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Once war broke out, the system went into abeyance.
Royal ceremonies had fallen into abeyance, and the throne's political influence had atrophied.
If the crisis now goes into abeyance, M5S's fortunes could wane too.Mr Casaleggio remains optimistic.
On 17 July 1945, in a room at Claridge's hotel, the rules of cartography went into abeyance.
It is disturbing to read the historian's summary: "..The actual effect was disastrous, and the edict soon fell into abeyance".
To this period also belongs the revival, in 1812, of the Abitur (the school-leaving examination), which had fallen into abeyance.
Similar(30)
A relapse into feudal anarchism seemed inevitable, and Yelü's reforms fell into temporary abeyance.
The debate about oxygen went into effective abeyance after 1953; researchers had other questions to ask the mountain.
If they are amputated they are not replaced, but other meristems along the stem, normally held in abeyance, begin to sprout into new branches that more than compensate for the loss of the original one.
But then this is 1996, slap-bang in the middle of that strange decade when history briefly put itself in abeyance, culture turned itself into a mess of gurning primary colours, and the United States had no real external enemies.
A natural and periodic ocean current phenomenon called El Niño peaked in 1998, pumping heat into the air, but has been increasingly in abeyance since.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com