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deaf

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deaf

partially or totally unable to hear
www.drf.org
Collins Discovery Encyclopedia, 1st edition © HarperCollins Publishers 2005
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References in periodicals archive
Reviewing the history of the press in Iran during the lifespan of the current regime deafly demonstrates that they have had no hesitation in closing news outlets that in democratically governed countries are usually the eyes and ears of the people, and provide checks and balances as far as their governance is concerned.
Field experiments deafly indicate that, with the adoption of high-yielding cultivars and adequate use of mineral fertilisers, yields from a wheat-soybean cropping system could be increased from subsistence levels to economically profitable levels (Ved Prakash and Gupta 2002).
The explanations are so incomplete that much remains unknown by the cliff-hanger ending, so a sequel deafly lies in the future.
The engagement of any individual or group concerned with quickening the end of extreme poverty is deafly both welcome and encouraging.
allows researchers to more deafly identify the tested drug's
Silly me, I thought that this was just the sexiest music ever, not rough drafts of musicians groping their way blindly (or deafly) toward eighteenth-century tonality.
Pesaturo said that by eliminating the variable work, quality improves as a result of deafly defined standard work steps.
(10.) It should be noted that on Chinese maps there is a tenth dash outside the South China Sea, to the southeast of Taiwan, that deafly indicates China's claim over that island.
Second, the identity of the likely more-informed party (i.e., the alimony payor) generally does not vary, and to the extent that it does vary, it does not vary over a set of facts and circumstances that are deafly definable ex ante.
The answer is deafly no and it is important that companies not get completely distracted by the current focus on distracted driving as it specifically relates to electronic devices.
His success in the bond business deafly demonstrates the significance of Chicago and the "geography of capital" that William Cronon contends as being crucial to the development of the West.
(70) His Hispanic acculturation can deafly be seen in actions before the Inquisition.
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