Dr Jones believes they may have counted using the horizontal abacuses prevalent in other European nations. |
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Up in the sun-dappled stands, they kept count of the goals and counted down the minutes until the official celebrations could begin. |
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He looked at the worn banknotes doubled over in his jacket pocket and slowly counted them out. |
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The clock then counted down to zero and Notre Dame won their first game of the season. |
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The timer counted down to zero, and after few seconds, the words Transmission Successful appeared on the screen. |
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It was here that his dream was shattered as he was counted out by the referee. |
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Even though Scholes sometimes plays in a follow-up role to the attackers, he's still counted as a midfielder. |
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The votes will be counted up to Monday, July 28 and the election is being overseen by the Electoral Reform Society. |
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The final mark includes both the test results, as well as assessment task results, which are counted up over the year. |
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I counted myself fortunate that the film only ran 84 minutes, since only about ten of them were interesting. |
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The votes were counted up fairly quickly, and by a slim majority one of the three choices had been passed. |
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Votes are counted locally but the totals are calculated nationally, and seats in parliament are awarded in proportion to votes. |
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The remaining stones were counted to determine the number of dead, then placed in a great heap in remembrance of those who died in battle. |
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These families often face material hardships and financial pressures similar to those families who are officially counted as poor. |
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The number of mistakes he made in his career could be counted on the fingers of one hand. |
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If you get less than 35, you left some combinations out, or if you get more than 35, you counted some combinations more than once. |
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Standing on the podium in ninth place, Gilmour counted her blessings that she could race in the 15 km Easter Weekend hill climb at all. |
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We collected fruits and counted the total number of flowers, fruits, and fully developed undamaged seeds from each plant. |
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He had made one mistake, he had not counted on the skill and determination of his wily opponent. |
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Each wigwam counted usually seven or eight persons, and these, together with their provisions, required the use of about twenty horses. |
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When it mattered, when it counted, you were there, and that's what should count. |
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Yes, both have their flaws, but as Pittsburgh's first experience of the Ring cycle, I think it has to be counted as a stunning success. |
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The grids were separated into four quadrants and the stomata were counted in each quadrant. |
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To make sure you are counted in, please send your contact details including telephone and e-mail to Voluntary Arts Ireland. |
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The 193 centuries were determined by wealth, and the richest centuries were also the smallest, so individual votes in these counted more heavily. |
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The number of food deliveries made to supplemented and control nestlings were counted from the observation blind. |
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Finally, the number of shoots and plantlets was counted again and summed with the first counts to give the total regeneration. |
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In my case and for most average joes, these occasions can be counted on one hand. |
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Each week, the leaves were lifted, and seeds with an emerged radicle were counted as germinated and removed from the flats. |
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It is the ballots that were not counted because the machines could not read them that are important. |
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I've no time for them at all and I am happy to stand and be counted as a Labour supporter. |
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She wetted the tip of her finger, counted out five tens and dropped them into the metal money scoop. |
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The number of classic albums made since the launch of CD as a format can be counted on the fingers of one hand. |
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The rest would have been welcome and I was disappointed that our views counted for little. |
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The real favourites for the title can be counted on the fingers of one hand, and first on everyone's list, invariably, is Hewitt. |
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At least in the insurance sector, destruction caused by riots is counted as an act of god. |
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Various factors counted against Halley when he was an applicant in 1691 for the Savilian astronomy professorship at Oxford University. |
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In these reports, only discharge events are counted and cannot account for individuals with repeat admissions. |
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Again, certain categories of fatalities are not counted, including deaths caused by industrial diseases. |
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For I counted him among the many friends I had gained during five years as a journalist in Jammu and Kashmir. |
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Though she was agoraphobic, she had a broad scattering of acquaintances, including a loyal readership who counted her among their friends. |
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He made a motion as if to get back up, them slumped back down as the referee counted him out. |
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There was a pinch of controversy over the way Abdulaev was counted out after suffering a knockdown at the hands of Clottey. |
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Patil emphasised that as far as he was concerned, what counted was the consistency factor. |
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His girlfriend liked the way he looked, and Mike felt that hers was the only opinion that counted. |
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She believed in him and she was not a frivolous person, so her opinion counted. |
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After learning the basics of our government, I counted the days until I turned 18 and could register to vote. |
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She pulled out all the money that she had brought from the Motel and counted it out onto the counter. |
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The elongated stars drifted by as the ships chronometer counted down to zero. |
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Referee Alfred counted him out at two minutes and 51 seconds of the fourth, by which time Iron Mike had rusted into a crumpled heap. |
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Our football clubs and national teams win nothing internationally, and yet we say we want to be counted among the best. |
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Etienne was knocked flat on his back in the middle of the ring and he lay there as referee Bill Clancy counted him out just 49 seconds into the scheduled 10-round fight. |
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Or unless they are a big-name, which Isaac is not, and that may have counted against him. |
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The marks I entered in my check list counted towards their final result. |
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The support they receive from the fans is incredible considering that the number of trophies they have won in the last fifty years can be counted on the fingers of one hand. |
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Even if codes could be completely debugged, million-cell memories could never be counted upon, digitally, to behave consistently from one kilocycle to the next. |
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Another question is whether the electors would have counted the overvote the same way that the consortium did. |
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If those people who live there didn't knock it so much and were just a little bit patriotic and counted their blessings, they just might find some peace of mind. |
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And the funds raised by the swimming marathon have just been counted up. |
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Last year, statisticians counted how long United went without a win. |
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Those running the campaign clearly counted on the influence of impressive propagandists and the help they received from an often acquiescent mainstream press. |
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The lack of a cannon is a particular problem, as the F-35 is being counted on to help out infantrymen under fire. |
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Throughout the eighteen years of Conservative government, the total number of Cabinet ministers with children in the state system could be counted on the fingers of one hand. |
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We also have to re-define work, so that the work of caring for children and doing human maintenance in the home is counted as productive work, has attributed value. |
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Chickens are not being counted but fingers are crossed for the promised white-out and perhaps even some snow pictures of a more impressive nature! |
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The loose change was counted up yesterday at the Sainsbury's store in Vauxhall, south London, using a machine which counts up to 600 coins a minute. |
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Some of the tales told against him by fellow touring pros were spiteful, but without doubt he would be counted among the top five British sportsmen in any era. |
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Students counted daily attendances and absences, team numbers, scores in games, chairs and tables, and counted down the days to important events in their lives. |
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Because this food source could abruptly disappear at any time, cutworm moths cannot be counted on to replace pine nuts. |
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It was expected that the House would be counted out at 9 o'clock. |
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You have to remember that we have an official who sent these voters their absentee ballot forms, they filled them out, they voted them properly, they were counted properly. |
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Piscitelli found out just how bad it had been when he counted the number of ambulatory survivors who came back with the dawn. |
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The radio operator tuned in to the appropriate Sonne station, counted the number of dots or dashes heard, and referred these to a special map to read off the bearing. |
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With more than three quarters of the vote counted in the first round of the Indonesian presidential elections, no candidate has achieved an absolute majority. |
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If all of those votes had been counted statewide, the consortium determined that Al Gore would have won. |
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Across the country thousands upon thousands of polling stations are closing and votes are beginning to be counted to determine the new rulers of the country. |
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At age 38 Lewis' critics have counted him out more than once. |
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Buckley, a 24-year-old schoolteacher, has Irish ancestry so is not counted as an overseas player, meaning the club still have the quota option open to them. |
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The vote was anonymous and we all watched as it was counted up. |
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He pulled all of his money from his shirt pocket and counted it out. |
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Chinese yuan banknotes are counted at the Huangsha Seafood Wholesale Market in Guangzhou, Guangdong province. |
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Farrakhan is a fiery 80-year-old preacher who has previously counted the late Libyan strongman Moammar Qadhdhafi among his friends. |
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Aqueous humour was collected at 6, 12 and 24 hr after LPS inoculation and the number of infiltrating cells in the anterior chamber was counted. |
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But in west Belfast, where the plague of joyriding is at its worst, thousands of people have signed up and been counted. |
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Edward Milner, an arachnologist studied and counted new species of spiders in the Colne Valley area around Heathrow. |
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Literally every second counted when butting heads with the competition. |
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Competitors at earlier Games born and living in Ireland are thus counted as British in Olympic statistics. |
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That large body of the working men who were not counted as citizens and had not so much as a vote to serve as an anodyne to their stomachs. |
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Come retirement, their Social Security may turn out to be a lot less than they counted on. |
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I counted what looked like a Mess Hall, a single barracks and another under construction, and a field tent. |
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The floor manager counted me in and The James Whale Radio Show took to the air on Yorkshire Television in its usual slot. |
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Bede counted anno Domini from Christ's birth, not from Christ's conception. |
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They waited one long excruciating minute, while Sam counted the kerthumps inside her chest. |
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By the end of 1721, New Orleans counted 1256 inhabitants, of which about half were slaves. |
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The highest daily volume, counted in trillions of dollars US, is reached when New York enters the trade. |
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I had counted on a life-lease of the profits, whereas I only received those of a few short years. |
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Articulation agreements may allow credit earned on an associate degree to be counted toward completion of a bachelor's degree. |
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Middleton and Manuel note that this definition has problems because multiple listens or plays of the same song or piece are not counted. |
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If proper synchronization of sound and picture was achieved in recording, it could be absolutely counted on in playback. |
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Prior to 2016, all substitutions, no matter the cause, counted against the limit during a match. |
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Figure shown is the total attendance which is officially counted for both games. |
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Biondetti actually competed in four Formula One races in 1950, but only one of these counted for the World Championship. |
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Unable to stand up, Castillo was counted out for the first time in his career. |
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Knocked down by the type of punch previously viewed as his own signature, Hatton was counted out by the referee. |
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Peterson was dropped to the canvas twice, although the first time was counted as a slip instead of a legitimate knockdown. |
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Votes from the 32 local government areas were counted and announced by each area separately. |
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Norman Davies has counted sixteen different states over the past 2,000 years. |
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For example, the 1831 census only counted men and did not cover the whole empire. |
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I counted five Mississippis between each flash of lightning and the thunder crash that followed. |
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A 2012 report counted 1,300 uniformed personnel and 50 British Ministry of Defence civil servants present in the Falklands. |
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When the final results were counted however, Labour came in second with 232 seats with the Conservatives achieving a Majority government. |
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So, despite everything these programs do to relieve poverty, they aren't counted as income when Washington measures the poverty rate. |
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It was estimated that up to one million people were not counted by the 1991 census due to such evasion. |
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Similar to Japanese, the nouns in Bengali cannot be counted by adding the numeral directly adjacent to the noun. |
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The major result was the permanent defeat of the Indian allies the British had counted upon. |
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There exists an informal economy that is never counted as part of the official GDP figures. |
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That is why the son of Henry III of England is counted as Edward I even though there were three Edwards before the Conquest. |
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The benefits of FPTP are that its concept is very easy to understand, and ballots can be easily counted and processed. |
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The boxes were instead transferred by sea and road to be counted in Stornoway. |
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Nevertheless, nearly all invalid ballots would have been spoiled no matter how they were counted. |
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The 7,000 figure above includes many of these variations counted as though they were different tartans. |
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He was counted among the Kings of the Britons by the Chronicle of the Princes. |
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Nonvoting members of the association, in addition to not having their vote counted, also cannot participate in debates on motions. |
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It is counted as one of the Seven Wonders of Wales and is a Site of Special Scientific Interest. |
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But Claire had not counted on Nyssa herself. Nyssa's aim in life seemed to be to do whatever she wanted whenever she wanted to do it. |
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One reporter counted 200 successful blows to Summers head during the match, and he was bleeding as early as the third round. |
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Secombe always claimed that his ability to sing could always be counted on to save him when he bombed. |
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More common species, such as the European honey buzzard Pernis apivorus, can be counted in hundreds of thousands in autumn. |
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Alfred the Great, who is counted as the first English king, was the first to mount significant opposition to the Vikings. |
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Existing ships were counted in the total, but the bill provided for ships to be replaced every 25 years on an indefinite basis. |
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These reserves are generally not counted when computing a nation's oil reserves. |
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The 1996 Australian census counted more than 7000 respondents as followers of a traditional Aboriginal religion. |
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While the Aquitani were probably Vascons, the Belgae would thus probably be counted among the Gaulish tribes, perhaps with Germanic elements. |
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Some indigenous peoples still live in relative isolation from Western culture and a few are still counted as uncontacted peoples. |
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Only systematics counted as true science and field studies were considered inferior through much of the 19th century. |
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The Low German varieties spoken in Germany are often counted among the German dialects. |
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It is not straightforward to say which language has the most vowels, since that depends on how they are counted. |
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In 1957, with the advent of the Admiral's Cup, points won in this race counted towards the Admiral's Cup. |
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In the United States, inventory data on sheep began in 1867, when 45 million head of sheep were counted in the United States. |
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Ambrose himself I esteemed a happy man, as the world counted happiness, because great personages held him in honor. |
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The pliant historian and courtier could be counted on to provide refined touches to official correspondence. |
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The duchies of Franconia and Swabia are also usually counted as among the newer stem duchies, as sometimes is Thuringia. |
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The Sami are counted among the Arctic peoples and are members of circumpolar groups such as the Arctic Council Indigenous Peoples' Secretariat. |
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Pretenders who had themselves named king, but are not counted in the official line of kings are written in italics. |
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There was, however, a great deal of fluidity as to whom was counted among their number in antiquity. |
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The 2010 census of the People's Republic of China counted more than 7 million people of various Mongolic groups. |
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Cape Verde counted 25 researchers in 2011, a researcher density of 51 per million inhabitants. |
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The 2011 Population and Housing Census counted 2,113,077 inhabitants of Namibia. |
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What they had counted on, however, was the influence of the separatists in the capital. |
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By the end of 2012, the Metropolitano system counted 244 buses in its central routes and 179 buses in its feeding routes. |
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By April 1629 the States Army counted 77,000 soldiers, half as much again as the Army of Flanders at that point in time. |
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By 2009, over 440 elk were counted at Tomales Point's 2,600 acres of coastal scrub and grasslands. |
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The Barents Sea is among the areas in the world with most seabirds, with about 20 million counted during late summer. |
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But it was only after another disputation that Bern counted itself as a canton of the Reformation. |
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In 2007, the Anglican Church counted 545,957 members on parish rolls in 2792 congregations, organised into 1676 parishes. |
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In ancient times, calendars were counted in terms of the number of years of the reign of the current monarch. |
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When a state produced only one member in attendance, its vote was not counted. |
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Slaves were counted as property and the rise in the cotton markets since the 1840s had increased their value. |
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Instead, voters elected an electoral college by passing through a gate designated for the candidate of choice while officials counted them. |
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However, they may be counted by order of the chairman or by order of the assembly through majority vote. |
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The yarn is wrapped snugly around a ruler and the number of wraps that fit in an inch are counted. |
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He opened the cashbox and counted out the money, and Martin handed it on to one of the ricers. |
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He counted the cattle over and over. It diverted him to speculate as to how much weight each of the steers would probably put on by spring. |
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The number of light received by two absorbers was counted, and the result is shown in Fig. |
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You must send your vote-by-mail ballot by Friday for it to arrive in the election office in time to be counted. |
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Persons with multiple encounters with audiograms within the calendar year were counted once for having an annual hearing test. |
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The benefits of race walking can't be counted on your fingers. |
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Cantor was able to show that aleph-one, the next higher number to aleph-zero, counted sets that could not be put into one-to-one correspondence with the rational numbers. |
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He counted just four raised hands of Labour MPs who fell for the trick, before accusing Labour of airbrushing Mr Brown out of their election campaign. |
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Although atretic oocytes can be identified with the stereological method, oocytes that are destined for atresia will be counted, causing fecundity to be overestimated. |
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A bangtail muster was a count of every beast on a property, and every one of them had to be yarded and have its tail cropped to show it had been counted. |
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In a lackluster election, Mayor Laurene Weste and council members Frank Ferry and Marsha McLain took early leads that held steady as votes were counted in City Hall. |
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The group alleged that the 41,000 acre-feet of annual water that the CLWA purchased in 1998 should not yet be counted toward the agency's official water supply. |
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Eyes to the front now and there was the body, a lump of black and brown. Moon counted three uniforms and a photographer, the medical examiner and his assistant. |
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Wound sizes were analyzed using ImageJ. The open wound was defined as the unepithelialized area and the number of pixels was counted for quantification. |
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Fractions would be a little easier if we counted by twelves. |
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In the 2011 Census, Newton Hill, Outwood, Stanley and Wrenthorpe were counted as parts of Wakefield, having been classified separately in the 2001 Census. |
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The highest part of the fell is a ridge running south from Mickledore as far as Slight Side, which is counted as a separate fell by most guidebooks. |
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Wherefore are we counted as beasts, and reputed vile in your sight? |
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For instance, the GDP excludes items counted in an earlier year to prevent double counting of production based on resales of the same item second and third hand. |
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They are then counted by the Tellers as they leave the Lobby. |
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The assembly may also have a rule that the division is counted. |
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The benefits of FPTP are that its concept is easy to understand, and ballots can more easily be counted and processed than in preferential voting systems. |
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What counted as law, to a lawyer, was what judges did in particular cases. |
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In the Burial service, the possibility that a deceased person who has died in the faith may nevertheless not be counted amongst God's elect, is not entertained. |
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Notice that the classifier changes as the unit being counted changes. |
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The census of 2005 counted 605,135 as speaking an indigenous language. |
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With a pout, Natasha counted the drops, and her eyelashes kept time. |
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Bangkok is at provincial level and thus often counted as a province. |
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What policy have you to bestow a benefit where it is counted an injury? |
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A Portuguese ally from the earliest trip of Vasco da Gama in 1498, Malindi could usually be counted on to give a warm reception and had plenty of supplies. |
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Soon the Hungarian Kingdom counted with two archbishops and 8 bishops, a defined state structure with province governors that answered to the King. |
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The time of a person's conversion is counted from the moment they sincerely make this declaration of faith, called the shahadah in front of witnesses. |
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Black Mountain, in the Black Mountains, on the border between England and Wales, was formerly counted in both countries but is now treated as being in Wales only. |
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Margaret was the mother of three kings of Scotland, or four, if Edmund of Scotland, who ruled with his uncle, Donald III, is counted, and of a queen consort of England. |
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Today the Greek community numbers officially about 5,000 people although many of Greek origin are now counted as Egyptian, having changed their nationality. |
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Our Air Force could not be counted on to guard our transports from the British Fleets, because their operations would depend on the weather, if for no other reason. |
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Certain days in the year were marked as festivals, and time was counted forward and backwards from them without reference to the ordinary calendar. |
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Ten years later, for these exchanges, Jean Fleury counted 225 to 230 both French and foreign, from 30 to 800 tons, ships each carrying 6 to 18 crew. |
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Reforms in training and gunnery were introduced to make good perceived deficiencies, which in part Tirpitz had counted upon to provide his ships with a margin of superiority. |
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A country and its territories and dependencies is counted once. |
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In June 2015, scientists flying over southern Chile counted 337 dead sei whales, in what is regarded as the largest mass beaching ever documented. |
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A catalog of a Dutch nursery from 1739 already counted 50 varieties. |
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Rhigyfarch counted Glastonbury Abbey among the churches David founded. |
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However, phonetically these are now considered a conflation of tone and final consonant and are seldom counted as individual tones in modern linguistics. |
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The rebels had counted on aid from Henry, but he lacked domestic support and was slow to mobilise an army, not arriving in France until the next summer. |
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Brittany and its people are counted as one of the six Celtic nations. |
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He said that the result should be challenged because there were 10,000 rejected ballots which could have caused a different result if they had counted. |
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Time in Ethiopia is counted differently from in many Western countries. |
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It's the only place where opinions are counted as equal to data. |
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When counted, nouns take one of a small set of measure words. |
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While easier methods can usually be counted by hand, except in a very small election Meek and Warren require counting to be conducted by computer. |
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Areas that form integral parts of sovereign states, such as the countries of the United Kingdom, are counted as part of the sovereign states concerned. |
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The tax revenue generated from an offshore site is not counted within the nation or region nearest to it, but is instead allocated to the UK Continental Shelf. |
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In the sixth round, Watson knocked Benn down with a jab and Benn was counted out as he rose to his feet, albeit by a somewhat hasty referee's count. |
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Standard scoring is used, and doubles and triples are counted. |
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The mixed systems of the Nordic countries are sometimes considered a branch of the civil law, but they are sometimes counted as separate from the civil law tradition. |
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On 23 August Japan joined the Entente, which then counted seven members. |
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Cells were then washed with PBS, counted and 10,000 cells were injected intravitreously using a 33-gauge Hamilton syringe, into healthy wild type mice. |
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The objects being counted appear in the singular, not plural form. |
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Bury, counted the Bastarnae along with the Goths, Vandals, Gepids, Burgundians, Lombards, Rugians, Heruls and Sciri among the eastern Germanic peoples. |
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Any refusal to salute the president shall be counted as an effrontery. |
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Even though a claim to know may be asserted dubitably and still be counted as a scientific claim, the imagined end of the enterprise of science remains certain knowledge. |
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He counted up the glasses, and realized there were fifteen missing. |
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The champ was knocked unconscious and counted out in the third round. |
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The bank teller counted out five twenty-dollar bills and gave them to me. |
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Many people counted him out, but he came back better than ever. |
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Hummingbirds cavort in her yard year-round, and on Saturday alone, she counted five mourning doves, two dark-eyed juncos, a white-crowned sparrow and two house finches. |
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