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shore thistle English

Meaning shore thistle meaning

What does shore thistle mean?

shore thistle

Any thistle of genus Carduus found along a shore, known to cause poisoning of ruminants. Carduus tenuiflorus

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News and current affairs

I grew up in an industrial town on the south shore of Lake Michigan - Gary, Indiana - and saw poverty, unemployment, and discrimination.
In response, Italy's President has asked the entrepreneurial classes to help shore up the country's competitiveness.
The world's rapid economic growth in 2004 shows that the efforts to shore up our defenses since the 1990's has paid off.
The government may have to shore up the financial system if the changes in asset prices that undermined the dollar sink risk-loving or imprudent lenders.
But, perhaps more than that, Morsi will need tangible achievements on the economic and domestic-security fronts to shore up his legitimacy at home.
From Dublin on the shore of the Irish Sea to Bratislava in the foothills of the Carpathians, the same coins and banknotes are legal tender, and they are constantly pushing back the European Union's boundaries.
But no amount of finger pointing can obscure the fact that, 50 years after the European Community's creation, Europe badly needs a new political framework, if not a new project, to shore up its unity.
The only way for the government to shore up growth in the short run is to pursue more debt-driven stimulus, as it did earlier this year.
To prevent that, we seek to shore up our current intention to lose weight.
No matter: Zeman took the opportunity to shore up his popularity by appealing to racist and xenophobic sentiments, telling several thousand listeners (separated by police from a large counter-demonstration) that they were not extremists.
Eight weeks later, Hurricane Sandy struck the New Jersey shore and New York City.
Today, a G-8 or G-20 agreement on exchanges of tax information could help to shore up national revenue bases and the reputations of governments for tax fairness.
Even before his fall, the opposition controlled most big Serbian cities, and in 2000 he lost the election that he called to shore up his authority.
Closer to the shore, many natural ecosystems, most notably coral reefs and mangroves, act as natural shock absorbers and wave breakers.
The financial crisis and recession may dampen the rise of FDI protectionism, as countries seek capital to shore up local firms and increase investment to help them promote economic recovery.
At the moment, Europe's banks desperately need to shore up their balance sheets.
If China proves itself willing to help shore up Afghan President Hamid Karzai's administration, it will not seek to gain any immediate advantage from the withdrawal of US forces.
Were the measures taken two weeks ago to shore up the financial system simply wrong?
In order to shore up their financial systems and overall demand, emerging-market countries must be ready to take actions similar to those pursued by the advanced countries.
Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff's government, which began its term this year with an understanding that economic growth will slow sharply, devalued the real in order to shore up the country's competitiveness.
But, above all, politicians must stop trying to shore up their diminished credibility with the pretense of economic science.
In the last few years, while American leaders continued to ride the neoliberal wave, much of the rest of the world was already standing on the shore.
So what can be done to shore up global aggregate demand and growth prospects, while preserving the economic openness that has benefited major parts of the developing world so greatly in the past 30 years?
Indeed, the regime has hinted that it may be willing to compromise on the issue - the delineation of the 1967 border along a tiny piece of land on the Eastern shore of the Sea of Galilee - that wrecked the negotiations eight years ago.

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