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your heart works crosswords

your heart works crosswords




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to write a journal entry example

to write a journal entry example




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to write a reflective journal

to write a reflective journal




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your life english edition

your life english edition




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to write an essay paper about yourself

to write an essay paper about yourself




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your favorite meal could be killing you slowly

your favorite meal could be killing you slowly




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to write a journal entry

to write a journal entry




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to write good journals

to write good journals




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to write a book in 24 hours 24 hour bestseller series

to write a book in 24 hours 24 hour bestseller series




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to wire your street rod

to wire your street rod




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to write a reflective journal examples

to write a reflective journal examples




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to make yourself happy and remarkably less disturbable

to make yourself happy and remarkably less disturbable




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to write a discourse community paper

to write a discourse community paper




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to write a dialectical journal

to write a dialectical journal




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to write a literary journalism essay

to write a literary journalism essay




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to write an autobiography essay about yourself

to write an autobiography essay about yourself




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to wire a four way switch with one light

to wire a four way switch with one light




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to write a journalistic essay

to write a journalistic essay




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to write an autobiography about yourself

to write an autobiography about yourself




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Loan No. 2542-BAN (SF): Participatory Small Scale Water Resources Sector Project [LGED/PSSW/PD/Ukhia/Cox/R-4/2013]




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Loan No. 2492/2493-UZB (SF): Water Resources Management Sector Project [WRMSP/ICB/03]




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Meghna Energy-Efficient Flour Milling Project

The transaction involves a senior secured loan of up to $20,000,000 to Tanveer Dal Mill and Flour Mills Limited (Tanveer) for the Meghna Energy-Efficient Flour Milling Project in Bangladesh. Tanveer is part of Meghna group.




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Domestic Resource Mobilization Modernization Project




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A cheaper alternative to activated charcoal for your terrarium

Is it worth including activated charcoal in your terrarium’s potting mix? James Wong isn’t convinced by this pricey product




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Tiny chameleon spotted by tourists in Madagascar is new to science

A species of leaf chameleon newly named Brookesia nofy was discovered in a patch of coastal rainforest, a highly threatened habitat in Madagascar




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The cactus family’s surprising evolutionary journey

We are finally untangling the ancient history of the cactus family, revealing some surprising forces that shaped these plants – ­­­­­­and prompting concern for their future




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Is it really cheaper to cultivate your own fruit and vegetables?

Our gardening columnist James Wong isn’t convinced, and does the maths to get some answers




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Richard Powers's new novel is a beautiful love letter to our oceans

From colonialism to AI, this Booker-longlisted novel urges us to wake up to how we treat wild creatures and places




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Your gut bacteria are at war - and force their enemies to switch sides

Rival tribes of bacteria armed with poison darts are fighting it out in your gut, with armies of traitors often winning the day




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Why excessive positivity is bad for your health and mental well-being

There are real benefits to a positive mindset, but the idea that we should always look on the bright side has gone too far. Research into toxic positivity can help restore balance




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How to easily satisfy your salt cravings without damaging your health

Could potassium fortification be the answer we're looking for when it comes to battling our unhealthy addiction to salt?




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Why our location in the Milky Way is perfect for finding alien life

Our arm of the Milky Way is filled with older, metal-rich stars. New research suggests these might provide the best conditions for life to form on their planets




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The vital viruses that shape your microbiome and your health

Your body is home to trillions of beneficial viruses crucial for a healthy microbiome. We may one day be able to tweak this "virome" to treat obesity and anxiety




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Why did humans evolve big brains? A new idea bodes ill for our future

Recent fossil finds suggest that big brains weren't an evolutionary asset to our ancestors but evolved by accident – and are likely to shrink again in the near future




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Why midlife is the perfect time to take control of your future health

The lifestyle choices you make in middle age play a particularly important role in how your brain ages




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If your gym instructor is an iPad, what is lost – and gained?

When your gym class is online at home, you don't necessarily need to miss out on the benefits that come from exercising in-person with others




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When is the best time to exercise to get the most from your workout?

There may be ways to work with your body’s natural daily and monthly cycles to get the maximum benefits from workouts and avoid injury




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How to use psychology to hack your mind and fall in love with exercise

If the idea of exercise is more attractive than the reality, you aren't alone. But there are ways to train your motivation and develop better habits




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What made us human? The fossils redefining our evolutionary origins

Fossils found 50 and 100 years ago seemed to pinpoint the moment humanity emerged – but defining a human has turned out to be far trickier than we thought




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How clues in honey can help fight our biggest biodiversity challenges

There are secrets aplenty in a pot of honey – from information about bees' "micro-bee-ota" to DNA from the environment – that can help us fight food fraud and even monitor shifts in climate




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How to tell if your immune system is weak or strong

New blood tests can reveal whether your immune system is fighting fit by looking at the balance of different immune cells, but there may be a simpler way of gauging your immune health




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Why overcoming your cynicism could be key to a healthier, happier life

Evidence suggests that cynicism is bad for your health. Neuroscientist Jamil Zaki describes the three ways to conquer your inner cynic to boost your well-being




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How climate change has pushed our oceans to the brink of catastrophe

For decades, the oceans have absorbed much of the excess heat caused by greenhouse gases. The latest observations suggest they are reaching their limits, so how worried should we be?




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We're finally solving the puzzle of how clouds will affect our climate

Clouds can trap heat or reflect it away from Earth, making their impact on global warming extraordinarily hard to predict. Now, new ways of studying them are lifting the fog




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How the most precise clock ever could change our view of the cosmos

Forget atomic clocks. Nuclear clocks, which only drop a second every 300 billion years, can test whether nature's fundamental constants are constant after all




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A longevity diet that hacks cell ageing could add years to your life

A new diet based on research into the body's ageing process suggests you can increase your life expectancy by up to 20 years by changing what, when and how much you eat




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Why we avoid effort even though it can improve our well-being

Understanding the “effort paradox” can help you reshape your relationship to exertion so that you commit to those hard but truly meaningful activities




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The brain has its own microbiome. Here's what it means for your health

Neuroscientists have been surprised to discover that the human brain is teeming with microbes, and we are beginning to suspect they could play a role in neurodegenerative disorders like Alzheimer's




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Why frenemies, or love-hate relationships, are so bad for your health

Friends who blow hot and cold put more strain on your physical and mental health than enemies. Here's how to spot them and handle them




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Take control of your brain's master switch to optimise how you think

The discovery that a small blue blob of neurons, the locus coeruleus, controls your mode of thinking suggests ways to increase learning, creativity, focus and alertness