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bodies and often
They keep their wings and feet pressed tightly against their bodies, and in spite of their often colorful attire you may very well mistake them for lumps of dirt.
Professional anthropological bodies often object to the use of anthropology for the benefit of the state.
Practictioners say such problems are often caused by people repeatedly mis-using their bodies over a long period of time, for example by standing or sitting with their weight unevenly distributed, holding their heads incorrectly, or walking or running inefficiently.
While some Anglicans claim it for their communion, their views are often nuanced and there is widespread reluctance to ' unchurch ' Christian bodies which lack it.
While administrative decision-making bodies are often controlled by larger governmental units, their decisions could be reviewed by a court of general jurisdiction under some principle of judicial review based upon due process ( United States ) or fundamental justice ( Canada ).
In the early phases bones of numerous bodies are often found together and it has been argued that this suggests that in death at least, the status of individuals was played down.
However, all other bodies and agencies, except for the European Agency for Reconstruction, have their own emblem, albeit often inspired by the flag's design and colours.
However, data now show that while people of East Asian origin may often have smaller bodies, they tend to have larger brains and higher IQs than average whites.
Although the Greek-language-origin prefix geo refers to Earth, " geology " is often used in conjunction with the names of other planetary bodies when describing their composition and internal processes: examples are " the geology of Mars " and " Lunar geology ".
It has the same cause as all other inflation: money-issuing bodies, central or otherwise, produce currency to pay spiralling costs, often from lax fiscal policy, or the mounting costs of warfare.
The term " international human rights law " is often used as a category of reference to describe these systems, but this can be a source of confusion as there is no separate entity as " international human rights law " but an interlocking system of non-binding conventions, international treaties, domestic law, international organisations and political bodies.
" After the death of Iran's first Supreme Leader, Khomeini, Hezbollah's governing bodies developed a more " independent role " and appealed to Iran less often.
Despite the ape-like morphology of the bodies, H. habilis remains are often accompanied by primitive stone tools ( e. g. Olduvai Gorge, Tanzania and Lake Turkana, Kenya ).
Lindow Moss is a lowland raised mire ; this type of peat bog often produces the best preserved bog bodies, allowing more detailed analysis.
These instruments often had bodies covered with animal skin, and it is unknown exactly when it became replaced with a wooden soundboard.
Italian Merlots are often characterized by their light bodies and herbal notes.
There are many governing bodies which often host exhibition games and tournaments.
Ore bodies often contain more than one valuable metal.
# When finite strains ( larger strains, as opposed to infinitesimal strains ) are applied to solid bodies, the stress-strain relationships are often much more complicated ( i. e. Non-Hookean ).
The word is often used to distinguish law made by legislative bodies from case law, decided by courts, and regulations issued by government agencies.
Salukis appear on Egyptian tombs increasingly commonly from The Middle Kingdom ( 2134 BC-1785 BC ) onward, and have often been found mummified alongside the bodies of the Pharaohs in the Pyramids.
While the relatively dimmer bodies, as well as the population as the whole, are reddish ( V-I = 0. 3 – 0. 6 ), the bigger objects are often more neutral in colour ( infrared index V-I < 0. 2 ).
In The Legend of Zelda: Phantom Hourglass, there are monsters known as Zora Warriors who often emerge from bodies of water.
The Noerr-Pennington doctrine is a rule of law that often prohibits the application of antitrust law to statements made by competitors before public bodies: a monopolist may freely go before the city council and encourage the denial of its competitor's building permit without being subject to Sherman Act liability.
Often considered a neutral country and blessed with a professional diplomatic corps, Uruguay is often called on to preside international bodies.

bodies and swelled
Great numbers of Alans are found to have joined the conquerors on their further progress, and large bodies of Alans afterwards swelled the waves of Goths, Vandals, and Sueves, that rolled across the Western Empire.

bodies and heat
Even today range riders will come upon mummified bodies of men who attempted nothing more difficult than a twenty-mile hike and slowly lost direction, were tortured by the heat, driven mad by the constant and unfulfilled promise of the landscape, and who finally died.
One could also add to these analogies that steel loses its magnetism by heat, which proves that steel becomes a better conductor through a rise in temperature, just as electrical bodies do.
For weeks after the battle, bodies washed up along the Egyptian coast, decaying slowly in the intense dry heat.
These two bodies, to which we can give or from which we can remove the heat without causing their temperatures to vary, exercise the functions of two unlimited reservoirs of caloric.
With its high specific heat capacity, water acts as a temperature-stabilizing heat reservoir, and land areas near large bodies of water — especially the oceans — experience less variation in temperature.
In an inelastic collision, some of the kinetic energy of the colliding bodies is converted into other forms of energy such as heat or sound.
The region of the north, in proportion as it is removed from the heat of the sun and is chilled with snow and frost, is so much the more healthful to the bodies of men and fitted for the propagation of nations, just as, on the other hand, every southern region, the nearer it is to the heat of the sun, the more it abounds in diseases and is less fitted for the bringing up of the human race.
When such bodies are subjected to a sinusoidally oscillating stress, the strain is neither exactly in phase with the stress ( as it would be for a perfectly elastic solid ) nor 90 degrees out of phase ( as it would be for a perfectly viscous liquid ) but rather exhibits a strain that lags the stress at a value between zero and 90 degrees: i. e., Some of the energy is stored and recovered in each cycle, and some is dissipated as heat.
Empirical temperatures lead to calorimetry for heat transfer in terms of the mechanical properties of bodies, without reliance on mechanical concepts of energy.
In 1875, after quantifying the heats of reaction for a large number of compounds, Berthelot proposed the principle of maximum work, in which all chemical changes occurring without intervention of outside energy tend toward the production of bodies or of a system of bodies which liberate heat.
Microclimates exist, for example, near bodies of water which may cool the local atmosphere, or in heavily urban areas where brick, concrete, and asphalt absorb the sun's energy, heat up, and reradiate that heat to the ambient air: the resulting urban heat island is a kind of microclimate.
* 1791 – Pierre Prévost shows that all bodies radiate heat, no matter how hot or cold they are
Fourier introduced the series for the purpose of solving the heat equation in a metal plate, publishing his initial results in his 1807 Mémoire sur la propagation de la chaleur dans les corps solides ( Treatise on the propagation of heat in solid bodies ), and publishing his Théorie analytique de la chaleur in 1822.
Marine mammals are adept at thermoregulation using dense fur or blubber to reduce heat loss ; as well as circulatory adjustments to conserve their body temperature ( counter-current heat exchangers ); torpedo shaped bodies, reduced appendages, and large size to prevent heat loss.
However, humans vary strongly in the amount and distribution of body hair and comparably-sized mammals adapted to semi-aquatic lifestyles actually have dense, insulating fur or large, barrel-shaped bodies that retain heat well in water.
With friction, momentum of the two bodies is lost to the heat generated between the surface that the two bodies are sliding upon and the sound generated by the movement of the bodies through some medium ( both of which are radiated out of the two body system ).

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