In building scenarios, the group used a time span of 20 years, but some of the scenarios are more futuristic than others. |
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I once ordered flowers at another florist's with the same time span for delivery and the flowers arrived on time. |
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Tilapia cichlids can establish a strong population in a very short time span if the conditions are right. |
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In that 13-second time span, people just watched to see which one will become victorious. |
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Forty years is also a time span of special significance in several other civilizations. |
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I am not discounting global warming, I just don't see it happening over a time span of a few weeks rather a century or two. |
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It is a time span that contains such a variety of genres that such a task would seem to be almost unmanageable. |
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Maybe I've just naturally reached the end of the time span that I'm able to cope with the sheer monotony of revision and exams. |
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To put this time span in perspective, two billion years ago our ancestors were microscopic single-celled amoebas. |
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They know well that in the short time span up to June 11 and with election fever in the air this debate will not be reasonable. |
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Since the time span of the play covered almost 70 years, three actors played Nellie at the various stages in her life. |
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We do not know who wrote most of them but they cover a time span of 150 years so they could not have all been written by Hippocrates. |
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This does mean that we will be making that delivery later in the day and over a longer time span. |
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Second, Taiwan stretched its preparatory period over a longer time span than did China. |
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This time span covers the florescence of the Cahokian polity and the subsequent social and cultural realignment. |
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Previously, equipment and business assets had to be depreciated over a five to seven year time span. |
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But the wider the time span or the geographic stretch, the harder it is to make many fine distinctions. |
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The digital age probably has produced more fads in its short life than any other human endeavor in a comparable time span. |
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Combining these two types of data we computed the offset between UTC and GPS Time for the whole time span of the test. |
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Three to four years is the usual time span for the player-caddy relationship. |
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But it became clear that at least five forces, including the two in Yorkshire, would not hit the Government's target in such a short time span. |
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An experiment on this scale has never done before, let alone in such a short time span. |
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History has been repeated once more with a time span of sixty years in between the teams. |
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With research, the time span is very long. The discretion in research is very long. |
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Thanks to this time span, it is also possible to implement remote-controlled functions from GSM cellphones. |
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If you know computers, you know that three years is a huge time span. |
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This time span is too short to make heavy investments and to build up new economic and technical channels. |
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If a person's date of infection resulted outside of that time span, he or she was simply out of luck, according to the government. |
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The Global Commission was not an organization and was not intended to outlive its allotted time span. |
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If there was an urgency, this could have been dealt with in a much shorter time span. |
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It is therefore necessary to consider the exact time span of the restructuring plan. |
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The time span for approval and the legislative processes is also an uncertain factor. |
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Paris Observatory has been involved for a long time in the computation of planetary orbits variations over an extended time span. |
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A video protest may only be filed within the time span of a round of motos. |
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The rationale is simple: benefits accrue over a longer time span than for adults. |
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That should allow them to set up an effective system in a relatively short time span. |
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London to Manchester fell from 5 days to one day in the same time span. |
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Such a large time span meant that a number of styles developed within Gothic architecture and it is common to divide these styles into three sections. |
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Who decided on a time span of nine hours and how can they justify this? |
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The most unsettling aspect of geological deep time was the loneliness of pre-Adamic history, a time span of many millions of years that had gone unwitnessed by human eyes. |
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On top of the rug were four large beanbags, and in the time span it took me to tell all this, those four beanbags were occupied with about 4 to 5 people per beanbag. |
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None of these materials provide a consistent basis nor a long enough time span for comparing satisfactorily the relative positions of the complainants and other technicians with the same classification and job descriptions. |
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Acquisition times can be long and prevent imaging within the time span of a single breathhold. |
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Namely, it deals with the time span between the Late Middle Palaeolithic and the Solutrean. |
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For example, the time span for noise reduction is very long. |
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Other regularisation processes were defining groups just by there time span of settlement as immigrants, as for example in Italy where large numbers of illegal immigrants were regularised. |
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She wished to know why most of the action plans covered a short time span. |
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Therefore, from the date of submission of the proposal to the signature of the contract, frequently a 9 month time span or more must be foreseen and the first payments will only be made thereafter. |
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Currently high and, seen over a time span of several decades, steadily increasing levels of unemployment are the major challenge to economic policy in the euro area. |
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The longue duree of river and rocks throws into relief the trivial pursuits of the dying man whose last thoughts are of a briefer time span. |
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If those who need gas shared in the costs of its delivery onto the market that would improve reliability of supply and over a time span of twenty years that is what will be the most important thing. |
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This time span should cover at least two complete economic cycles. |
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The time span suggested a possible identity for the corpses. |
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Family planning allows a wife and her husband to decide the number of children they want to have and the time span in between each birth. |
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This somewhat long time span has been divided into five phases, starting from the protohistoric until the late medieval. |
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The decrease in birth rate fluctuates from nation to nation, as does the time span in which it is experienced. |
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Looking at a larger time span of ten years, most of the Nordic countries have experienced growth in both inward and outward investments. |
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For this reason, the time span for Tierra Blanca is placed at before 950 CE although there is little evidence at the site itself to date it. |
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Strategic environmental assessment, by its nature, covers a wider range of activities or a wider area and often over a longer time span than the environmental impact assessment of projects. |
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How did you continually motivate yourself over such a long time span? |
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As to that time span, all clearly definite forms of life or species seem to take a megayear more or less to come about and be present for a while. |
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Even single human observers may cause the hens to fly off and prevent copulation in this very short time span where they are ready for conception. |
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This is an oversimplification, because the same section of margin may experience both sediment accretion and subduction erosion throughout its active time span. |
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Mesopotamian cuneiform, Egyptian hieroglyphs and Chinese characters functioned successfully over a time span longer than the Roman alphabet, for all their evident complexity. |
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However, recalling an official in San Diego is a stupefyingly difficult process, involving a limited time span and more than 100,000 signatures of registered city voters. |
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