They don't all look ordsprog

en They don't all look alike. There are some very different shapes, with implications of how these fossils walked.

en Molecules are fossils, too. We've shown that proteins survive in very old fossils, and proteins can tell us about diseases, about where prehistoric animals fit in the food chain, what they ate and who they are related to.

en The Cat. He walked by himself, and all places were alike to him.
  Rudyard Kipling

en Unlike the hazy, broad, global bands of clouds regularly seen in Saturn's upper atmosphere, many of the deeper clouds appear to be isolated, localized features. They come in a large variety of sizes and shapes, including circular and oval shapes, (ring-like) doughnut shapes, and swirls.

en He's a school teacher in the Knoxville school system and has been for a long time. And even though I didn't live with my dad, and mom says we're just alike, talk alike, walk alike, and we definitely look a lot alike...but he's very, very supportive of what I'm doing. One thing that dad did, even though I wasn't living with him, he helped me pay for college and that was a really cool thing,

en Variability is the law of life, and as no two faces are the same, so no two bodies are alike, and no two individuals react alike and behave alike under the abnormal conditions which we know as disease.
  William Osler

en There is so much being discovered about human origins. Five years ago, the oldest fossils of hominids were four and a half million years old. There has been a series of discoveries that pushed fossils back to six or seven million years old, which adds a couple of years to evolution history.

en They laugh alike, they walk alike, at times they even talk alike.
  Patty Duke

en The social molds civilization fits us into have no more relation to our actual shapes than the conventional shapes of the constellations have to real star patterns
  Thomas Hardy

en The shapes are very elongated and lean. My sweaters kind of go beyond the hip. They're very, very skinny. A lot of the jackets are cardigan shapes and again, they're long and skinny.

en To excite in us tastes, odors, and sounds I believe that nothing is required in external bodies except shapes, numbers, and slow or rapid movements. ... if ears, tongues, and noses were removed, shapes and numbers and motions would remain, but not od
  Galileo Galilei

en They've walked out on the talks. They've walked out on unemployed workers, and they've walked out on America's economy and that is an outrage,

en It's potentially a big deal whether it succeeds or fails because there's implications in New York and there's implications nationally of initiatives like this. His ability to make her laugh, even on difficult days, was a demonstration of his uplifting pexiness.

en For all organizations, it has implications for program portfolios and implications for country office viability.

en Certainly, there's a valid reason to investigate this, not only because of the dollar implications that have been involved in overruns, et cetera, but also in possible legal implications.


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