed Corn Fed and Ahmed split up.

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  • High school sweethearts who married and then split up relive their courtship years, and sometimes reveal affairs.

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  • Depending on the challenge, competitors are split up according to gender, or they are randomly divided into groups of both men and women.

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  • She is the eldest of three siblings, and her parents split up when she was 4 years old.

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  • I always wondered if that was why Mom and Dad split up for a while - because Mom was used to a different lifestyle and social circle.

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  • I can't forget that she said she loved Alex and hoped we would split up.

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  • Obviously Katie didn't know they had split up.

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  • When you and Alex were having problems, I think he hoped you would split up.

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  • The spores differ from those of ferns in their outer coat (exospore) being split up into four club-shaped hygroscopic threads (elaters) which are curled when moist, but become straightened when dry.

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  • In the more highly developed lorms, as already indicated, the leaf-trace is split up into a number of strands which leave the base and sides of the leaf-gap independently.

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  • The fate of these inorganiccompounds has not been certainly traced, but they give rise later on to the presence in the plant of various amino acid amides, such as leucin, glycin, asparagin, &c. That these are stages on the way to proteids has been inferred from the fact that when proteids are split up by various means, and especially by the digestive secretions, these nitrogen-containing acids are among the products which result.

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  • The enzymes which act upon glucosides are many; the best known are emul sin and myrosin, which split up respectively amygdalin, the special glucoside of certain plants of the Rosaceae; and sinfgrin, which has a wide distribution among those of the Cruciferae.

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  • This comes in almost all such cases from the decomposition of sugar, which is split up by the protoplasm into alcohol and carbon dioxide.

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  • The slope of the river bed diminishes until the plain compels the river to move slowly, swinging in meanders proportioned to its size, and gradually, controlled by the flattening land, ceasing to transport material, but raising its banks and silting up its bed by the dropped sediment, until, split up and shoaled, its distributaries struggle across its delta to the sea.

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  • Partly owing to this, and partly to ancient feuds whose origin we cannot trace, the Athenian people was split up into three great factions known as the Plain (Pedieis) led by Lycurgus and Miltiades, both of noble families; the Shore (Parali) led by the Alcmaeonidae, represented at this time by Megacles, who was strong in his wealth and by his recent marriage with Agariste, daughter of Cleisthenes of Sicyon; the Hill or Upland (Diacreis, Diacrii) led by Peisistratus, who no doubt owed his influence among these hillmen partly to the possession of large estates at Marathon.

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  • It contains the ruined capital of the ancient Hindu kingdom of Vijayanagar, and on the overthrow of that state by the Mahommedans, in f 564, the tract now forming the district of Bellary was split up into a number of military holdings, held by chiefs called poligars.

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  • The rest of the country was split up among Turcoman tribes, such as the Zulfikar in Marash and the Al-i-Ramazan in Adana.

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  • France is represented by a resident superior, who presides over the ministerial council and is the real ruler of the country, and by residents exercising supervision in the districts into which the country is split up for the purposes of the French administration.

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  • Chemically they resemble the albumins, being split up by acids or ferments into albumoses, peptones and amino-acids, forming salts, and giving N =C6 1 The pyrimidin ring is numbered 2C "C5.

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  • The various parties meanwhile had split up into some half a dozen sub-sections; but the expected fusion of the party of independence and the government fell through, and the barren struggle continued till the celebration of the millennium of the foundation of the monarchy produced for some months a lull in politics.

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  • In the physiological process of intestinal digestion, the precursors of such fats are split up into these two radicles.

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  • He found the medical profession of his time split up into a number of sects, medical science confounded under a multitude of dogmatic systems, the social status and moral integrity of physicians degraded.

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  • In short, the function of guarding and supervising the trade monopoly split up into various fragments, the aggregate of the crafts superseding the old general gild merchant.

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  • The country was once more split up into small governments, more or less independent, and groups of wandering tribes carrying on their petty feuds.

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  • Silesia, now split up into seventeen principalities, was the bone of contention between them; and when Casimir suddenly invaded that country, took Wschowa, and made Prince Charles of Bohemia a prisoner, war between the two kingdoms actually broke out and Casimir was besieged in Cracow by the Czechs.

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  • Picking up on his way such reinforcements as were available, he marched southward with all speed behind the Vosges, and in the last stages of the movement he even split up his forces into many small bodies, that the enemy's spies might be misled.

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  • These very thick seams are, however, rarely constant in character for any great distance, being found commonly to degenerate into carbonaceous shales, or to split up into thinner beds by the intercalation of shale bands or partings.

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  • In spite of this, the calculation was defeated; for in Europe every true democracy at once becomes national, and hence the national problem infected the working-classes so soon as they won parliamentary power; the " International " split up into national groups, just as the bourgeoisie had done before it.

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  • The churches of the Lombards, West Goths, Franks and Anglo-Saxons, all counted themselves parts of the Catholic Church; but the Catholic Church had altered its condition; it lacked the power of organization, and split up into territorial churches.

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  • Thus over a great part of Europe the Catholic Church was split up into territorial or national churches, which, whatever the theoretical ties which bound them together, were in fact separate organizations, tending ever more and more to become isolated and self-contained units with no formal intercommunion, and, as the rivalry of nationalities grew, with increasingly little even of intercommunication.

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  • Mercifully, Tom Byron and his mullet hairdo split up in '93.

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