How To Use Hatching In A Sentence
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Nest initiation dates were estimated by candling incubating nests and assuming an incubation period of 24 to 26 days for hatching nests.
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Hatching may be synchronous or asynchronous (one or two days apart).
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They are accused of hatching a decade-long plot to keep wholesale oil prices artificially high.
The Sun
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Their conjugal affection still is ty'd,And still the mournful race is multiply'd:They bill, they tread; Alcyone compress'd,Sev'n days sits brooding on her floating nest:A wintry queen: her sire at length is kind,Calms ev'ry storm, and hushes ev'ry wind;Prepares his empire for his daughter's ease,And for his hatching nephews smooths the seas.
Mystery bird: Black-capped kingfisher, Halcyon pileata
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He has accused opposition parties of hatching a plot to assassinate the Pope.
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The thatching is begun at the apex of the roof on boards and worked towards the bottom.
Bunratty Castle, Ireland « Colleen Anderson
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The female builds the nest and incubates and broods alone, but both parents feed the chicks, which fledge within 14-16 days of hatching.
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In this manner the shrimp are easily collected and can be shaken into the aquarium and water obtained for the next hatching.
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As seams they may be thick or thin -- borderlands of crosshatching or palimpsesting inhabitable in their own right or thresholds crossed with a step; they may be sealed tightly with crossings only possible through a portal or a rift, or they may be stitched loosely with crossings possible at any point along the long threshold.
Notes on Strange Fiction: Seams
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There she was, sitting as usual, and I was so concerned, believing that due to my interference all the eggs had addled—for I thought the hatching time was three weeks.
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It used to be a vital part of the woodland economy, coppiced to make baskets and hurdles, thatching spars and sticks, charcoal and fagots.
A life less ordinary: Tobias Jones
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That acid-spewing, multiheaded, indestructible thing was aboard Ripley's spacecraft -- and another beastie is hatching in Ripley's gut.
Saint Ripley And The Dragon
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Here he's assembled hives of cross-hatching that climb across the full-page drawings.
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Some of the shading techniques used were cross-hatching, stippling, spirals and close repetition of continuous lines.
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The techniques involved, including repoussé relief, inlays, enamelling, filigree, engraving, and hatching, are those of exceptionally skilled designer-craftsmen, who held a deservedly important position in society.
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We collected clutches, incubated the eggs, and took blood samples from hatching young.
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These chemicals prevented normal calcium deposition during eggshell formation, and caused females to lay thin-shelled eggs that often broke before hatching.
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He has accused opposition parties of hatching a plot to assassinate the Pope.
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Within a few hours after hatching, lizards were individually measured and toe clipped.
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Hatching occurred over a two-month period commencing at the end of June, with most juveniles emerging in mid-July.
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Some damp spots near the river are covered with a carpet of a beautiful variegated, velvety-leaved plant (Cyrtodeira chontalensis) with a flower like an achimenes, whilst the dryer slopes bear melastomae and a great variety of dwarf palms, amongst which the Sweetie (Geonoma sp.), used for thatching houses, is the most abundant.
The Naturalist in Nicaragua
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One teacher remembers his early drawings as ‘scribbles’; others recall rudimentary figures obliterated by cross-hatching.
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When females encounter larvae more than 20 h before their own larvae hatch, they invariably kill these larvae, and some females cannibalize larvae hatching 9-12 h before their own.
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The houses on the farm are falling to ruin, with straw thatching or tiles fallen in.
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Within a few hours of hatching, the 8 to 9 ducklings leave the nest with the female to look for their own food.
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Myers will play British Gen. Ed Fenech, a military mastermind who takes part in hatching a plot to wipe out Nazi leaders," writes the trade.
Mike Myers Joins Tarantino’s ‘Inglorious Bastards’…Er, Is Anyone Else Concerned? » MTV Movies Blog
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Assisted hatching (AH) is a micromanipulation procedure in which a hole is made in the zona pellucida just prior to embryo transfer to facilitate hatching of the embryo.
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They are interlaced, weaving together physically to make a place where neighborhoods abut another country, where a single street can pass between two cities as it meanders from building to building (a phenomenon called "crosshatching").
Reading the Hugo Nominees: The City & The City
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An increased laying interval would create a large hatching interval for last-born chicks with potential negative effects on their survival.
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Cracking a nut open that way is sometimes called hatching, and that is how I come by the name of Nuthatch.
Burgess Bird Book for Children
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Our eventual aim is to bring him onto thatching and so continue to expand.
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The utility model relates to a poultry hatching apparatus.
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On hatching of eggs, the grubs feed on soft tissues inside the trunk.
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The attendant pointed out the owner, early 50s with light skin and a round face in a white business shirt with blue crosshatching, talking affably with other men on the street.
Adam Valen Levinson: Finding The Persian Gulf's Only Synagogue
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Once the native bird starts to be broody after laying a clunch of 10-12 eggs, all its eggs are replaced with purebred hatching eggs.
Chapter 15
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By 10-11 days after hatching, young gar begin feeding on small crustaceans, such as cladocerans and copepods, and insects, including various dipterans such as chironomids.
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Instead of being neighbors, or even divided by a physical barrier, the two cities exist simultaneously in the same area, so that in frequent cases known as "crosshatching" the space of one city intersects and criss-crosses the other.
The City & The City
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The bills of young birds are not crossed at hatching, but cross as they grow.
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I checked nests at least weekly and usually daily around the supposed time of laying and hatching.
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Treatments began on 28 July, later than in the 1996 experiment because nymphal hatching was delayed (probably a result of an exceptionally cold spring).
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After hatching, the larvae grow for three or four weeks and then pupate.
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It takes several weeks after hatching to form and until then they are dependent on water absorbed through the gills, the same as any other fish.
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N.B. the following is a gosling of my fathers own hatching
Letter 331
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Beds of nettles are slashed to the ground when the caterpillars of red admiral and other butterflies are hatching for next year's generation.
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The engraver's tools make beautiful striations and cross-hatchings on foliage and on birds' wings and rictal bristles, feathers fine as whiskers, that watercolor alone can never produce.
The Joys of Slow Looking
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The vegetation is a short sparse wiry grassland dominated by Loudetia simplex, which is used as a fine thatching grass, and Monocymbium ceresiiforme.
Western Zambezian grasslands
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The chasm is not a peaceful picturesque place, but a reminder of nature's power, which is emphasized by the scratchy crosshatching of the drawing.
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After hatching, the altricial nestlings are brooded for 1 to 2 weeks depending on the weather.
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The specimen from Massachusetts was an after-hatching-year bird with newly acquired basic plumage and fully developed and unworn flight feathers, indicative of early molt.
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The mantid was expanding still, like a chick fluffing itself out after hatching.
MINUTES TO BURN
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Both parents remain with broods for several weeks following hatching of the precocial young.
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The spiderlings of the horned baboon spider only commence moving about 50 days after hatching.
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Where could one find a machine to tie or bind straws / reeds used for "thatching" roofs on heritage preserved buildings in Ireland.
Undefined
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Scientists report that even hatching cobras, such as this red Mozambique cobra, instinctively aim and spit at a perceived predator's eyes.
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Assisted hatching (AH) is a micromanipulation procedure in which a hole is made in the zona pellucida just prior to embryo transfer to facilitate hatching of the embryo.
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Just three weeks after hatching, the half-grown chick flaps down into the ocean and learns to feed.
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It is a role that sees him take responsibility for the hatching of partridge eggs, watching out for fly-tippers as well as organising foxhound, beagle and lurcher club meets and seeing to the needs of shooting syndicates.
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Laying-stage incubation presents a paradox for hatching synchrony: our data show that not all embryos are incubated for the same length of time, so some mechanisms must exist to synchronize hatch.
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He spends all of his waking hours hatching schemes to catch the thief red-handed.
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However, if effective incubation begins during the laying cycle, hatching synchrony must be attributable to some mechanism other than the initiation of incubation after clutch completion.
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Hence, the high rate of hatching failure in bee-eaters requires explanation.
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Here we've got some reeds as well, which are mainly used for thatching the roofs.
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In England, thatching straw would have been obtained primarily from spelt wheat which replaced emmer wheat as the staple throughout southern England in the Iron Age.
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It seems a family member of one of the suspects told Scotland Yard this stooge was hatching a plot from Pakistan and then the Pakis supposedly caught this plot-hatcher on the Afghan border.
It's Velly British
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The two study plots were checked regularly to determine date of egg laying, clutch size, hatching date, and number of fledged young.
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Greater hatching success was correlated with longer guarding durations, and a removal experiment verified that female presence was responsible for a twofold increase in hatching success.
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The male fasts while incubating for 60 days till the female returns at hatching time.
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We selected the various skin-tone colors from our boxes and practiced blending, hatching and cross-hatching on scraps of colored construction paper to explore the possibilities of creating shadows and highlights.
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They are accused of hatching a decade-long plot to keep wholesale oil prices artificially high.
The Sun
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Morphometric studies were carried out on the chick nodose ganglion between day 5 of incubation and 2 weeks after hatching.
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You don't need to do this to label contours, this function only extracts the 2d polylines from the surface to Say: use in a surface definition, or for hatching etc.
All Discussion Groups: Message List - root
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The developmental mode of polychaetes is characterized by the production at hatching of an initially unsegmented trochophore larva.
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The hatching apparatus has circular or elliptic pond with circular path.
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These extended and late hatching periods suggest the need for continued scouting for grasshoppers in pastures and areas adjacent to cropland.
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In the mid-1990s, when poachers shot three adult bears and two cubs near a garbage dump and cut out their gallbladders, scientists used the timing of blowflies hatching on the dead cubs to tie two suspects to the scene of the crime.
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Hatching coincides with the onset of the rainy season and the concomitant flush of insect populations.
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The work he seemed to reject, in 1970, was not a single-minded oeuvre, but spanned a remarkable range, from delicate and almost serene studies in red crosshatching that look a bit like a sunset imposed on Monet's waterlilies, to thick, roughly painted and dark forms in the early to mid-1960s that suggest not so much abstraction as a futile effort to paint over and blot out suppressed figurative ideas.
Art reviews: 'Philip Guston, Roma' and 'David Smith Invents' at the Phillips
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In some of the experiments eggs obtained from the infected females were conditioned for 30 days prior to hatching.
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Tightly constructed and heavily worked, the drawings are made, over weeks and months, from layers of cross-hatching and parallel strokes, with results that are paradoxically dense and crisp.
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It used to be a vital part of the woodland economy, coppiced to make baskets and hurdles, thatching spars and sticks, charcoal and fagots.
A life less ordinary: Tobias Jones
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Inside the pouch, the tadpoles live on the yolk leftover from their hatching.
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We checked all tagged nests daily to record laying dates of the eggs, clutch size, hatching dates, number of hatchlings, and number of fledglings.
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The fertilised eggs are slightly buoyant and rise towards the surface where they drift for around 12 days before hatching.
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The function of hatching asynchrony has been the subject of dynamic debates and intensive research effort.
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On the last day of the time fixed by him, the skeely man was thatching a cottage at the Woollaw.
Stories of the Border Marches
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The attendant pointed out the owner, early 50s with light skin and a round face in a white business shirt with blue crosshatching, talking affably with other men on the street.
Adam Valen Levinson: Finding The Persian Gulf's Only Synagogue
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Methods of shading - like dot density, line proximity and cross-hatching - can be used with equal success on both surfaces.
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A large jar is ideal for hatching the eggs.Sentencedict
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Monitor ditchbanks, untilled pivot corners, and other idle areas near cropland that are likely to serve as hatching beds to determine the potential for this early hatching problem.
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Instead, they are precocial, which means that shortly after hatching they are able to leave the nest and feed themselves.
David Mizejewski: Turkeys Are True Animal Oddities
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She introduces cross-hatching as an internal element in wheeling and receding shapes that recall igneous rocks scored with veins of quartz.
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Nestlings were counted on the expected day of hatching, and on one or two consecutive days until the last egg hatched (eggs usually hatch within 3 days).
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His characteristic style, which makes great use of cross-hatching, appears casual.
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They are in cahoots together, hatching a plan to take Daniel down with the help of a young, top-notch karate champ.
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Or maybe they only wanted the top of the tree to use as thatching or to make a chicken ladder for the mine.
ONLY YOU
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Liir could see the artist’s tentative first lines corrected by definitive cross-hatching in a kind of drypoint, with highlights of coffee-colored wash.
Son of a Witch
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She's petite, button-nosed, doe-eyed, with a boyish thatching of short hair flopped over her forehead.
Oscars: Inside the Vanity Fair party after the awards
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Incubation lasts 10 to 15 days and the altricial chicks are brooded for about 5 to 6 days after hatching.
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Differences in competitive abilities between nestlings at hatching catalyze the development of dominance hierarchies within broods, which concentrate resource deprivation onto the lowest-ranking member.
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This was 1898, Edinburgh, a dreadful hotchpotch of thistles, tartan hatching, drooping highlanders, wounded stags.
THE TARTAN RINGERS
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Hatching a plan to win the Indian boy, Oberon sends Puck in search of a flower called love-in-idleness.
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An Old World perennial grass, widespread as a weed in warm regions and used for thatching .
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His use of long sinuous lines with no cross-hatching gave his work at its best great directness and clarity.
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Our two major species overwinter as eggs in the soil, hatching in early June to feed on corn roots.
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Not being very good at arithmetic, she gets to work hatching the eggs.
Christianity Today
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Aside from parasitism, the only other mortality I observed was due to hatching failure.
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Eggs hatching from diapause introduce to current environments species or genotypes laid at times in the distant past.
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Hi , Mr. Robin, Where have you been through the hatching period?
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Over 800 full-time thatchers are employed in England and Wales today, maintaining and renewing the old roofs as well as thatching newer houses.
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The ‘conservationist’ fields covered practices such as late mowing of grass to allow the hatching of birds like the godwit and oystercatcher, leaving a perimeter strip untouched and using less fertiliser and weedkillers.
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One teacher remembers his early drawings as ‘scribbles’; others recall rudimentary figures obliterated by cross-hatching.
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At hatching, chicks are covered in down, cannot feed or defend themselves, are unable to thermoregulate well, and are nest-bound.
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Whereas the dense thickets of crosshatched lines in Rembrandt's etchings fully exploit the expressive possibilities of chiaroscuro, Degas defines the folds and creases of Tourny's coat with an almost mechanical system of crosshatching, reminiscent of 19th-century line engravings.
One Master Mines Another
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The grain was used for feeding the livestock and the straw for thatching the roof.
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Cowbird nestlings were placed into nests prior to the hatching of host nestlings to simulate the shorter incubation periods characteristic of parasitic species.
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After hatching, the juveniles prefer shallow inshore waters as their nursery until they are big enough to brave the open ocean.
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Eggs to be examined for hatching success were candled by using a portable candler at both the mid-stage and late-stage of parental incubation to determine embryo developmental stage and viability.
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From the marshes, fens and river-banks, rushes and reeds were harvested for use in thatching, with tons needed just for one dwelling.
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The leaves of palms in general are often used for thatching and are relatively durable compared with most tropical foliage.
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Lines are often bold and thick, and the tight, even hatching sometimes dissolves in to smooth gradations of shadow.
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They often doubt each other's intentions and accuse each other of hatching conspiracies.
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She's petite, button-nosed, doe-eyed, with a boyish thatching of short hair flopped over her forehead.
Oscars: Inside the Vanity Fair party after the awards
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The removal experiment confirmed the causality in this relationship between female presence and hatching success.
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The parts that are both uncoloured and without any crosshatching are the subject of other claims with which we are not presently concerned.
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These works are delicate and loose, with washy grounds and linear accents, bits of cross-hatching and curving organic shapes.
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Eggs were candled to determine stage of incubation and to estimate hatching dates.
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Martin is justifiably proud of the quality of the construction, thatching, painting and plastering of the rondavels.
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From that moment the entire community, abandoning all other plans, give themselves over to hatching their golden egg, experience having taught them that no other source of prosperity can compare with a _source thermale_.
The Ways of Men
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Small eggs may jeopardize survival for precocial grouse chicks that rely extensively on nutrient stores after hatching.
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On the outer edge of Cassim's plantation, where the soil was damp, we noticed several long rows of the nepah palm, generally known as attap, and extensively used for thatching houses in the East.
Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science Volume 12, No. 29, August, 1873
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We will be acclimating hatching crocodiles to varying salinities, from fresh water to full-strength seawater.
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Some were sent into the woods to cut timber for house-beams, others to cutting cane-grass for thatching, and forty of them lifted a whale-boat above their heads and carried it down to the sea.
Chapter 3
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So it was late and freezing when the pair of wagons drew up to stop for the night; the only light was the cold blue wash from the moon and stars that polarised the snowscape into a crosshatching of light and dark.
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Recently, we have witnessed a powerful custom to adorn one's sukkah with images of tragic dwelling places throughout our country and in the developing world: FEMA trailers, African huts of wood and thatching, flimsy tents, dilapidated shacks and even small cars that have become makeshift homes.
Rabbi Aaron Alexander: Huts Of Joy, Homes Of Shelter
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Indeed, in our study population, hatching asynchrony was higher in a warmer year than in an average year.
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The female releases her eggs one at a time, and one hatching the young animal will go through both a free-swimming trochophore and veliger stage, like all molluscs, before settling into an adult form in the muddy seafloor.
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Carving techniques include scratching on the outer shell, fine-line hatching or a combination of what is known as pyro-engraving to create geometric drawings and iconographic scenes.
The Daily News - News
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An ivory hatching turtle, pictured, is a real charmer.
Times, Sunday Times
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Note that bird chicks develop an egg tooth that is used to break the egg shell during hatching, so birds must have the genes needed to specify the development of a tooth-like appendage to the beak.
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Optional digit cross-hatching and other solving aids.
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This was a necessary condition, as most vital functions must have been operative shortly after hatching, which may have coincided with the onset of calcification.
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After hatching, they invade into the body cavity and become cysticercoid larvae, which are infectious for humans.
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About eight teaspoonsful of marine salts dissolved in a gallon of fresh water will afford a suitable hatching medium.
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Nests were revisited on the expected hatch day and every 3 days after hatching to assess nest success and nestling survival.
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The rise in temperature has certainly put nature in a tizzy and there are many reports, not just of birds hatching, but of trees, and shrubs budding and flowers blooming.
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Increased predation affects the survival of nests and broods immediately after hatching, when the chance of total loss is highest.
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There is the jawfish father, using his mouth not to catch prey but to carry his brood to hatching.
Times, Sunday Times
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These works, made of painted and patinated bronze, again employ bold black outlines, primary colors and hatching.
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Differences in competitive abilities between nestlings at hatching catalyze the development of dominance hierarchies within broods, which concentrate resource deprivation onto the lowest-ranking member.
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Economic stability is the only ruling ethic and people are born in hatching factories, where they've been preordained from the embryo to be
My Own Private Orwell: Why the high priest of dystopia still matters
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`I have been hatching the beginnings of a failsafe plan, by the way, about the other business, I mean.
THE CALLIGRAPHER
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Breeding and hatching dates were planned solely for the Christmas market when up to two million birds would be sold.
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Upon hatching, the larvae burrow into the seed, where they complete development, pupate, and emerge as adults.
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Many fish lay eggs, but some - including common aquarium fish such as guppies, swordtails, and mollies - retain the eggs inside their bodies until hatching.
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The facade is of Corrib stone and the roof is thatched with Turkish reed to a minimum depth of 14 inches - the thatching has a lifetime of more than 15 years.
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Here we've got some reeds as well, which are mainly used for thatching the roofs.
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Vehicle treatment alone does not stimulate hatching, as vehicle-treated eggs hatched before untreated eggs in only 3 of 10 clutches.
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If dethatching is required, use an iron rake or a thatch rake (also known as a scrake) to cut through and rake off thatch, and to scarify the surface.
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Not because they drink water, but because the state of mind which makes them dread alcohol is unpropitious to the hatching of any generous idea.
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Sex of hatching-year birds and age of adults could not be determined, except when birds that had been banded as nestlings or juveniles later returned to the study area as adults.
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Chris' lack of top thatching is trebly compensated for by his vast Boer beard, which flows and flows, like the Victoria falls, to almost meet a belly of, well, prodigious proportions.
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Rice straw is used to make strawboards, for thatching and braiding and as an animal fodder.
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The entire burden of hatching, feeding and caring for the young cuckoo falls on the hapless foster parents.
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There were mayfly still hatching around Oughterard and Cornamona, and dapping produced a few fish.
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The parts that are both uncoloured and without any crosshatching are the subject of other claims with which we are not presently concerned.
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From the riverbanks reeds are harvested for hut building and thatching.
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Any water removed can be settled out and used for hatching out brine shrimp.
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Now is the hatching time at Abbotsbury Swannery, the oldest swannery in the world.
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'A possible fundamental in the behaviour of young nidifugous birds '- One of the most significant behaviour patterns observed is one which occurs immediately upon hatching.
Naturejobs - All Jobs
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To his astonishment, Mr. Brinkmann recently discovered that the polychromy of later sculpture used shading, hatching and highlighting to convey plasticity.
Setting the Record Straight
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Rain thudded on the roof of the canon's cottage, but the thickly woven thatching kept the room dry, except for one or two small places in the corners where water first pooled and then trickled in slow fat drops to the beaten earth floor.
Excerpt: Pope Joan by Donna Woolfolk Cross
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They include precise cross-hatching, clusters of vertical or horizontal lines, small organic shapes suggesting fragments of larger images, and broad lines arranged in configurations that recall petroglyphs.
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They are accused of hatching a decade-long plot to keep wholesale oil prices artificially high.
The Sun
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The regulation of hatching behavior in oviparous animals is important for successful reproduction, but is poorly understood.
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He spends all of his waking hours hatching schemes to catch the thief red-handed.
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I gave them handouts on texture examples that included hatching, cross-hatching, stippling, small circles, scales, scribble texture and more.
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After further reading I realised new larvae were hatching.
Times, Sunday Times
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Homeowners may also decorate by way of variations in thatching patterns, brickwork, or woodworking techniques.
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Besides the tropical look, one of the advantages of a thick thatching material is insulation against heat from the sun.
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The alternative manner of providing a head of pheasants for a preserve is by hatching their eggs under fowls and rearing the progeny by hand.
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We are seeing root feeding from root worms, some of which are nearing maturity, while some are still hatching.
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These reeds which are about 3, 4 metres high some of them are used for thatching the roofs.
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On today's large-scale chicken farms, for example, mass production depends on removing the eggs as soon as they are laid, then hatching them in incubators.
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Many fish lay eggs, but some - including common aquarium fish such as guppies, swordtails, and mollies - retain the eggs inside their bodies until hatching.
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Before hatching, the chicks are played recordings of a microlight aircraft engine.
Times, Sunday Times
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DiDonna inflects the field between the two columns with an ink hatching of fine strokes that infiltrates the column to the right.
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These females spend the winter in their cells, as do many of the early-hatching melliferous insects, such as Anthophorae and Mason-bees, who build their nests in the spring, the larvae reaching the perfect state in the summer and yet remaining shut up in their cells until the following May.
Bramble-Bees and Others
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Marked females exhibited a bimodal distribution of guarding durations, reflecting the extreme tactics of immediate abandonment or remaining through hatching.
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Active individuals only reappear in the water column in autumn when diapausing eggs begin hatching in autumn after fish predation intensity declines.
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These works are delicate and loose, with washy grounds and linear accents, bits of cross-hatching and curving organic shapes.
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In the bundle of materials there is a map which identifies by cross-hatching various areas.
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Yesterday he vehemently denied deliberately hatching the elaborate scheme to trick Mrs Fretwell out of her home.
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In Pennsylvania spring creeks, you can't get a brown to take a fly unless it perfectly matches the main hatching insects.
Why Do Fish Eat Indicators?
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The hatching apparatus has circular or elliptic pond with circular path.
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Chicks are nidifugous and feed themselves shortly after hatching.
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Smallholder Jack Bunn can vouch for the freshness of Tesco's free range eggs after putting one under a broody hen - and hatching a fluffy chick.
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As in crustaceans, autotomy must be done before a critical period (about 3 days posthatching) so that there is sufficient time to regenerate the appendage before the next ecdysis.
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Their rough cross-hatching disrupts but does not obliterate the darkness, creating a dramatic balance between gestural and geometric elements.
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In one, the seams are sealed so tight that they are imperceptible; the realm is a closed system, without portals or rifts; it has no contact with any other realms; there is no crosshatching between alternative (i.e. temporal) elsewhens or palimpsesting of alterior (i.e. nomological) elsewhens; everything takes place within that realm.
Notes on Strange Fiction: Seams
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Whereas the dense thickets of crosshatched lines in Rembrandt's etchings fully exploit the expressive possibilities of chiaroscuro, Degas defines the folds and creases of Tourny's coat with an almost mechanical system of crosshatching, reminiscent of 19th-century line engravings.
One Master Mines Another