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When and crowded
When no games were being held, the Circus at the time of Catullus ( mid-1st century BC ) was likely " a dusty open space with shops and booths ... a colourful crowded disreputable area " frequented by " prostitutes, jugglers, fortune tellers and low-class performing artists.
When Noble resumed duty in 1946 the enrollment had increased to such an extent that almost 600 students were crowded into a building originally designed for 350.
When Burr Caswell arrived the area was a virtual wilderness, giant pines crowded the shores of the lake, wolves wee common and travel was hard.
When the schools became too crowded due to the influx of jobs in nearby Wichita, El Dorado, and Andover, the school board voted to build a middle school in Benton.
After the game's release, a reviewer for Game Revolution praised its sound, saying that " When you're in a crowded city, it sounds like a crowded city.
When doing photometry in a very crowded field, such as a globular cluster, where the profiles of stars overlap significantly, one must use de-convolution techniques, such as point spread function fitting, to determine the individual fluxes of the overlapping sources.
When a partner or friend is not available at such a time, some people satisfy this need anonymously in a crowded venue, such as a bar, disco, pop concert, street festival, etc.
When he lectures at the Royal Institution the theatre is crowded.
When Turner brought Imberg to the Culver City, California corporate headquarters of Ashton-Tate to be trained, the offices were so crowded that the only space available for Imberg was a small desk beside a large photocopier, with no phone line ; the offices were so crowded that when Turner needed to conduct a confidential meeting, he would have it standing up in the nearby restroom.
When the team has a match at Urawa Komaba Stadium in Urawa-ku or Saitama Stadium, the town becomes more and more crowded with the supporters.
When walking a dog in crowded places they can get easily confused and lost or they could be involved in car accidents.
When the film premiered, it caused the collapse of the Gran Via Madrileña, where nearly 10, 000 fans crowded the streets.
* The 1989 American film When Harry Met Sally ... is well known for a scene in which the character Sally, played by Meg Ryan, fakes an orgasm while sitting in a crowded deli in order to demonstrate how persuasive a fake orgasm can be.
When it was Time For Beany, the entire family was crowded around the 6 " ( or so ) television screen.
When Howard's men attacked they were crowded back to the left, meeting the same resistance and were repulsed.
When one saw him across a crowded room, one couldn't wait to get together with him and have a chat and a catch-up.
When they visit a nude beach crowded with other young tourists, they are hesitant at first but find themselves getting caught up in the uninhibited energy that surrounds them.
When he gets on the Skyway, the Young Man tells Calder that the bomb is in his radio but he must not throw it away because it will explode on impact, and the paths below the Skyway are crowded with patrons.
When the Stadium MRT Station was under construction, Kallang MRT Station was crowded with people, when either the Singapore Indoor Stadium or the National Stadium had an event.
* Ken and Barbie: When Sharon mentions her childhood dreams, Kevin looks around at all the plastic people in the crowded noisy room and says, " Ken and Barbie had it easy.
When this shrine was first built, Telok Ayer Street, where the shrine was located, was a sandy beach crowded with sailing craft.

When and absence
Bruce Hindmarsh suggests that the secular popularity of " Amazing Grace " is due to the absence of any mention of God in the lyrics until the fourth verse ( by Excell's version, the fourth verse begins " When we've been there ten thousand years "), and that the song represents the ability of humanity to transform itself instead of a transformation taking place at the hands of God.
When the radiometer is heated in the absence of a light source, it turns in the forward direction ( i. e. black sides trailing ).
This absence of investment contributes to the marginalisation of these zones. When unfavourable agro-climatic conditions are combined with an absence of infrastructure and access to markets, as well as poorly adapted production techniques and an underfed and undereducated population, most such zones are excluded from development.
When Greek orthography was codified by grammarians in the Hellenistic era, they used a diacritic symbol derived from this half-H shape to signal the presence of / h /, and added as its counterpart a reverse-shaped diacritic to denote absence of / h /.
When the king saw Anne for the first time in late December 1539, a week before the scheduled wedding, he did not find her attractive but was unable, for diplomatic reasons and in the absence of a suitable pretext, to cancel the marriage.
) When a landline phone is inactive or " on hook ", the circuitry at the telephone exchange detects the absence of direct current and therefore " knows " that the phone is on hook ( therefore, only AC current will go through ) with only the alerting device electrically connected to the line.
When a landowner left England to fight in the Crusades, he needed someone to run his estate in his absence, often to pay and receive feudal dues.
During the temporary absence of the two men, she meets Cecily, each woman indignantly declaring that she is the one engaged to “ Ernest .” When Jack and Algernon reappear, their deceptions are exposed.
When the line is broken, the continuous spacing ( open circuit, no current flowing ) causes a receiving teleprinter to cycle continuously, even in the absence of stop bits.
When, after an absence of fourteen months, Cyprian returned to his diocese, he defended leaving his post in letters to the other North African bishops and a tract " De lapsis ," and called a council of North African bishops at Carthage to consider the treatment of the lapsed and the apparent schism of Felicissimus ( 251 ).
When used to represent data in an asynchronous communication scheme, the absence of a neutral state requires other mechanisms for bit synchronization when a separate clock signal is not available.
When Fairport Convention reformed in 1985 after a six-year absence, Mattacks was recruited as drummer.
When it was discovered what had happened, Gylippus went into exile and was condemned to death in his absence.
When Andronikos arrived he found that during his absence he had lost popular support, and that Isaac had been proclaimed emperor.
When Perseus returned to Seriphos with the Gorgon's head, he found that, in his absence, his mother was threatened and abused by Polydectes, who made her work as a palace slave.
In 1989 Norman explained why Home at Last, the third album in his Second Trilogy, was released before the other two albums: " When it was suggested that my " comeback ", after ten years absence, might be a difficult passage back into the public arena, it was decided that Stranded in Babylon might be too radical a message for the first release.
When examining transdifferentiated cells, it is important to look for markers of the target cell type and the absence of donor cell markers which can be accomplished using green fluorescent protein or immunodetection.
When the town was first settled, around 1780, the absence of roads required entry by means of the Delaware River.
When her boss, Katharine Parker ( Sigourney Weaver ), breaks her leg skiing, Tess uses Parker's absence and connections, including her errant beau Jack Trainer ( Harrison Ford ), to put forward her own idea for a merger deal.
When William left for Ireland in June 1690 Marlborough became commander of all troops and militia in England, and was appointed a member of the Council of Nine to advise Mary on military matters in the King's absence ; but she made scant effort to disguise her distaste at his appointment – " I can neither trust or esteem him ," she wrote to William.
When William left for Holland in July Marlborough was one of the Lords Justices left running the country in his absence ; but striving to reconcile his close Tory connections with that of the dutiful royal servant was difficult, leading Marlborough to complain – " The King's coldness to me still continues.
When Sir John Croke, suspected in engaging in a conspiracy, sent him some sugar loaves to excuse his absence from a case, Hale remarked that " I cannot think that Sir John believes that the King's Justices come into the country to take bribes.
When the concept of the temperaments was on the wane, many critics dropped the phlegmatic, or defined it purely negatively, such as the German philosopher Immanuel Kant, as the absence of temperament.

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