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Popularity and dwindled
Popularity of custom games dwindled in 2009 when game hosting bots became mainstream, forcing legitimate players to be unable to host games themselves, and the lobbies of bot hosted games to rarely ever fill.

Popularity and after
Popularity of CATV started in the 1980s after the Marcos administration.
Niven resumed his acting career after his demobilisation, and was voted the second most popular British actor in the 1945 Popularity Poll of British film stars.
Popularity of the Heath bar grew after the war, although the manufacturing process remained largely a hands-on, family-run operation.
Popularity began to increase again in the 1970s and after.
Popularity and distribution declined after World War II.

Popularity and very
Popularity of sports tended to conform to class divisions, with tennis and yachting popular among the very wealthy and football ( soccer ) favoured by the poorest.

Popularity and on
Popularity of the VFL grew rapidly and by 1925 with 12 teams, had become the most prominent league in the game and would dominate so many aspects of the sport from that point on.
Popularity can be established to a greater or lesser degree depending on product and market.
In the early 2000s, rights to the album reverted to Alexakis, who planned to remix the album and reissue it on his own label, Popularity Recordings.
He apparently remixed the original recordings in 2002 with the intention of releasing them on his new label, Popularity Recordings.

Popularity and early
In the early 2000s, Alexakis established his own label, Popularity Recordings, as a subsidiary of Artemis Records.
Popularity achieved its zenith in the late 1950s and early 1960s.

Popularity and American
Popularity of Salukis dramatically increased, and the Saluki Club of America was founded in 1927, with recognition by The American Kennel Club following in 1929.
* Cambridge History of English and American Literature: Popularity of the Masque in the age of Elizabeth
Popularity in America and Australia was muted, with the track falling short of an American Top 40 position and being restricted to a small musical niche with Australians.

Popularity and literature
In 2006, an estimated 2, 000 FDTD-related publications appeared in the science and engineering literature ( see Popularity ).

Popularity and from
Popularity quickly followed in the rest of Europe, and it became a global phenomenon from the early-to-mid 90s onwards.
* Popularity of Needle Exchange programs has grown over time, more than quadrupling in six years from 1993-1999.
Popularity of the NDP gradually increased under leader Grant Notley, who led the party from 1968 until his death in a plane crash in 1984, and was the party's sole MLA until 1982.
Popularity of the term among teenagers rose in the mid-2000s, with the spread from the Internet written form to use in spoken language.
Popularity of the pure-blood eugenics theory came from a homegrown racial purity or monoculture national belief that has been part of Japanese society since ancient times.

Popularity and .
Popularity of the song increased greatly following the September 11, 2001 attacks ; at some sporting events it was sung in addition to the traditional singing of the national anthem.
Popularity of the book in Italy was such that a Milan bookseller issued an Italian edition in 1610.
Popularity of EVM has grown significantly in recent years beyond government contracting, in which sector its importance continues to rise ( e. g., recent new DFAR rules ), in part because EVM can also surface in and help substantiate contract disputes.
Popularity with all parts of the Labour movement saw him through the ballot of Labour MPs to win the leadership vote.
In 2005, Vega was the setting for the CMT reality show, Popularity Contest.
Popularity in psychology grew as the public became more aware of the field.
Popularity in the sport has grown since the 2002 Winter Olympics and now includes participation by some countries that do not have or cannot have a track because of climate, terrain or monetary limitations.
Popularity took another major surge in 2009 with UFC 100 and the 10 events preceding it including UFC 90, 91, 92, 94 and 98.
* Ottenberg, June C. " Popularity of Two Operas in Philadelphia in the 1790s.
Popularity is the quality of being well-liked or common, or having a high social status.
Popularity figures are an important part of many people's personal value systems and form a vital component of success in people-oriented fields such as management, politics, and entertainment, among others.
* The Cycle of Popularity: Interpersonal Relations Among Female Adolescents # Donna Eder ; Sociology of Education, Vol.
The name Nakula generally means full of love and the male characteristics implied by the name are: Intelligence, Focus, Hard-Work, Handsomeness, Health, Attractiveness, Success, Popularity, Respect, and unconditional Love.
These include Differentiation, Satisfaction or Loyalty, Perceived Quality, Leadership or Popularity, Perceived Value, Brand Personality, Organizational Associations, Brand Awareness, Market Share, and Market Price and Distribution Coverage.
* Popularity of folk music of Sufi genres: introduction of philosophy and religion in music.

dwindled and bit
Bit by bit, the population of the hamlet dwindled.
In the 70 and 80's this game would often attract a crowd around 6000, although it has dwindled a bit over the years the respect and rivalry is still noticeable

dwindled and after
Support for CND dwindled after the 1963 Test Ban Treaty.
While monetary and military Libyan support for the Sahrawi cause dwindled in the mid-1980s, after a rapprochement with Morocco, the enemy of Polisario, some Sahrawi refugee students are still able to apply for higher education in Libya.
Commission opportunities dwindled with the worldwide depression after 1929.
Two hundred years after the construction of Ptolemy's canal, Cleopatra seems to have had no west-east waterway passage, because the Pelusiac branch of the Nile River, which had fed Ptolemy's west-east canal, had by that time dwindled, being choked with silt.
With the Yellow Kid's merchandising success as an advertising icon the strip came to represent the crass commercial world it had originally lampooned, and publication of both versions stopped abruptly after only three years in early 1898, as circulation wars between the rival papers dwindled.
He was obliged to flee after the victory of Theodosius I. Augustine records that the Tertullianist group dwindled to almost nothing in his own time, and finally was reconciled to the church and handed over their basilica.
The Hobbits ' numbers dwindled, and their stature became progressively smaller after the Fourth Age.
Commercial traffic on the canal dwindled in the second half of the 19th century and early 20th century, and freight moved from rail to road after World War II, leading to the abandonment of the goods yards in the early 1980s.
The number of Hungarians dwindled after the Treaty of Trianon of 1920 when Transylvania united with the Kingdom of Romania and the fall of Communism in December 1989 saw most German families leaving the town and the country to Germany.
During the American Civil War the trade with the South dwindled, and after the War much of Indiana saw New Albany as too friendly to the South.
Although the monastery was well maintained for many decades, after the number of resident nuns and finances dwindled, the chapel deteriorated and was vacated in summer of 2009.
There were 30 lumber mills operating in the valley after the war, but by the late 1980s the number had dwindled to just one.
It quickly became the largest school in the state, but dwindled to nearly nothing after the civil war.
In 1970, after her film roles dwindled, and after turning down the role of Carol Brady on The Brady Bunch, a role that ultimately went to her best friend, Florence Henderson, Jones was more than happy to be the producers ' first choice to audition for the lead role of Shirley Partridge in The Partridge Family, an ABC sitcom based on the real-life musical family The Cowsills.
There was a social club, called the Fetcham Sports and Social Club, but this closed in 2001 after the membership dwindled.
Anthea is experiencing a terrible drought after many nuclear wars, and the population has dwindled to less than 300.
Enforcement of these laws seems to have dwindled gradually, and the hat is not often seen in pictures after the 15th century, although the ring continues after that.
He made one final attempt to resist the Restoration of 1660 after escaping a month later, but his support had dwindled.
Even after the death of Gil-galad, as the Elves dwindled in numbers by the year, Mithlond remained a focal point of the history of the northern part of Middle-earth.
Eventually the clientele dwindled after the arrival of television ( in 1953 ) and by 1958 a decision was made to close it down.
By the end of 1994, his approval ratings had dwindled to 34 percent after being as high as 53 percent.
Over time, the political differences between SPD and USPD dwindled, and following the assassination of foreign minister Walther Rathenau by right wing extremists in June 1922, the two parties ' fractions in the Reichstag formed a common working group on July 14, 1922 ; two months later, on September 24, the parties officially merged again after a joint party convention in Nürnberg, adopting the name Vereinigte Sozialdemokratische Partei Deutschlands ( VSPD, " United Social Democratic Party of Germany "), which was shortened again to SPD in 1924.
As a result of this double blow, numbers dwindled and after a brief combination with Rosehill School in Gloucestershire the remaining boys went with the then Headmaster, W. J. V. Tomlinson ( Bill ), to join the old rival Summer Fields School, in Oxford.

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