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Some Related Sentences

Some and bridges
Some double-decker bridges only use one level for street traffic ; the Washington Avenue Bridge in Minneapolis reserves its lower level for automobile traffic and its upper level for pedestrian and bicycle traffic ( predominantly students at the University of Minnesota ).
Some bridges attract people attempting suicide, and become known as suicide bridges.
Some bridges also allow for alternate tunings at the touch of a button.
Some are deliberately created for access-such as bridges and walkways.
Some of the bridges and other constructions used by the former railway have become well loved landmarks, especially the " Fontevecchia " bridge, set in a pleasant countryside location.
Some bridges thus had deliberate openings, usually tubular, in their spandrels to allow floodwater to pass through.
Some of the philosophical languages of the 17th-18th centuries could be regarded as proto-auxlangs, as they were intended by their creators to serve as bridges among people of different languages as well as to disambiguate and clarify thought.
Some natural bridges may look like arches, but they form in the path of streams that wear away and penetrate the rock.
Some tolls are collected to accumulate finances to build future capacity expansion and maintenance of roads, tunnels, bridges, etc.
Some swineherds see the giant Bendigeidfrân wading the sea and reported to Matholwch who retreated beyond a river and destroyed the bridges.
Some examples include historical places, monuments, zoos, aquaria, museums and art galleries, botanical gardens, buildings and structures ( e. g., castles, libraries, former prisons, skyscrapers, bridges ), national parks and forests, theme parks and carnivals, living history museums, ethnic enclave communities, historic trains and cultural events.
Some 2 miles ( 3 km ) south of Botley, the river passes between the villages of Bursledon and Lower Swanwick and is crossed by the M27 motorway, the Portsmouth to Southampton railway line and the A27 road on three substantial bridges.
Some parts can be traced, while some bridges still exist.
Some Allied units, particularly the 3rd U. S. Infantry Division " Rock of the Marne ", held fast or even counterattacked, but by the evening, the Germans had captured a bridgehead either side of Dormans deep and wide, despite the intervention of 225 French bombers, which dropped of bombs on the makeshift bridges.
Some of the roads and bridges in former Warsaw Pact countries were designed such that T-72s can travel along in formation, but NATO tanks could not pass at all, or just one-by-one, significantly reducing their mobility.
Some tentative attacks across the bridges were repulsed by Wool's regulars.
Some countries, such as New Zealand with its Resource Management Act and its Building Act, use the term " consent " for the legal process that provide planning permission for developments like subdivisions, bridges or buildings.
Some bridges and cuttings still survive but the site of the goods station, which was also the town's original railway station before the one near the county buildings was built, is now mainly residential properties.
Some of these bridges replaced predecessors unable to sustain increased traffic ; others were erected at new sites to provide more access points.
Some venues contain smaller tracks inside larger ones, with access tunnels and bridges for spectators.
Some weirs are used as bridges for people to walk along.
Some tidal generators can be built into the structures of existing bridges, involving virtually no aesthetic problems.
Some larger clapper bridges, such as at Dartmeet and Bellever, have collapsed – their slabs swept away by floods, or raided for building or wall construction.

Some and accommodate
Some proponents of the anthropic principle reason that it explains why the Universe has the age and the fundamental physical constants necessary to accommodate conscious life.
Some of Flaherty's staging, such as building a roofless igloo for interior shots, was done to accommodate the filming technology of the time.
Some parts of the classification offer options to accommodate different kinds of libraries.
Some tubes had an electrode terminating at a top cap which reduced interelectrode capacitance to improve high-frequency performance, kept a possibly very high plate voltage away from lower voltages, and could accommodate one more electrode than allowed by the base.
Some designs might even accommodate large numbers of people, essentially " cities in space " where people would make their homes.
Some leaders in the South tried to accommodate to new conditions.
Some enterprising families set up boarding houses to accommodate the influx of men ; in such cases, the women often brought in steady income while their husbands searched for gold.
Some of the early solar watches of the 1970s had innovative and unique designs to accommodate the array of solar cells needed to power them ( Synchronar, Nepro, Sicura and some models by Cristalonic, Alba, Seiko and Citizen ).
On 6 March 2009, however, as part of a massive new public works program, Silvio Berlusconi's government announced that plans to construct the Messina Bridge had been fully revived, pledging EUR 1. 3 billion as a contribution to its estimated cost of EUR 6. 1 billion Some 3. 3 km long and 60 m wide, the bridge would be supported by two 382 m pillars, each higher than the Empire State Building, and accommodate six freeway lanes, a railway ( for up to 200 trains a day ), and two walkways.
Some early development took place to accommodate the popularity of the nearby Sadler's Wells, which became a resort in the 16th century, but the 19th century saw the greatest expansion in housing, soon to cover the whole parish.
Some implementations vary the size or intensity of the dot depending on the degree of similarity of the two characters, to accommodate conservative substitutions.
Some literatures do not consider Taylor micro-scales as a characteristic length scale and consider the energy cascade contains only the largest and smallest scales ; while the later accommodate both the inertial sub-range and the viscous-sub layer.
Some trees can accommodate higher order primitives such as splines instead of simple triangles.
Some languages, such as English, are said to be stress-timed languages ; that is, stressed syllables appear at a roughly constant rate, and non-stressed syllables are shortened to accommodate this.
Some stadiums are designed primarily for a single sport while others can accommodate different events, particularly ones with retractable seating.
Some gatherings have taken place in Ralph Bunche Park, but it is too small to accommodate large demonstrations.
Some standard masonry units like blocks and bricks are made with strategically placed voids to accommodate rebar, which is then secured in place with grout.
Some bags are designed specially to accommodate women's body shapes.
Some cranks on children's bikes have more than one pedal hole so that the pedal can be moved to accommodate growth.
Some cranksets have been produced that incorporate a ratcheting mechanism to accommodate coasting.
Some anvils have several hardy and pritchel holes, to accommodate a wider variety of hardy tools and pritchels.
Some office towers maintain a helipad on their roofs in order to accommodate air taxi services.
Some of the new gates will be able to accommodate either one widebody or two narrowbody aircraft.
Some of these effects are more apparent, such as the reversal of the Chicago River to accommodate the growing pollution levels and trade on the river.

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