Contaminated drinking water causes half a million deaths from diarrhoea each year.
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Nitrate contamination in drinking water is a major threat to public health.
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Some environmental and public health activists say it taints drinking water supplies.
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Twenty years ago, Icelandic teens were among the heaviest-drinking youths in Europe.
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Main outcome measures: Time to alcohol relapse and to heavy drinking relapse.
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Tours are of course led by City Cycle employees barred from imbibing.
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Take her recent pronouncements on milk and the imbibing thereof, for example.
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If you plan on imbibing, consider booking a drinks package in advance.
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Nauseous from imbibing cloying endearments and a pound of gilt-wrapped Belgian truffles?
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Are you imbibing my gospel, the gospel of will and of influence?
Ús de imbibition en anglès
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First, the imbibition proceeds by compressing the air inside the aggregate.
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The most jovial of the celebrants tells of his early imbibition of red ink.
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However, despite its considerable importance during seed imbibition and germination processes, primary carbon metabolism in seeds is less studied.
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But the most remarkable and interesting case of this kind of action is the imbibition of oxygen by metallic platinum.
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The imbibition kinetics of a millimeter-sized aggregate of 300 nm diameter colloidal particles by a wetting pure solvent is studied.
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Finally, the imbibition starts again at a constant excess of pressure, smaller than the capillary pressure but larger than the one of the atmosphere.
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Theories are put forward, most learned theories, introducing capillary action, osmosis and cellular imbibition, to explain why the caulicle ascends and the radical descends.
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To manage this little feeding organism, with its wondrous instinct and capacity of imbibition, is the first great question after that of race is settled.
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*The distinction between true absorption and mere permeation, or imbibition, is by no means clearly understood: see Mller's 'Physiology,' Eng.