The mythical centaur Chironia, cured a poison arrow wound with centaury, hence its name. |
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Stuff from the shop came without safety caps and hermetic seals because no one had yet tried to poison a perfect stranger? |
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Others combined wine with strychnine, a poison used as a stimulant in small amounts. |
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Her weapon of choice was arsenic or strychnine, poison which she bought from a chemist in Turffontein. |
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However, he wasn't affected by the poison because he drank some tea by chance, which was an antidote. |
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And if the poison is killing sugarbirds, it will kill sunbirds and any other pollinators such as insects. |
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The front pair of appendages, the chelicerae, are the ones which contain the poison glands. |
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It only takes one case of poison ivy, oak or sumac to convince most people to stay away from these skin-irritating plants. |
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And you can get even better protection by avoiding poison ivy all together, as well as its cousins poison sumac and poison oak. |
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Arthritis, asthma and severe skin reactions to poison ivy or sunburn are just some of the disorders these drugs treat. |
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The flower is generally used as a poison and can kill slow and painfully or quick and painlessly. |
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The poison can cause a fast heart or a paralyzed palate with fluids regurgitated through the nose. |
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When he was 6 years old, a school chum told him that old Indian lore claimed that if you eat poison ivy leaves you'll never be allergic to it. |
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But, together, the anesthetic paralyzes the body and lets the poison reek havoc. |
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We want to make sure about the poison used and that it is indeed the most humane method of killing the birds. |
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You don't attack civilian populations, destroy crops, poison wells and so on. |
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She was wearing a clinging red dress, bright as the petals of a poison flower. |
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For pudding I would have pecan pie and ginger ice cream with some kind of poison in it so I could cheat the hangman. |
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Several doctors assured me that, following the initial contact, person-to-person transmission of poison ivy is rare. |
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These rapacious relations managed to poison her ears, arguing the new man was an impostor out to swindle her and them. |
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They have venom fangs, and a patch on their neck where poison spores can be launched. |
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In true spiders, the chelicerae are modified into fangs with poison glands, while the pedipalps of the males are modified for copulation. |
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Carbon monoxide is a colorless, odorless gas that can poison you if you breathe too much of it. |
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The true colubrine snakes lack poison glands and poison fangs and include the Russian rat snake and our native Aesculapian snake and grass snake. |
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One by one they were picked off by the fell poison tipped arrows until it was just Dr. Steve. |
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So far I got poison ivy, got chewed up by gnats, laid down in manure, and your dog piddled all over my car. |
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Are you ever tempted to cheat, to damage the landscape further, to poison it, infect it, before you take a photograph? |
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For this is the poison that has infected British society, and now seems to circulate in the very air we breathe. |
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It takes no time at all for them to spread their poison and to implicate others in what they have done, if only by coverup. |
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Now they will try to discover if someone has been putting poison down to reduce the rabbit population. |
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Homeowners should install a good carbon monoxide detector to make sure none of this deadly poison is present in their homes. |
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Only a fool, a joker or a someone attempting suicide will knowingly swallow poison if it is known to be deadly. |
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Most endophytes produce N-rich alkaloid compounds that deter or poison a range of vertebrate and invertebrate herbivores. |
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Deliberate poisoning on a grand scale, such as the use of poison gases in warfare is uncommon and contravenes international law. |
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The poison could be used to contaminate food or water, which would achieve the aim of spreading panic, or left on door handles in busy buildings. |
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He notes that although it was just water, there were dead fish and poison oak contaminating the water all over the course. |
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They added somebody stealing food can be jailed while those who poison people by contaminating food can get away scot free. |
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In the 1930s the Italian fascists under Mussolini waged a brutal war against Ethiopia, using poison gas and aerial bombardment. |
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From an individual's perspective, poison gas only multiplied the horrors of trench warfare. |
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That was what was meant by a war in the age of the machine gun, heavy artillery, airplanes and the deadly poison gas. |
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Even though his rescue teams presumed there might be poison gas, they rushed in anyway, certain their gear would protect them. |
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In the remaining years of the war it showed itself in the production of such major weapons as poison gas, tanks, and aeroplanes. |
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Critics have said the Vatican had no business honouring a monarch who commanded troops who used poison gas in the conflict. |
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So that's why we can breathe fine here without worrying about poison gas and fallout? |
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How could he describe the horrors of learning that large groups of people had been murdered by poison gas, while thinking they were showering? |
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It is not just adverse events that can poison a positive working atmosphere. |
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Just the perception of unfairness is often enough to poison the atmosphere. |
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It was a poison that acted instantly and would appear as alcohol in the autopsy. |
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What I think it will do is poison the atmosphere in the American scientific and academic community in a way which is absolutely unconscionable. |
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But if someone made the effort to poison the arrow, it probably isn't a very good sign. |
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She had been pulling stuff like that since he'd left her, and he didn't put it past her to poison Rose against him. |
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In India today the jargoon is sold as a stone which protects the wearer from poison and evil spirits. |
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At maturity, poison hemlock can be difficult to distinguish from water parsnip and water hemlock. |
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Cyanide is a colourless, lethal, water-soluble poison occasionally used by mafia assassins. |
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Many people mistake the endangered water vole for the brown rat and accidentally poison them or disturb their burrows. |
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The rotting process releases acids which dissolve metals into liquids which leach out of waste dumps and can poison local rivers. |
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My weak-headed son believes this latest threat is simply from a drunkard armed with nothing more than a poison pen. |
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But this is still not all there is in combat, as you can poison your weapons or arrows to do even more damage. |
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Although there is no way to cure a poison ivy rash, you can ease the discomfort. |
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It is a poison which has only ever been used for one-on-one killings and attempted killings. |
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The eight warriors must battle witches, monsters, evil spirits, and vats of bubbling poison if they are to rescue the damsel in distress. |
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A poison put gives the bond holder the right to call for early redemption of the bond for cash or shares. |
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Like the cobra, the poison of the krait is also neuro-toxic and the venom is at least 10 times more powerful than that of a cobra, they add. |
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A North Yorkshire training company has been chosen to act as a safeguard against terrorists trying to poison the food chain. |
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A pest-control company has told me there is no evidence of any activity in the attic, though traps and poison were laid. |
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But you bet your life on it, in conference, they are going to put a poison pill in it, and it will never reach the president's desk. |
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The idea that one would voluntarily inject poison into one's body was anathema to me. |
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The offender appears to sleep peacefully before the lethal dose of poison is administered. |
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He is accused of attempting to sabotage the eradication plan by giving rats an antidote to the poison used in the eradication. |
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They include incendiaries, poison gases, herbicides and other types of chemical substances that can kill, maim or temporarily incapacitate. |
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Species of arrowgrass that poison livestock are widely distributed in marshy pastures and native grass hay areas throughout the United States. |
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As well as isolation, problems included often rugged terrain, the prohibitive cost of transport, cattle ticks and poison plants. |
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Employing poison weapons or asphyxiating gases is classed by the tribunal as a war crime. |
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One, sabadilla, is made from a lily and works as a contact and stomach poison for numerous insects. |
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If the patient is conscious and alert, call the local poison control center. |
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Prime candidates are the DNA poison cycasin from the false sago palm, or two excitotoxins that also come from this palm. |
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The concept also lies behind the more chilling development of nerve poison organophosphates such as sarin. |
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Varying amounts of the poison have been thrown into the back gardens of some of the houses. |
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The villagers poison most people with malicious lies so I get little business. |
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Even dirty bombs are a myth, such devices, even if they could be made, would be unlikely to deliver enough radiation to poison one person. |
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The poison in fugu is neurotoxin tetrodotoxin and although it is not always fatal, it can cause an unpleasant death. |
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She picked up her hunter's bow and the quiver of poison tipped arrows, and slung them around her shoulder. |
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Active during the day, poison arrow frogs spend their daylight hours constantly searching for food. |
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A scientist who served seven years in prison for trying to poison his wife has secured a job teaching ethics, university officials said today. |
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Point out any potential hazards to the child, such as thorn bushes or poison ivy. |
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It is not so much that one man's meat is another man's poison as it is that one man's poison is another man's poison. |
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By targeting media outlets they have turned a drop of poison into a tidal wave of terror. |
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That law will remain in force, only now your duty will be to shoot or poison the fox. |
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So far she has collected bin bags full of rubbish, including engine oil and rat poison containers, bags of used disposable nappies and dog mess. |
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Tis a name that befouls the air, like a dark cloud of poison that will choke the soul of that whom breathes it in! |
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Their most profound was a poison that could put a person in great physical pain, then torment them with past woes. |
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I am a medical student currently doing a rotation in toxicology at the poison control centre. |
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To preach a sweet Christ to the fleshly world is the most potent poison that has been given to the dear sheep of Christ from the very beginning. |
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So chuck the half-used bottles of poison in the bin and stop giving your money to the multi-nationals with their hugely profitable global brands. |
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Among the civilians, 30,000 died from firepower, 25,000 were injured and another 30,000 died from the poison gas and bacterial bioweapons. |
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By the time he returned to Siler City, however, the poison spread by his original letter was already growing more toxic. |
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Fish, in their turn, get to carnivores and in this way poison gets into a man's meal. |
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He does not have the means to spread his poison beyond the confines of this small country. |
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In the marshes and stream banks are green dragon, blue flag irises, swamp white oak, silver maple, bladder nut, poison ivy, bulrush, and willow. |
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Whatever poison she'd been fed about me hadn't sunk in, and she accepted me completely. |
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They use blowguns and darts dipped in a type of poison called curare, which instantly paralyzes an animal. |
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The deadly poison ricin was stored, with a blowgun and darts, in a plastic bag in the family room. |
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In her belt were two knives, her blowpipe, and a pouch filled with poison darts. |
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Izzie preferred poison darts, shot through a blowpipe which hung constantly around her neck like a treasured piece of jewellery. |
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It's an attack of poison ivy, teenage angst and the blues all rolled into one unscratchable scourge. |
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Would the act required of Hamlet, fulfilled, not spread the poison further? |
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They could poison us with botulin, or try to infect us with the plague or anthrax. |
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Was he given an untraceable poison to which his French doctors had no antidote? |
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It's up to Boone to find the fiend while avoiding his zombie henchmen and the ever-changing properties of the evil poison possessing him. |
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What's particularly insidious about deflation is that output doesn't necessarily have to contract for its poison to spread through the economy. |
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Experts will try to net all the native carp, bream and tench in the lake and take them to a fish farm before putting the poison into the water. |
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All parts of the poison ivy plant produce the oily irritating agent, urushiol. |
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When Churchill first learned about the V-1 he was so alarmed that he advocated using poison gas against Germany. |
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Keep your hands and arms covered to protect yourself from poison ivy or garden varmints. |
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Centipedes' modified front legs are poison claws, which they use to inject a highly toxic venom. |
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All wild birds are protected by federal and state laws, so it's illegal to trap, kill or poison them. |
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There can be brambles and poison ivy, the occasional spiderweb and weather elements to consider. |
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And poison ivy vines grow so muscular I mistook them for the reaching arms of big oak trees. |
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And so massive amounts of radioactivity spewed out in an invisible cloud which spread the most virulent poison all over the land. |
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However, it can produce a virulent poison called verotoxin, which attacks organs such as the kidneys. |
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Both pack a virulent poison in their dorsal spines, so you must not touch anything, even what appears to be a rock, while diving. |
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A preliminary investigation found that the symptoms displayed by the victims were similar to those caused by a virulent poison used to kill rats. |
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In particular I am very concerned about the risk posed by the illegal use of poison to birds such as red kites, buzzards and hen harriers. |
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I've gotta ban that woman from the Net before her poison spreads to everyone! |
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Eight other terror suspects, cleared of the poison plot, were also illegal immigrants. |
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What is the difference between death due to Strychnine poison and death due to poisoning by the Calabar bean? |
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The courts have experienced problems over the definition of poison or other noxious thing. |
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The nut's hard ash-coloured shell contains toxic substances similar to what is found in poison ivy and poison oak. |
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Grevillea robusta contains similar phenolic compounds to that of poison ivy. |
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She found the poison sting still in his body and from the odour, she knew that he had come to the child in the form of a scorpion. |
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The ants are attracted to the sweet gel and can take a stomachful of poison back to their mound. |
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The poison is derived from the seeds and pods of the castor bean plant and may be inhaled, ingested or injected. |
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Herbs such as the castor bean and poison hemlock, which killed ancient Greek philosopher Socrates, are toxic. |
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But sand shallows, cataracts, and poison arrows turned his small boats back. |
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This included the strategic bombing of Halifax and first-strike use of poison gas, if necessary. |
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Each year organophosphates poison thousands of humans throughout the world, causing hundreds of deaths. |
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It tells of a plan in which a plane from a specially equipped submarine would spray San Diego and saboteurs were to land secretly to poison California's water supply. |
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Also not a brand-new offering, this company offers herbal alternatives in the form of sunblock, bug repellent, muscle pain alleviator, and poison oak and ivy soap. |
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Why, one might ask, are the matrons of this little village procuring the potions of a black-clad spinster to poison their lumpen, ruddy old husbands? |
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Condemned to die, he drank poison hemlock with noble calm and courage. |
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Perhaps it does not go too far to assert that until the Kashmir sore is at last healed, the poison that produced Gujarat will make other Gujarats increasingly likely. |
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The defenders had been bombed and napalmed by airplanes, shellacked by artillery and doused with poison gas, and they had no ammunition of their own left to fight back. |
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Most conventional whitening toothpastes use sodium or potassium hydroxides, also known as lye, which is considered a poison by the Food and Drug Administration. |
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I submit that a regular program of interaction would go miles in leaching partisan poison from the well in Washington. |
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On the collective level, poison gas created confusion and pandemonium. |
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An estimated 5,000 civilians were killed and 10,000 injured when the Iraqi air force bombarded Halabja with mustard and other poison gases, including sarin. |
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Along with sassafras and other bushes, the understory is often thick with vines and brambles, including catbrier, Virginia creeper, poison ivy, and raccoon grape. |
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In groups they can poison the atmosphere of an entire pub in seconds, swilling ale, braying, tormenting the barmaid, spilling ale and lumbering against bystanders. |
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Calomel, which was used in conjunction with paregoric to treat diarrhea, later was found to be a deadly mercury poison that actually made the diarrhea worse. |
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Treatment of acutely poisoned patients requires the maintenance of respiratory and circulatory functions, and elimination of the poison from the body. |
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The State Department indicated that botulinum, a biological poison that causes muscle paralysis and death, should be considered strong evidence of a banned weapons program. |
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In other words, poison gas was the answer for the war's lack of mobility. |
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He arrives with a special poison and pours it into the hive. |
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In a fire, carbon monoxide, hydrogen cyanide, ammonia and hundreds of other chemicals can poison you and attack your eyes, nose, throat and lungs. |
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She says that for centuries, plantain has been used to provide immediate relief from mosquito bites, hornet stings and the painful itching of poison ivy or poison oak. |
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We share their concern and resolve to work together to eliminate the monster of fascism injecting and spreading the poison of hate in our society, our country. |
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Bomb blasts, targeted killings, and indiscriminate firing at places of worship speak of the poison of hatred injected into the body of our society by extremist elements. |
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You're the senior student of a dwarf named Master Drogan, and one night kobolds attack, poison Drogan, and then make off with some powerful artifacts. |
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The jump takes the proportion of e-cigarette related calls to poison centers from just 0.3 percent to 41.7 percent. |
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While the poison ivy rash is not contagious, the irritating oil from these plants can remain on clothing and shoes for days, so be sure to wash that laundry. |
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Self-interested Vandemonians had been dripping poison in ears at home. |
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Unbeknown to him, a poison challis was slipped into his personal baggage. |
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Now I know it is wrong to give water to a person who has fainted or to cut open the wound to bleed out the poison from the body of a snakebite victim. |
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Along with machine guns and poison gas, artillery guns played a prominent part in the trenches especially at battles such as the Somme and Verdun. |
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Ternately compound leaves come in threes, such as poison ivy. |
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Use canes to mark out the areas and apply the poison evenly. |
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Police are investigating complaints of an alleged campaign of poison pen letters, nuisance calls and vandalism directed at local Liberal Democrats. |
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Some gobies even rely on chemical protection, producing a poison called tetrodotoxin, which also occurs in pufferfishes and species of salamander. |
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The usefulness of syrup of ipecac as a home treatment for poisoning has been increasingly challenged, and many poison centers no longer recommend its use. |
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Coloured ink, green especially, indicates that the sender of the letter spends quite a lot of his free time planning to poison the Scottish water supply. |
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It is set in a fictitious women's college in a wholly real Oxford, where a poison pen is causing increasing alarm and distress among students and staff. |
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If the work really has to be undone, who will replant the poison ivy? |
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Irritated summer skin is usually caused by clogged sweat ducts, a condition called prickly heat or miliaria, or by exposure to poison ivy, oak or sumac. |
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Interpol reported finding rat poison in counterfeits, while Pfizer in its own tests has found floor wax. |
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Then came the horrors of World War I, with the advent of tanks and airplanes and poison gas. |
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The Assad regime in Syria has carried out a horrifying crime, killing 1,400 noncombatants with poison gas. |
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As we've discussed here not long ago, the dilution of the deadly poison is such that I can chug down any amount of homeopathic water and not notice it at all. |
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Was he telling her that he'd been poisoned by poison hemlock? |
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Improper mining could kill the Kabul River and poison the aquifer for generations to come. |
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Mangoes come in hundreds of varieties and a wide range of shapes and sizes, and are distant relatives of cashews, pistachios, poison oak and poison ivy. |
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Unfortunately, the study also found that carbon dioxide-enhanced poison ivy boasts a stronger strain of urushiol, which may prove even more poisonous to humans. |
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There's a reason ipecac is clearly labeled that it is not to be administered without first consulting a poison control center, emergency room or physician. |
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King Joffrey Baratheon ingesting poison and transforming into a bloodied ghoul during the Purple Wedding. |
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But between that one devastating tweet and this poison pen, perhaps the bodyguard was on to something. |
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Negotiation and compromise are the lifeblood of democracy, not poison to the body politic. |
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Apart from the development of royal poison antidotes, there was increasing demands for a wide range of non-poisonous plants from all parts of the known world. |
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Revealing that Claudius murdered King Hamlet by pouring poison in his ear, the wandering spirit begs young Hamlet to avenge his father's foul murder. |
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Symptoms, also caused by rubber accelerators and chemical additives, include redness, itching, crusting, and blisters, resembling the reaction to poison ivy or poison oak. |
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The real ones are far worse but I dare not mention them lest their owners or fans of the owners come around one night and burn my house down or poison my dog. |
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I learned how to poison arrows, and how to set explosives in them. |
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Once the polonium had been recognized, police were able to trace the source of the poison to the Millennium hotel in Mayfair. |
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Even an attempt to destroy a chemical-weapons dump may be disastrous, if the poison gas is released into the atmosphere. |
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And some members of the Lizard Squad are now claiming that they were never trying to poison the network. |
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Josh Rogin has the whole of the secret State Department cable on poison gas in Syria at The Cable blog at Foreign Policy. |
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Cholera vibrios release a poison that damages the lining of the intestine so that it leaks fluids and salts, and as a result, the patient is intensely dehydrated. |
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They have created a poison pill that they know you will never want to take. |
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The end results were anything but pleasant for Niko who spent a week after the incident in the hospital ward sick with fever and poison from snakes bite. |
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There's no air, there's hard radiation, there's poison in the ground below you and of course, it's between 100 and 150 degrees below in centigrade. |
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His traps and poisons proved strangely ineffective for a while, but he eventually saw it off by ramming a huge bag of poison down its hole and covering with a big stone. |
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The only certain way of avoiding poison ivy rash is to avoid the plant. |
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An important reason for this is that those who spread the poison of hatred and brutality have not been reined in during the last fifty years or so. |
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The apple was to disguise the bitter taste of the cyanide and thus ensure that the poison would do its work. |
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The hearings helped purge the poison from the American body politic. |
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In April a small tractor had been used to disc-harrow much of the poison ivy, bittersweet, bayberry, and grass cover, leaving the soil soft and free of vegetation. |
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He devises a far-fetched plan to poison the monk through the mail, because he realizes that he cannot kill the man face-to-face. |
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The poison spread by the BNP will make everyone's lives worse. |
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He was struck down inside an upmarket London hotel by a rare radioactive poison that had been slipped in to his pot of tea. |
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Many multicellular trichomes are glandular, developing a terminal gland which may secrete a variety of compounds, such as alkaloids to deter or poison predators. |
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In 2002, an Islamist plot to poison the London underground with ricin was foiled as well. |
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Later on, I found out that poison gas wasn't even new to them. |
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Another campaign aide, Nicole Wallace, and her husband, Mark Wallace, are mentioned as founts of poison on Palin. |
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The poor fellow has neither the tusks of the elephant, nor the claws of the lion, nor even the horns or pointed teeth or stings and poison glands. |
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In 1925 the Geneva Protocol prohibiting the use of poison gas was signed. |
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He tried to poison us like lower animals, like the mice that pester storybook villages, the insects that fly around the heads of those that I read about. |
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They claim to have concerns that such a mass influx of people into wildlife areas will disrupt animal mating, damage flora and poison underground freshwater sources. |
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Wash the veggies because they may not be clean, because they may even have traces of poison on them? |
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Inside these rented storage units, Federal agents discovered the chemicals and plans used for making the same poison gas once used by prison death chambers. |
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Today, I think the rhetoric coming from the right wing media is the toxic poison that is spreading this culture war into our body politic so quickly. |
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This is a poison spreading through the body politic of the country. |
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Although people talk about poison gas I don't care about it. |
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In the northeastern foothills, on relatively dry slopes, bur oak dominates above an understory of hop hornbeam, smooth sumac, coralberry, and poison ivy. |
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Auto-Intoxication It's about a medical condition where the body's organs poison their own system. |
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Exposing that paper to fluorescent ricin, a poison that sticks to galactose, showed that the poison was present. |
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The alleged poison had been laurel water, distilled from the leaves of the bush. |
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And we all might be less inclined to poison that ant hill in our yard after we see first-hand the complexity of the ROM's leafcutter ant colony. |
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Acts as stomach and contact poison against caterpillars, leafhoppers, thrips, and squash bugs. |
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You might have to hide in the woods while the animals clear out, so watch out for the poison sumac. |
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Some birds, such as hermit thrushes, subsist on wild fruit like sumac and poison ivy. |
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For an example of how the blood feuds of the past can poison the present, one need look no further than the Israeli-Palestinian dispute. |
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Alcohol brewed by the bootleggers turns into poison due to the formation of methyl alcohol which is toxic in nature. |
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Phenothiazines such as haloperidol may have a synergistic effect with the poison and should be avoided. |
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Instead, as tests showed, the flatworm contained a poison called tetrodotoxin. |
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The poison can be easily made from widely available castor beans using basic, low tech equipment. |
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Ricin is a poison that can be made from the waste left over from processing castor beans. |
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The proposals cover more than 60 groups of species, ranging from the African elephant to Malagasy poison frogs and the monkey puzzle tree. |
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Green potatoes contain a poison called solanine and are not healthy for you to eat. |
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The US keeps reminding us about the poison gas attack on the Kurdish village of Halabja, carried out by Saddam. |
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In addition, Hapten Sciences is planning a multiple ascending dose study in individuals that are sensitive to poison ivy. |
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I really got hot, when I saw Janette Scott, fight a Triffid that spits poison and kills. |
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They let a bittersome poison creep into their hearts, concerning the failings of people. |
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We've all heard of the Blue Wall of Silence, the code under which cops stay mum about rogue cops who poison the barrel. |
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A jellyfish... carries poison cells that can sting other citizens of the sea. |
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As the poison has gone out of the European wound, the Conservative Party should now be able to tolerate a Federast leader. |
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The forcible administration of poison is by no means a new thing in criminal annals. |
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Varieties commonly found in these forests include grapevines, trumpet vine, poison ivy, and Virginia creeper. |
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Arsenic was used as a poison during the era because it was undetectable when administered over a long period. |
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Sometimes soap or caustic or poison chemicals are used in the bucket as killing agents. |
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In 1678 the murder of Sir Edmund Berry Godfrey was ascribed to her servants, and Titus Oates accused her of an intention to poison the king. |
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As the poison takes effect, Hamlet, hearing that Fortinbras is marching through the area, names the Norwegian prince as his successor. |
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Heartbroken, Romeo buys poison from an apothecary and goes to the Capulet crypt. |
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In da Porto's version, Romeo takes poison and Giulietta stabs herself with his dagger. |
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At the end of the debate, Satan volunteers to poison the newly created Earth and God's new and most favoured creation, Mankind. |
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In an effort to break the deadlock, this front saw the introduction of new military technology, including poison gas, aircraft and tanks. |
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This may include use of known toxic substances, such as use of the poison lead in traditional Chinese medicine. |
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Rumours circulated attributing the death to a poison administered by the Emperor Domitian, but no positive evidence for this was ever produced. |
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They were also viewed as noxious animals prone to thieving, and their saliva was said to be able to poison a grown man. |
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Illegal poison baits set for foxes or crows are indiscriminate and kill protected birds and other animals. |
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Most temperate woody vines are also deciduous, including grapes, poison ivy, Virginia creeper, wisteria, etc. |
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All Narcissus species contain the alkaloid poison lycorine, mostly in the bulb but also in the leaves. |
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Jellies destroy fish nets, poison or crush captured fish, and consume fish eggs and young fish. |
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The most venomous jellyfish is the box jellyfish which produces enough poison to kill 60 humans and is the reason for 1 death per year. |
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The British also had several contingency plans, including the use of poison gas. |
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A poison is inhaled or ingested, whereas venom produced by snakes is injected into its victim via fangs. |
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The mountains are dry and brown and so remote that not even helicopters fly overhead, spraying their poison over papaverous hillsides. |
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It was known that the toad could poison people and, as the witch's familiar, it was thought to possess magical powers. |
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Toads were associated with devils and demons and in Paradise Lost, John Milton depicted Satan as a toad when he poured poison into Eve's ear. |
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It may take several hours before the poison takes effect, as cyanogenic glycosides must be hydrolyzed before the cyanide ion is released. |
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This will kill the plant back into its root system using a small fraction of the poison required to spray whole bushes. |
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These alkaloids protect grass plants from herbivory, but several endophyte alkaloids can poison grazing animals, such as cattle and sheep. |
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According to Thomas' version, Tristan was wounded by a poison lance while attempting to rescue a young woman from six knights. |
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It is worrying that that there are people spreading poison about the company unattributably and this is undermining confidence. |
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Heavy artillery and machine guns caused most of the casualties, supplemented by poison gas. |
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In AD 19, Adgandestrius, a chief of the Chatti, asked Rome for poison to kill Arminius. |
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This allergic reaction is recognized as secondary to exposure to the urushiol oil which is found in poison ivy, poison oak, and poison sumac. |
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Peter Isaacson continued his attack on Hearst and the poison pen of his editors. |
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Opium was used with poison hemlock to put people quickly and painlessly to death, but it was also used in medicine. |
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When they arrived at the town, they were attacked by the natives and de la Cosa was shot with poison arrows and killed by Indians. |
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The best thing would be for the Pope to die, for he is the poison at the root of all this trouble and more which may occur. |
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We're worried that the poison will seep down into the river under the ground and poison our muku and tjala, witchetty grubs and honey ants. |
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It can squirt this poison in jets up to a distance of one metre and usually aims at the eyes of its victim. |
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Like poison ivy or oak, swimmer's itch is a reaction of the skin to an irritant. |
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During the first assault of Ahriman, it is Tishtariya who purges the world from all poison and harmful animals. |
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Luke had been given the poison by his arch nemesis, Helena Cassadine. |
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A slip-up by a couple of technicians while they are mixing an atomic cocktail can create a poison cloud that spreads for miles. |
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But a poison pill might not be necessarily given Icahn's corporate raider history. |
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Hilary Mantel may be a brilliant writer of historical fiction, but she appears to have traded in her wordprocessor for a poison pen. |
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Pearce has swept away the poison and paranoia which infested Billy Davies' unlamented regime at the City Ground. |
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Police said the poison used in the latest attack was cresol, a powerful and toxic disinfectant. |
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Pyrethrum and derris are short-lived, mild natural insecticides that poison insects. |
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A frisky narrative teases with cautions about hissing snakes and poison sumac lying in wait. |
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In the 1980s, Saddam's forces killed tens of thousands of Kurds, many with poison gas. |
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On March 16, 2006, angry Kurds in Halabja, Iraq, tore down a monument dedicated to the memory of the 1988 poison gas attacks by Saddam Hussein. |
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At this key juncture of our planet's evolution, species had either to learn to cope with this poison that was produced by photosynthesizing cyanobacteria or they went extinct. |
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In fact, the 1997 proposal was a binding bylaw amendment prompted by Fleming's refusal to redeem its poison pill despite a 65 percent antipill vote the previous year. |
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And in the midst of better conditions and brighter prospects the shameless, brainless, fameless bipeds pollute the atmosphere, poison hearts and plant discontent. |
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I who have the best gamecocks from here to Maraval, and win twenty-nine battles with Hawk alone before they poison him near the gayelle in Valencia when we went to fight. |
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If women had a voice in the making of the laws, how long would the dram-shop and low groggery send out their liquid poison to pollute civilized lands? |
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Did hisse, and spit out poison greene, and spirt with tongues infest. |
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In addition to high explosive and incendiary bombs the enemy would possibly use poison gas and even bacteriological warfare, all with a high degree of accuracy. |
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Only licensed exterminators can purchase rat poison in this state. |
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