For hygienic reasons, restaurants should wash silverware and drinking glasses more than once. |
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If the upwards velocity is higher than the settling velocity, the sediment will be transported high in the flow as wash load. |
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It may look like a huge mess now, but I expect that it will all come out in the wash as time goes on. |
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Hydraulic mining is utilized in forms of water jets to wash away either overburden or the ore itself. |
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There's a wash of noise I am somehow part of, dead-handed. The first song is pretty much over before I even realize we're playing. |
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Naval exercises with sonar regularly results in fallen cetaceans that wash up with fatal decompression. |
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In combination with wash out of excessive nutrients from conventional farming, this has often led to large algae blooms. |
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The Wash is the large indentation in the coastline of Eastern England that separates the curved coast of East Anglia from Lincolnshire. |
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A lightship marks the entrance to the Lynn Channel, the one safe channel from the North Sea to the south coast of the Wash. |
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Silence in action is the doerless doing that we've spoken of before, in which you just wash the dishes, just vacuum the floor. |
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It may also refer more generally to any seaweeds or seagrasses that wash up on beaches and may accumulate in the wrack zone. |
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It has been estimated that about two million birds a year use the Wash for feeding and roosting during their annual migrations. |
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The Wash is recognised as being Internationally Important for 17 species of bird. |
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Moder, gyn, will not y washen' the dishen'. i. Mother, Jone, will not wash the dishes. |
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It is very difficult to overstain with safranin. Wash slides with several changes of water, until water is no longer pink. |
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Like Sanchez's piece, Wash delights in its own banality, its antitheatricality. |
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Fallow deer are now widespread on the UK mainland and are present in most of England and Wales below a line drawn from the Wash to the Mersey. |
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For days afterwards, bodies continued to wash onto the shores of the isles along with the wreckage of the warships and personal effects. |
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Gently go over your dog's face with the washcloth until it's clean. Be sure to wash the flews, or the hanging skin around the mouth. |
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What kind of gutter language is that? I ought to wash your mouth out with soap. |
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Did you get ick all over my things? Should I walk myself through a car wash on the way home? |
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The salients could then be supplied along Watling Street, dividing the invaders into pockets south of the Weald in east Kent and around the Wash. |
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Cut karelas into thin slices. Wash and rub two table spoons salt all over the karelas and its scrapings. |
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The region's major rivers, the Nene, the Soar, the Trent and the Welland, flow in a northeasterly direction towards the Humber and the Wash. |
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There is no absolute speed limit on most of the Tideway downstream of Wandsworth Bridge, although boats are not allowed to create undue wash. |
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A surgeon was not required to wash his hands before seeing a patient because such practices were not considered necessary to avoid infection. |
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And, by the look of you, you could do with some mangarie, a good wash, and a proper night's kip. |
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What was it about Charlie Resnick that made him so special? With his shirt still crumpled from the wash and his tie knotted arse-about-face. |
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Pen in black, with grey, brown, black, and red wash on paper mounted on canvas, National Portrait Gallery, London. |
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If a spoonful of sugar helps the medicine go down, a barrel of laughs can wash down the big pills you might need to swallow. |
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A woman with a well-to-do south voice told me to wash my soily hands before touching her messages. |
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Slimakowa looked him up and down, gave him a bowl of barszcz and another of potatoes, and told him to wash in the river. |
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All rivers discharging into The Wash and the North Sea between King's Lynn and Cleethorpes at the mouth of The Humber. |
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Mariners sometimes call the moving path of light leading to the moon the moonwake, because it looks like the white wash of a ship's wake. |
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His cymbal wash during the five songs taken from a live Swedish radio broadcast is a wonder to behear. |
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A press operator must carefully wash the blanket whenever changing a plate. |
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He drank his coffee standing in the clean wash of a wind nemoral and northern, its light going thin and cold. |
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For though thou wash thee with nitre, and take thee much soap, yet thine iniquity is marked before me. |
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They were also used to produce a controlled supply to wash the crushed ore. |
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One can buy coated frying pans, which are much easier to wash up than normal ones. |
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The Holy Family with St John the Baptist, brush and brown wash on panel by Michelangelo. |
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Select young okra, wash thoroughly, remove the stems, and wipe the okra dry. |
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Wash colored items separately from whites and darks to prevent the colors from bleeding. |
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Reportedly, in preparation for the role, Ifans did not wash himself or brush his teeth. |
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It is easy to see this pattern when the waves are destructive and wash away finer grained material at the top, revealing coarser sands and cobbles as the base. |
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But as it is, Koch wants this antirape comedy to be trendy, tough, and hilarious too, and considering the material, that not only won't wash, it's just a tad obscene. |
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If you bring your dirty laundry round on Saturday, I'll wash it for you. |
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The rush to dredge resulted in engineering problems, with those who had not first ascertained the depth of the wash by boring later dredging up only buckets of water. |
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But thou, when thou fastest, anoint thine head, and wash thy face. |
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A scone is often lightly sweetened and occasionally glazed with egg wash. |
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Shoegaze combines ethereal, swirling vocals with layers of distorted, bent, flanged guitars, creating a wash of sound where no instrument is distinguishable from another. |
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Other imaginary lines can be drawn, for similar purposes, between the Severn Estuary and the Wash, and between the Severn and the mouth of the River Trent. |
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This identified three restricted areas for larger scale development, Liverpool Bay, the Thames Estuary and the area beyond the Wash, called the Greater Wash, in the North Sea. |
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It was his custom to wash the tobacco in muscadel and grains, and to keep it moist by wrapping it in greased leather, and oiled rags, or by burying it in gravel. |
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Spawning success is often much better in channels than in adjacent streams due to the control of floods, which in some years can wash out the natural redds. |
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Further speed restrictions were imposed on the HSS during the tern breeding season, when wash from the ship could cause problems for the breeding birds on the Scar. |
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Dead leatherbacks that wash ashore are microecosystems while decomposing. |
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Strong intertidal currents wash the 'seeds' around on the seabed, where they accumulate layers of chemically precipitated calcite from the supersaturated water. |
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The Wash is fed by the rivers Witham, Welland, Nene and Great Ouse. |
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The Wash varies enormously in water temperature throughout the year. |
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The partially confined nature of the Wash habitats, combined with the ample tidal flows, allows shellfish to breed, especially shrimp, cockles and mussels. |
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Runoff can wash out the mineral nitrogen and phosphorus from detritus and in consequence supply the water bodies leading to slow, natural eutrophication. |
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The paper outlined an assault on England's eastern coast between The Wash and the River Thames by troops crossing the North Sea from ports in the Low Countries. |
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Consider harvesting any brook trout as park biologists electrofish this stream every summer to remove brook trout that wash down from outside the park. |
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