The evolutionarily primitive aspect of emotion helps to explain its power to disrupt thinking. |
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If matters are allowed to drift, hotheads on both sides could easily disrupt the recent calm. |
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What could have caused deep waters to form in the low latitudes and so markedly disrupt the usual system of deep water circulation? |
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The clear intention was to kill civilians gathered for food aid and to disrupt humanitarian relief. |
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Sectarian organizations with party lines and hierarchical, anti-democratic structures disrupt attempts to move forward collectively. |
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One aspect of hypertext and hypermedia, for example, is its capacity to link sources in ways that disrupt the continuity of a narrative. |
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The reference standard for identifying apneas and hypopneas is the recording of flow with a pneumotachograph but this can disrupt sleep. |
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That is, what about people who deliberately disrupt the continuity that ordinarily characterizes our identity? |
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Large doses of lead and other heavy metals were known to disrupt mental faculties, but the effects of low-level exposure were unknown. |
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Revolutionary messianism, fanaticism, is the only way to disrupt one's embedment in a system whose hegemony is so thoroughly entrenched. |
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We've done a great deal to disrupt their activity and influence the flow of money. |
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When they take industrial action, they intend to disrupt information technology systems. |
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Moreover, it may reduce the risk of an influenza outbreak that will disrupt daily institutional life and care. |
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We hope that we have improved capacity to interdict, to make difficult, to disrupt and prevent terrorism. |
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For instance, influencing or interdicting one key player could disrupt an adversary's decision-making capability. |
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We have perfected a way of replacing broken and cracked firebacks now, without the need to disrupt the fireplace itself. |
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The anti-theft tags are designed to disrupt the criminal networks that target consignments of goods destined for high street shops. |
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It was designed to concentrate firepower to disrupt and destroy the opponent's military capability. |
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Without some intrusive interventions to disrupt patterns of homicides, population trends alone are likely to spur some growth in murder tolls. |
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But time and again irritations creep in which disrupt the flow of the book. |
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Effective fires directed against enemy forces will disrupt enemy plans and schemes of maneuver. |
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Earlier, strong gusts of wind had come funnelling through the valley and it felt for a while like they might threaten to disrupt proceedings. |
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Member states have pursued their domestic interests too eagerly and threatened to disrupt a trade agreement. |
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Solar flares are known to emit low energy cosmic rays which disrupt geomagnetism one or two days later. |
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Mutations that disrupt the signaling interactions between epithelium and the underlying mesenchyme can cause eyelid closure defects. |
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These data suggest that mutations of the out gene disrupt the programmed cell death of the germ cells. |
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The heavy security was apparently prompted by intelligence reports that unidentified groups planned to disrupt the controversial exercises. |
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An important form of political protest, demonstrations often disrupt urban streets and highways. |
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All this can devastate lives, destroy relationships, disrupt work, cloud effective thinking, and affect physical health and ruin futures. |
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They have taken out a group of people who are no longer in a position to disrupt the elections. |
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Why can't we come up with solutions to try and disrupt the eye of the hurricane somehow? |
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Stress, drugs and other chemicals, and a low-fiber diet can destroy these friendly bacteria and disrupt normal digestion and absorption of food. |
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The goal of this operation was to eliminate a key political figure in the Algerian resistance and to disrupt its infrastructure. |
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All of this in spite of insurgents' efforts to disrupt the reconstruction process. |
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They were targeted after police visited or monitored their homes in a bid to to disrupt their activities. |
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Strike action would disrupt performances in the company's current summer festival season. |
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Police said they had mounted the operation to ensure the safety of those attending the club and to disrupt criminal activities. |
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Where insertion does not disrupt the structural gene, the activity is expressed, killing the cell. |
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There was a major effort to disrupt the enemy's command structure on Thursday morning. |
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Every circumstance in church life offers an opportunity for the forces of the abyss to disrupt and destroy. |
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Successful propagandists must also discourage dissenters who might disrupt the party line. |
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The whole rationale of symbolic gestures requires that they disrupt and disturb the secular order. |
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Trans fats disrupt the messages between neural pathways and have been linked with attention deficit disorder and dyslexia. |
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Domestication did not violate nature, disrupt evolution, or enslave animals, but was itself evolutionary. |
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It exhorts viewers to fight against divisive forces that disrupt the peace of a nation, says Sundar. |
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If infection is established, this agent will have a lesser ability to disrupt the complexes because of high antibody avidity. |
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A problem perhaps unique to these children is hyperacusis that can be severe enough to disrupt many routine daily activities. |
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These groups however are discredited by the outrageous actions they take to disrupt hunt meets. |
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The notion that a small group would disrupt the event for reasons of self-interest will be regarded as distasteful. |
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It is feared that low-flying seagulls could disrupt events such as beach volleyball. |
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Look, the last thing that a star wants is to disrupt the lie of a dress by eating a cheeseburger before a show. |
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Mega-doses of folic acid can produce convulsions, interfere with the anticonvulsant medication used by epileptics, and disrupt zinc absorption. |
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Borrowing from English, however, is threatening to disrupt the unity of a great many semantic fields which are linked by these metaphors. |
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Those who failed to mend their ways and continued to disrupt their communities with noise, vandalism and harassment might face eviction. |
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The task force is here to detect, disrupt and defeat terrorist cells in the Horn of Africa. |
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Phthalates, industrial plasticizers that disrupt animal development, were also detected in resident crayfish. |
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Thousands of riot police will be lining the streets amid fears that either anarchists or terrorists will attempt to disrupt proceedings. |
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Instead, according to critics, it has become a miasmal swamp of convoluted regulations that disrupt physician autonomy and patient well-being. |
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Presumably, the shock treatments that elicit bursting disrupt the balance of wall synthesis and lysis responsible for cell wall extension. |
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Stock market traders fear that the violence may reach a level where it will disrupt world oil supplies. |
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For migratory species, such dams can disrupt several stages of the life cycle of the fish. |
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I am sick of the mindless thugs who think they have a right to disrupt other people's lives. |
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Earlier today, Tom Ridge renewed his warning that al Qaeda plans a large-scale attack to disrupt the democratic process. |
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The bill will also restrict the powers of telecommunications companies to disrupt traffic flow by opening roads for cable laying. |
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A midblock crosswalk will completely disrupt the already short Grand-Snelling intersection, causing severe backups on both sides of the light. |
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This crust was to disrupt enemy landings long enough to allow the arrival of local reinforcements. |
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The Germans could use the base to attack British shipping in the area and disrupt the British use of the Suez. |
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No one should be allowed to disrupt the democratic achievements so far attained. |
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We should try and disrupt showings of his films at cinemas, and egg him when he appears in public. |
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Saboteurs have pledged to disrupt hunts over Christmas and predict they will turn violent. |
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Slurping up black gold here will disrupt migratory birds, whales, and seals that help balance the ocean ecosystem of the West Coast. |
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Someone is trying to throw a spanner in the works but we won't allow them to disrupt the rebuilding job we are doing here. |
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He was quick enough to disrupt opposing guards anywhere on the floor while also using his size and strength to stop them. |
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He doesn't give a monkey's about being liked and is not averse to sledging markers to disrupt their concentration for advantage. |
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A strike would disrupt the processing of passengers and goods at the country's sea and air terminals. |
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Ailurophobia can severely disrupt normal life, interfering with school, work, or social relationships. |
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Wind energy doesn't produce sulfur dioxide or nitrous oxides that cause acid rain, and it does not disrupt the Earth's climate. |
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A candidate who can bank those sums is not only a threat to win, but a threat to disrupt the rules by which campaigns are run, paid for, and won. |
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Invading foreign computer networks could shut down radars and electrical plants and disrupt telephone lines without firing a shot. |
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In addition, oils disrupt feeding by insects such as flea beetles, whiteflies, and aphids without necessarily killing them. |
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Life is sweet, and when rejection or responsibility threaten to disrupt my blissful state, I can roll with the punches. |
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Any change in the pattern would have a severe impact on the country, and may disrupt its ability to grow food to feed its 1.3 bln people. |
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They don't thrive at school, and they bloody-mindedly disrupt the learning environment in school classrooms. |
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To disrupt and threaten such work by thuggish behaviour is totally unacceptable. |
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To make that clear she unbarred the door, left a note tacked to it explaining that only if it was a true emergency would they disrupt her peace. |
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With three sacks and 10 tackles for loss, Doss can disrupt the opponent's backfield. |
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His origins disrupt traditional values about what it means to be a Scythian, as they were regarded as barbarous and uncivilised. |
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They asserted that it drew close enough to disrupt the orbits of rocky objects, sending a shower of bolides toward the inner planets. |
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Sickness produces symptoms and collateral damage that disrupt or sabotage health. |
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This would disrupt all ingoing and outgoing Web proxy requests until the service was restarted. |
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Any near-term funding shortfall will affect the overall schedule, and such schedule slips disrupt future funding. |
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They might not know their upper-case letters from their lower, but today's online activists certainly know how to disrupt the enemy. |
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Too much salt, or sodium chloride, can disrupt your body's proper balance of potassium and other electrolytes. |
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You could disrupt a summit devoted to capitalist planning, imperialism and exploitation. |
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The movement went to extremes in its use of buffoonery and provocative behaviour to shock and disrupt public complacency. |
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To disrupt North Vietnam's offensive capabilities until Vietnamization could progress further, Nixon expanded the war into neutral Cambodia. |
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Or if you're typing, and you think what your little finger of your left hand is doing, it'll disrupt. |
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The Turkish battleship Turgud Reis manoeuvred in the Dardanelles to disrupt the Anzac landings, firing across the peninsula. |
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This can disrupt the work of the thyroid gland, which regulates how our bodies burn calories. |
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It's hard enough bird watching, does she have to disrupt the animals in their natural habitat? |
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Once they tried to drive a herd of several hundred ponies through the line to disrupt and stampede the pack animals, but the attempt failed. |
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The camarilla set out deliberately to disrupt these cadres, one by one, in one country after another. |
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He and his men were to penetrate the U.S. defenses and disrupt the flow of supplies heading to their front line. |
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Many of the structures built by society disrupt the natural coastal processes and consequently result in erosion and deposition. |
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It is important not to disrupt those analytical and operational activities. |
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That would disrupt the balance of strategical interests and forces which in my opinion is extremely dangerous. |
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Under pressure from animal rights activists seeking to disrupt the race he raised the tape, but a technical failure led to a clear false start. |
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We should do everything we can to disrupt and destroy any cells, any activity that would do us harm in this country. |
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Each cylinder can generate radio signal to disrupt cellular traffic, said Marshall. |
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If you are going to disrupt a good party and if you are stupid enough to fall out of a tree I want to see you writhing pain. |
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Wind energy doesn't produce sulfur dioxide or nitrous oxides that cause acid rain, and it does hot disrupt the Earth's climate. |
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As Prince Michael took the salute, a small gathering of anti-war protesters made themselves heard, but failed to disrupt proceedings. |
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Currently, six developers have submitted plans to build on sites that could disrupt Swainson's hawk habitat. |
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He also brought forward the company's annual shareholder meeting to late March in what is seen as an effort to disrupt the hostile takeover bid. |
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Both are last-ditch measures to disrupt a missile engagement, not to prevent tracking. |
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An Embassy sometimes soft-pedals a demarche when it is ordered to register a complaint but does not want to disrupt comfortable relations with the host government. |
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As far as disrupting the drug trade, they did nothing of the sort, which is just fine, because no doubt few residents feel it's a good idea to disrupt it. |
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At first examination, the use of computer network attack against military targets to disrupt clearly military activities appears legal and ethical. |
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Further investment in players may improve their weak defence or thin squad, but would disrupt the team spirit which has thus far carried them to the heady heights of fourth. |
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Even relatively innocuous data changes, such as a change of address, can be used to exploit or disrupt systems if they're not audited, says Brady. |
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The first rule never prevented Mississippi State fans from smuggling in cowbells, but home teams now can be penalized if their fans disrupt play with noisemakers. |
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Tight clothes that rub against acne aggravated skin tend to disrupt the area even more and give rise to new pimples by spreading the oil and bacteria. |
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Or, counter-intuitively, global warming could disrupt the North Atlantic Gulf Stream, thereby ushering in another Ice Age and giving Provence a Siberian climate. |
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What Stravinsky leaves out, though is the fact that much of the booing was due to a claque that had been paid by enemies of the composer to disrupt the performance. |
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Chronic misuse can eventually lead to organic vocal fold changes, which appear as vocal nodules and will disrupt the normal laryngeal vibratory pattern causing dysphonia. |
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It seems she has resurfaced just in time to disrupt an illegal mission. |
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The inevitability of globalization was evident even to the demonstrators who scuffled with armed Swiss national police units in seeking to disrupt the proceedings. |
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Policemen are frisking ticket holders at the gates as a security measure in the wake of threats to disrupt the first screenings of the film in the city. |
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Once there, he did everything he could to disrupt the game while the seeker tried to grab the snitch. |
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One more thing, take it in the morning otherwise it can disrupt your sleep since vitamin D and melatonin are inversely related. |
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To have the tally-hoes of the English shires coming in droves to Ireland's hunting counties would severely disrupt the relationship between the hunts and the landowners. |
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Surely, external agencies will make every effort to disrupt the process. |
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If you can eliminate the alpha animals you can disrupt the predation until a new alpha pair is established or transient pack takes over the territory. |
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Animated sequences, overlaid text and dramatisation are combined in an attempt to explore the subject thoroughly and disrupt the narrative sequence. |
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I think they will go ahead, since the West has advised Russia to not do anything to disrupt them. |
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In the process, Apple may be about to disrupt an entirely different market. |
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With no beams or bars to disrupt the view, as there would be in a normal cabriolet or roadster, it's a bit like sitting in the cockpit of a glider. |
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In Yemen, Somalia, Iraq, and Mali, we have to keep working with partners to disrupt and disable these networks. |
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The 200,000-square-foot facility is powered by solar energy so that frequent power outages do not disrupt care. |
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In experiments that test the effect of actin, cells were incubated for 30 min before experiments in medium containing 20 M cytochalasin D to disrupt actin filaments. |
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At the time, it seemed a large nuclear strike would disrupt communications networks to the point that command and control services would collapse. |
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The failure of a laboratory's computer system has the potential to disrupt work flow, compromise business interests, and delay or perturb patient care. |
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The ball was old and the pitch was slow and Jones, as was his wont, was moving around the crease to disrupt the bowler's line. Jack decided to stand up to the stumps. |
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The quantity of downers he is alleged to have taken would really disrupt his coordination, making it almost impossible for him to play golf as well as he does. |
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Hushed, melancholic vocals disrupt the hypnotic interlude, reminiscing on a past love. |
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Because shadows on the riverbed can disrupt underwater ecology, the gangways and above-surface portions of the pool wall may be made of Plexiglas. |
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Their sole purpose in being at the Old Head is to disrupt our business by intimidating, insulting and abusing our guests who come from all over the world. |
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But it is unfortunate that people feel the need to disrupt a gathering where they could peacefully and civilly ask questions. |
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Nevertheless, he and his secretary of the treasury, took the decision to declare the dollar inconvertible and disrupt the international monetary system. |
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Generally, mutations which disrupt or weaken the stem structure reduce the pausing strength, whereas compensatory mutations restore the pausing strength. |
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The elastases disrupt the integrity of the epithelial barrier by disrupting epithelial cell tight junctions and interfering with mucociliary clearance. |
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It is critical that even as we unveil the motivation of opponents and antagonists, we are careful not to inadvertently help them in their effort to disrupt our work. |
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Reformers intended the white slave traffic acts to disrupt the movement of women into red-light districts in order to halt prostitution's production. |
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Meant to enforce a no-fly zone or just to maintain air superiority over an airspace, the weapon is targeted on an aircraft to disrupt its instrumentation. |
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Some were hoping for mass direct action to disrupt the base. |
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The Germans must move to Sweden to block any Russian move there while the army can be used in any fashion to interdict or disrupt Russian operations. |
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Pilot boat men who guide ships in and out of Waterford Port last night balloted in favour of industrial action, a move which could disrupt July's Tall Ships' Race launch. |
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It will specifically target offenders and disrupt their activities. |
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I slowed my pace so as to not disrupt the sleepy horses, but I did not waste time while making my way toward the stall Yahora shared with an old paint mare. |
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Led by Col. Philip Cochran, the Air Commandos began supporting deep incursions by the Chindits into Burma to disrupt enemy communications and supply lines. |
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They claim to have concerns that such a mass influx of people into wildlife areas will disrupt animal mating, damage flora and poison underground freshwater sources. |
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Subverting the derivative subterranean drift of the rest of the album, Smith allows dissonant chording and mechanical clanks to disrupt his serene drones. |
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Every one of the major political parties is capable of mobilising gangs to create deliberate provocations in rival strongholds in order to disrupt voting. |
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In the variegated pupfish, the entrance of a female into a male's territory will stimulate neighbors to intrude and disrupt the courtship of the territorial male. |
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Because rescheduling and canceling appointments disrupt the schedule, patients should be encouraged to give early notice when they will not be able to keep an appointment. |
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Surgery can disrupt your digestive system, resulting in flatulence. |
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When we plow up more land than can be farmed, grade and disrupt natural landscapes, we provide fertile ground for non-native tumbleweeds and exotic invasive plants. |
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However, there are things we can do as a nation to disrupt e-crime. |
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Not only does he pose a genuine threat as a ballcarrier, he has a priceless ability to disrupt the opposition forwards' play. |
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But yesterday morning Todo, a Spanish Andalucian pure-bred, had developed a nasty cough which threatened to disrupt the performance. |
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The antibacterial activity of YML might be attributed to its capacity to disrupt bacterial murein. |
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They hope to identify new ways to disrupt this pathway so neuroblastomas can be more effectively treated. |
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Actually, from a purely consumeristic point of view, it is the televisual programs that disrupt the advertising. |
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By midsummer, Youngs and his fellow conventiclers had begun to actively disrupt Sabbath exercises in Hartford. |
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Acorns contain gallic acid and tannic acid, which damage the kidneys and disrupt the gastrointestinal system. |
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With their demyelinated nerve cells, the plaques disrupt proper nerve transmission. |
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There is no in-game paywall and nothing that should disrupt the balance of the game. |
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Land grabbers and drug barons wanted to disrupt the peace of Karachi by fuelling sectarianism and undermining political harmony, he added. |
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Therefore, it is incumbent upon the man to protect the nature and not to disrupt the dynamic equilibrium set by Almighty Allah. |
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Bowen controlled things intelligently and even a yellow card for flanker Karl Hocking failed to disrupt the Ravens' momentum. |
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These dual goals leave us to question their compatibility, for it seems that elevation requires that desire disrupt the intrapsychic harmony. |
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Chemically diverse toxicants converge on Fyn and c-Cbl to disrupt precursor cell function. |
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I do not let these experiences disrupt my focus in my daily or my responsibility for my family. |
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The flooder may be seeking attention or trying to disrupt the socializing in the rooms. |
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The power cable itself has enough inductance to disrupt the digital signal of the video output cable, due to poor shielding. |
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Port cities were also attacked to try to disrupt trade and sea communications. |
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Joan Curran devised the 'chaff' technique during the Second World War to disrupt radar on enemy planes. |
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Hunt saboteurs trespass on private land to monitor or disrupt the hunt, as this is where the hunting activity takes place. |
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When you have weak internal sovereignty, organisations such as rebel groups will undermine the authority and disrupt the peace. |
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Opponents organised to resist bailiffs and disrupt court hearings of community charge debtors. |
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He also did not want to disrupt the audience's melancholy after the Titanic's sinking. |
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These males commonly disrupt the copulations of their subordinates while they themselves can mount without inference. |
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First deployed to disrupt the hunt of the Icelandic whaling fleet, the Rainbow Warrior would quickly become a mainstay of Greenpeace campaigns. |
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Such noise can disrupt cetacean behavior such as their use of biosonar for orientation and communication. |
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During World War II the Luftwaffe bombed the post office at Gutcher in an attempt to disrupt the communications system. |
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In war, pipelines are often the target of military attacks, as destruction of pipelines can seriously disrupt enemy logistics. |
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The power of intersex bodies is their ability to disrupt social norms. |
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Local powers could disrupt the routes as could the wet season and road use was highly dependent on constant maintenance. |
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Foxes have been known to steal chickens, disrupt rubbish bins and damage gardens. |
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In an effort to disrupt the French alliance with William, Henry mounted an attack into France in 1128, forcing Louis to cut his aid to William. |
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The problem with this model is that funding can be inconsistent and can disrupt the development and operation of services. |
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During the soil preparation stage tillers and plows will be used to disrupt the soil. |
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The spice trade soon revived but the Portuguese would not be able to fully monopolize nor disrupt this trade. |
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In 1651, Fort Nassau was dismantled and relocated in an attempt to disrupt trade and reassert control, receiving the name Fort Casimir. |
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They engaged in a systematic campaign of terror amongst the rural Nicaraguan population to disrupt the social reform projects of the Sandinistas. |
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Subsidence can damage buildings, and disrupt the flow of streams and rivers by interfering with the natural drainage. |
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Those who seek to disrupt the stability from the outside may adulate the processes of change in order to make them hit rock bottom. |
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According to the DPR Transportation Ministry, Ukrainian saboteurs organized 20 blasts on rail tracks to disrupt transportation. |
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If that failed, they could disrupt the proceedings by threat of force. |
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Since humans are biologicalls diurnal, staying up at night can disrupt the body's biological clocks. |
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Such flares sometimes disrupt the Earth's magnetic field causing a magnetic storm that can be recorded with a magnetograph. |
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We would organise commemorative services and the police would disrupt them with their sjamboks and teargas. |
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Several Lords threatened to disrupt the Government's other bills if they continued with the plan to abolish the hereditaries' right to sit in the House of Lords. |
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Members of the mercantile community were in an uproar as they felt the ensuing confusion and inconvenience of having no local courts would disrupt commercial activity. |
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He had doubts about accepting the position because it came with so little profit and would disrupt his law practice and take him away from the city. |
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Occasional tropical cyclones generally occur between January to March and tend to disrupt the weather for only about three days, bringing heavy rain. |
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Since the stem nodes tend to disrupt the length of the fiber bundles, thereby limiting quality, tall, relatively unbranched plants with long internodes have been selected. |
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Magnetic fields from electronics can easily disrupt the needle, preventing it from aligning with the Earth's magnetic fields, causing inaccurate readings. |
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That is, since atheists gave themselves to no Supreme Authority and no law and had no fear of eternal consequences, they were far more likely to disrupt society. |
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Some plastic additives are known to disrupt the endocrine system when consumed, others can suppress the immune system or decrease reproductive rates. |
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Muller, think that geomagnetic reversals are not spontaneous processes but rather are triggered by external events that directly disrupt the flow in the Earth's core. |
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During the night there was sporadic fighting, and the Poles called for frequent artillery bombardments to disrupt the German retreat from the sector. |
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To do so, he needed to ensure that the Royal Navy would be unable to disrupt the invasion flotilla, which would require control of the English Channel. |
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In an interview shown on the BBC2 4 July 2009, John Jenkins repeated his intention that the bombs were never planted or timed to hurt people but just to disrupt the ceremony. |
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This is because the length of the vote is unpredictable and if it continues for longer than allocated it can disrupt other debates and meetings later in the day. |
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This was disputed by Mariot Leslie, a former UK permanent representative to NATO, who stated that NATO would not want to disrupt its arrangements by excluding Scotland. |
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The German strategic bombing offensive intensified as night attacks on London and other cities in the Blitz, but largely failed to disrupt the British war effort. |
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Certain DNA elements such as transposons, fragments of DNA that replicate within an organism's genome, can however disrupt this functioning and disable genes. |
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That is, since atheists gave themselves to no Supreme Authority and no law, and had no fear of eternal consequences, they were far more likely to disrupt society. |
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However, as conspiracy neared completion in 1688, the English government sometimes used to disrupt this correspondence by holding up the whole mail delivery system. |
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Additives called emulsifiers disrupt the intestine's protection from bacteria and boost inflammation in mice, scientists report in the March 5 Nature. |
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Exposure to environmental toxicants that disrupt sperm production or the function of reproductive hormones or sperm may increase the risk of male infertility. |
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Poxviruses have evolved a wide-spectrum of open-reading frames encoding immunoregulators which bind host proteins and disrupt the antiviral immune response. |
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Representatives of Taliban have expressed their intention to use all the strength to disrupt the election campaign, including by attacks on organizers and electioneerers. |
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Occasionally, the physical presence of SVAs can precipitate arrhythmias, obstruct a coronary artery resulting in myocardial ischemia, or disrupt normal hemodynamics. |
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Our previous studies clearly show that desynchronized circadian clocks disrupt the sleep, performance and cardiac parameters of night-shift workers. |
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Not only do chemical defoliants such as 2,4-D cause acute illness, they disrupt hormones needed for normal operation of the thyroid gland, kidneys, ovaries and testes. |
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If such a missile is launched at the plane, a turret on the pod shoots a laser at the missile to disrupt its guidance signals and throw it off course. |
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Not getting enough shuteye has been linked with weight gain because it increases the production of hunger hormones which can disrupt your metabolism. |
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Violence did disrupt the vote in some of the more conflictive states. |
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The study suggests that anorexia could be caused in part by a disruption in the normal processing of cholesterol, which may disrupt mood and eating behaviour. |
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Such a walkout could seriously disrupt the atmosphere of the games, leaving the host city disconnected from cities such as Nottingham and Sheffield. |
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A computer virus is a program that replicates by inserting or attaching itself to other computer programs or media and can disrupt a computer system's functional abilities. |
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He may use the entire system as a means to the achievement of his national and international ambitions, but to do so he must not disrupt its impersonal workings. |
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