Definitions
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Etymologies
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Examples
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Thanks Liisa, that is a good one to show how important the messages in Dr. Seuss books are to growing minds.
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So well-respected is Bjoergen among her peers at the moment that Finland's Riitta-Liisa Roponen was shocked to learn that her ski time in the third leg was faster than Bjoergen's anchor leg.
Norway's Bjoergen adds to bounty with cross-country relay gold 2010
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And many thanks to the kind folks who aided my research, especially Pentti Aro for Finnish translations, Bruce and Diantha Weilepp, and Liisa Penner at the Clatsop County Historical Society.
The Trouble With May Amelia Jennifer L. Holm 2011
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I agree with Liisa about not using numbers or colours for subway lines.
» City Council boards the DRL bandwagon • Spacing Toronto • understanding the urban landscape 2009
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Helsinki Arts Festival "Helsinki Festival 2011" stages circus events, other performing arts, a children's program and cinema, including choreography by Mart Kangro and Liisa Risu, and music by Lisa Ekdahl.
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And many thanks to the kind folks who aided my research, especially Pentti Aro for Finnish translations, Bruce and Diantha Weilepp, and Liisa Penner at the Clatsop County Historical Society.
The Trouble With May Amelia Jennifer L. Holm 2011
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Liisa Bayko , an analyst at JMP Group Inc.'s JMP Securities, earned the No. 1 ranking in the pharmaceutical sector in the Best on the Street survey by focusing on the industry's science side.
Pharmaceuticals 2011
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As Marja-Liisa Swantz notes, "problems that most Westerners would feel are individual problems, whether of a psychic, spiritual, or physical nature, are accepted by most Africans as social problems."
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Marja-Liisa Swantz found that the Zaramo viewed childbirth as a potentially threatening transformation both for the child and for those people in close proximity to the process.
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In the Ruvu ethnographic record, for instance, Marja-Liisa Swantz found that Zaramo in the Bunju area kept matawango, a religiously-significant clay-pot container in which they placed earthen figurines, pungi, "fashioned from clay and mixed with some parts of the skin, hair and nails of the ancestral guardian of such pots."
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