Sentence examples for favour place from inspiring English sources

Exact(1)

To find out which leg you favour, place one foot in front of you and the other behind and stand for a few moments, then swap over and do the same.

Similar(59)

"They favour places with abundant food that are inaccessible to other predators.

They used to favour places that looked much like their living rooms, but, thanks in part to local regeneration schemes, these have lost out to high street bars.

In general, such tools are contrary to advice from advocates of the innovation system approach, such as Smart Specialization strategies that favour place-based policies tailored to specific needs of individual regions.

The phylogenetic position of P. robusta has been resolved to be at the very base of the turtle lineage by multiple analyses in recent years [ 14, 22, 24- 26], but opposition is fierce and some still favour placing this taxon at the base of the pleurodiran lineage [ 12, 27, 28].

Around the late 1950s, Osborne began recording under his own name, favouring place names for his instrumental titles – the best known are "The Lights Of Lisbon", "The Man From Marseilles", "The Windows Of Paris", which became the theme music for the BBC drivetime programme, Roundabout and was recorded by Bing Crosby, with lyrics by Johnny Mercer, and "The Man From Madrid", a Top 50 entry in 1961.

The choke-zones of the high seas are favoured places to strike: the Malacca Straits between Malaysia and Indonesia and the lawless waters where the Red Sea enters the Gulf of Aden, a short boat ride from Somalia.

They favoured placing rich, ornate designs on the outside of skyscrapers at the ground level and simpler, plainer ornamentation on the upper levels, with strong vertical lines.

Woodlarks and hoopoes favoured places with shorter swards while wrynecks did not show preference for any particular sward height.

This approach is taken by, for example, Jackson et al. (2012) who test whether informal favours take place across edges that are supported (i.e. that nodes exchanging a favour have a common neighbour), which is the prediction of their theoretical model.

We know, for example, that sharing of food and favours takes place amongst primates and assumptions have been made that this was always about a clear exchange of one favour for another.

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