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To interruptions
noun
The act of interrupting, or the state of being interrupted.
Exact(60)
The price spikes over the past century were linked to interruptions in supply, notably during the first world war.
"But regrettably we lost over 59 hours and 7 minutes due to interruptions, followed by forced adjournments".
During a late-night gig at the Canon's Gait, Whitney allegedly responded to interruptions from the crowd by headbutting a member of the audience.
"People here are used to interruptions," Sara Abbas, 21, a senior communications major, said with a shrug as she studied in a cafe near campus.
They see you're wearing them and it gives the impression that you're listening to something important and therefore less open to interruptions.
The county music industry is an insular world which understands its market like a science: by contrast general pop music has no geographic base and therefore is more prone to interruptions in sound, message and cultural quirks.
Jules et Jim is an epic of inconsequence, the historical sweep of the first world war and the rise of nazism reduced to interruptions to the enigmatic potentialities of private life.
The new strategy was immediately condemned by City Council members and advocates for the poor, who said it might lead to interruptions in basic aid to thousands of women and children.
So what we saw, both in the fixed-income markets and in the equity markets, was the legacy of almost 20 years of work in strengthening the physical infrastructure of our markets, making sure that they are resilient to interruptions.
Subject to interruptions from time to time, this shop has provided carpets, seat covers, and similar weavings ever since, at first for the French court and then for government buildings.
The study of nurses' responses to interruptions is limited.
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