Cf. Sentence Examples

cf.
  • With reference to any particular group of forms such a new centre of modification may be termed a metacentre, and it is plain that the archecentre of the whole group is a metacentre of the larger group cf which the group under consideration is a branch.

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  • It is worse than useless to apply drastic remedies if the main facts cf the, lifehistory of the pest are not known; e.g.

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  • The smaller company exchanges its stock for stock of the larger system on an agreed basis, or sells it outright, and the bondholders of the absorbed line often have a similar opportunity to exchange their securities for obligations cf the parent company, which are on a stronger basis or have a broader market.

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  • In respect cf hospitals and the treatment of the sick his energy and knowledge were of enormous advantage to his country, both in times of peace and of war, and the unrivalled accommodation for medical treatment possessed by Berlin is a standing tribute to his name, which will be perpetuated in one of the largest hospitals of the city.

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  • The mountains both in Victoria and New South Wales were snow-capped, and glaciers flowed down their flanks and laid down Carboniferous glacial deposits, which are still preserved in basins that flank the mountain ranges, such as the famous conglomerates of Bacchus Marsh, Heathcote and the Loddon valley in Victoria, and cf Branxton and other localities in New South Wales.

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  • Towards the en._ cf October 20,000 shearers were called out, and many other trades, principally concerned with the handling or shipping of wool, joined the ranks of the strikers, with the result that the maritime and pastoral industries throughout the whole of Australia were most injuriously disturbed.

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  • We have to argue back from the state cf things revealed in the texts, of various dates from 450-250 B.C., and in the inscriptions from that date onwards.

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  • In some cases both the nucleus and the chromatophores may be carried along in the rotating stream, but in others, such as T.Titeila, the chloroplasts may remain motionless iii a non-motile layer of the cytoplasm in direct contact with the cell wall.i Desmids, Diatoms and Oscillaria show creeping movements probably due to the secretion of slime by the cells; the swarmspores and plasmodium of the Myxomycetes exhibit amoehoid movements; and the motile spores of Fungi and Algae, the spermatozoids of mosses, ferns, &c., move by means of delicate prolongations, cilia or flagella cf the protoplast.

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  • The supreme responsibility for this act must rest with the emperor, "who imposed it by an exercise of personal power on the only one cf his ministers who could have lent himself to such a forgetfulness of the safeguards of a parliamentary regime."

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  • In the beginning of 1409 he concluded a treaty with Jagiello at Novogrudok for the purpose, and on the 9th cf July 1410 the combined Polish-Lithuanian forces, reinforced by Hussite auxiliaries,.

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  • Often this felsitic devitrified glass is so fine-grained that its constituents cannot be directly determined even with the aid of the microscope, but chemical analysis leaves little doubt as to the real nature cf the minerals which have been formed.

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  • In an age when, with the evolution of the feudal organization cf society, even everyday costume was becoming a uniform, symbolizing in material and colour the exact status of the wearer, it was natural that in the parallel organization of the Church the official vestments should undergo a similar process of differentiation and definition.

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  • It is common to all Germanic languages; cf.

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  • The main body of his works belongs, so far as can be ascertained from the scanty evidence which we have, to the latter half of his life; 206 B.C. is the approximate date of the Miles gloriosus; cf.

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  • After the revival of learning Plautus was reinstated, and took rank as one of the great dramatists of antiquity; cf.

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  • A difficult question arose for Descartes's philosophy, when it had to explain the union in man of the absolutely opposite substances, 4 Cf.

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  • It is possibly also in connexion with the dualism of his fundamental 1 =Nimrod = Zoroaster, cf.

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  • This is in line with the provisions in the Constitution of the United States regarding the protection of property, but the difficulty in applying the principle to the railway situation lies in the fact that costs have to be met by averaging the returns on the total amount cf business done, and it is often impossible, in specific instances, to secure a rate which can be considered to yield a fair return on the specific service rendered.

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  • This is a fact which has long been recognized; cf.

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  • To foll.; cf.

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  • They became orgiastic in character and scenes of drunkenness, cf.

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  • Contact with Babylonia tended to stimulate the 1 Cf.

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  • It is common to Teutonic languages, cf.

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  • It was at the holy well of Kadesh, in the sacred mounts of Sinai and Horeb, and in the field of Edom that the 1 Cf.

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  • It is instructive to observe in Egypt the form which old traditions have taken in Manetho (Maspero, Rec. de travaux, xxvii., 1905, 1.22 seq.); cf.

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  • See the article in Herzog-Hauck, Realencyklopadie; and cf.

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  • Further information is contained in the excerpts from Ctesias by Photius; cf.

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  • Bertolotti's Francesco Cenci e la sua famiglia (2nd ed., Florence, 1879), containing a number of interesting documents which place the events in their true light; cf.

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  • Lemon juice is fermented for some time to free it from mucilage, then boiled 2 Cf.

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  • For what follows, with regard to the Church's conversion of guerra into the Holy War, cf.

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  • Farn; the Indo-European root, seen in the Sanskrit parna, a feather, shows the primary meaning; cf.

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  • The addition and multiplication of two relation-numbers is defined by taking two relations R and S, such that (I) their fields have no Cf.

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  • The founder of the modern point of view, explained in this article, was Leibnitz, who, however, was so far in advance of contemporary thought that his ideas remained neglected and undeveloped until recently; cf.

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  • For the modern authors who have rediscovered and improved upon the position of Leibnitz, cf.

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  • As to the discovery of Greenland by the Norsemen and its early history see Konrad Maurer's excellent paper, " Geschichte der Entdeckung Ostgronlands " in the report of Die zweite 1 Cf.

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  • See the articles in Herzog-Hauck's Realencyklopadie and the Allgemeine deutsche Biographie; and cf.

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  • For other works said to have been written by Hamdani cf.

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  • The Old English word is cweorn; it is a word common to Teutonic languages, cf.

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  • Between the bases of the sixth pair cf limbs and behind the prosomatic carapace is seen the tergite of the small prae-genital somite.

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  • From 1 The word is common to the Teutonic languages, cf.

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  • It is held 1 that the Darwinian doctrine of selection of fortuitous congenital variations is sufficient to account for all cases, that the Lamarckian hypothesis of transmission cf acquired characters is not supported by experimental evidence, and that the latter should therefore be dismissed.

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  • The word is apparently from a Norman-French kenil (this form does not occur, but is seen in the Norman kinet, a little dog), modern French chenil, from popular Latin canile, place for a dog, canis, cf.

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  • One of the earliest of the religious houses to be suppressed was the hospital cf St Thomas of Acon (or Acre) on the north side of Cheapside, the site of which is now occupied by Mercers' Hall.

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  • He had wars with the Swazis, who in 1855 ceded to the Boers of Lydenburg a tract of land on the north side cf the Pongolo in order to place Europeans between themselves and the Zulu.

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  • Glas, perhaps derived from an old Teutonic root gla-, a variant of glo-, having the general sense of shining, cf.

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  • The pressure at any point cf a plane in the interior of a fluid is the intensity of the normal thrust estimated per unit area of the plane.

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  • Another work of Ibn Tufail, the Kitab Asrar ulIjikma ul-mashragiyya ("Secrets of Eastern Science;"), was published at Bulaq (1882); cf.

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  • This script, together with the general Sumerian culture, was taken over by the Babylonians upon their settlement in the Euphrates valley and adapted to their language, which belonged to the Semitic group. In this transfer the Sumerian words - largely monosyllabic - were reproduced, but read as Semitic, and 1 Cf.

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  • See the articles in the Encyclopaedia Biblica; Herzog-Hauck, Realencyklopddie; The Jewish Encyclopaedia; Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible; and cf.

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  • It appears in many Teutonic languages, cf.

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  • He also arranged an experimental tubefurnace by passing a carbon tube horizontally beneath the arc ' Cf.

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  • For his life see his Ideate and Irrtumer (1872 5th ed., 1894) an Annalen meines Lebens (1891); and cf.

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  • There is a story - based, however, on no good evidence - that Walaf rid devoted himself so closely to letters as to neglect the duties of his office, owing to which he was expelled from his house; but, from his own verses, it seems that the real cause of his flight to Spires was that, notwithstanding the fact that he had been tutor to Charles the Bald, he espoused the side of his elder brother Lothair on the death cf Louis the Pious in 840.

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  • Jabneh (name of a city), Jabin, Jamlek, Jiptah (Jephthah), &c. Most of these really are verbs, the suppressed or implicit subject being 'el, " numen, god," or the name of a god; cf.

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  • There is also a Flood-story, an episode in which has a bearing on the 1 Cf.

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  • Not only did an extreme party arise in Asia Minor rejecting all prophecy and the Apocalypse of John along with it, but the majority cf the Churches and bishops in that district appear (c. 178) to have broken off all fellowship with the new prophets, while books were written to show that the very form of the Montanistic prophecy was sufficient proof of its spuriousness.

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  • Later regulations are also laid down in the Talmuds in order to prevent any appearance of authority attaching to the translation, and also to ensure reverential 1 Cf.

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  • The result of his studies there was the translation of the Chronicon of Eusebius, with a continuation 1 of twenty-eight homilies of Origen on Jeremiah and 1 Cf.

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  • The meaning of the root from which it is derived is very doubtful; cf.

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  • Charles, Critical History of 1 This idea appears as early as the 2nd century B.C. Cf.

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  • Important remains of prehistoric settlements have been found in the vicinity; cf.

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  • The mud is 1 The word is descended from the Aryan name of the animal, cf.

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  • The relation of the Ephetae to the court of the Areopagus is obscure; cf.

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  • These gaps have lately been repaired, or made passable with the help of iron stanchions; the remains cf the buildings at the top and at the foot of the mountain have been excavated; and the entrance to the gallery, between the outstretched paws of a gigantic lion, has been laid bare.

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  • I) of a family character, is regarded as producing immortality (cf.

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  • These words are for (I) the swim-bladder of a fish; (2) a narrow stretch of water between an inland sea and the ocean, or between an island and the mainland, &c., cf.

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  • The wave from D has travelled to a circle of radius nearly equal to DF, that from C to a circle of radius nearly CF, and so on.

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  • On the 27th cf November, after losing 12,000 men, the assault was abandoned.

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  • The etymology of the word Tophet is obscure; it is possibly of Aramaic origin and means,"fire-place," cf.

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  • In most cases, however, where an ancient civilization shows us a strong priestly system we are unable to make out in any detail the steps by which that system was elaborated; the clearest case perhaps is the priesthood of the Jews, which is not less interesting from its origin and growth 1 Cf.

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  • The word in Old English was helig, and is common to other Teutonic languages; cf.

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  • But, at the beginning of the 17th century, when the current of the Catholic reaction was running very strongly and the Jesuits, after subduing the Protestants, began to undermine the position of the Orthodox Church in Lithuania, a more intolerant spirit 1 Cf.

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  • But the Revised Version takes the word sheth as a common noun, "tumult," and others interpret it as "pride"; cf.

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  • There are some fundamental divergencies in the representations of the traditions of both David and Saul (qq.v.), and there is indirect and 1 Cf.

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  • Charles, p. 91; cf.

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  • The reserve artillery consisted cf 23 batteries and Stuart's cavalry corps of 3 000 sabres.

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  • Amos still has frequent visions cf a more or less enigmatic character, as Micaiah had, but there is little trace of this in the great prophets after him.

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  • Nature, limited in her resources for adaptation, fashioned so many of these animals in like form that we have learned only recently to distinguish similarities cf analogous habit from the similitudes of real kinship. From whatever order of Mammalia or Reptilia an animal may be derived, prolonged aquatic adaptation will model its outer, and finally its inner, structure according to certain advantageous designs.

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  • The list is correct for the year 1604; cf.

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  • It is essentially a food cheese rather than a mere condiment, and 1 lb of it will furnish as much nourishing material as 24 lb cf the best beefsteak.

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  • It was his desire to unite the enthusiasm cf primitive Christianity with intelligent thought, the original demands of the Gospel with every letter of the Scriptures and with the practice of the Roman church, the sayings of the Paraclete with the authority of the bishops, the law of the churches with the freedom of the inspired, the rigid discipline of the Montanist with all the utterances of the New Testament and with the arrangements of a church seeking to set itself up within the world.

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  • On the intimate relation which in primitive times subsisted between the sorcerer and the king see the citation from Frazer's Early History of Kingship, p. 127, in the article Priest, and cf.

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  • The malleus and incus cf the internal ear are united, and there is no transverse canal in the skull.

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  • Tiffeneau, Comptes rendus, 1903, 1 37, p. 573), forming ortho-tolylcarbinol, CH3 C6H4 CH20H, and not benzylcarbinol, C 6 H 5 CH 2 CH 2 OH (cf.

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  • This essence of bodies, this resemblance in difference, this prevailing ' Cf.

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  • It is approached in a very circuitous way, either by a passage (Xaupn) leading from a side door in the main propylaeum or by another long passage which winds round the back cf the chief hall, and so leads by a long flight of steps, cut in the rock, to the little postern door in the semicircular bastion.

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  • This punishment, originally inflicted on those who neglected certain mystic rites, was transferred to those who, like the Danaides, despised the mystic rite of marriage; cf.

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  • For practical purposes this refinement is of small value, the two ideas being aspects of the same thing; cf.

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  • The Phoenicians spent much care on their burial-places, which have furnished the most important 1 Traces of ancient mining for iron have been found in the Lebanon; cf.

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  • The word is the English representative of the substantive common to Teutonic languages, as "dead" is of the adjective, and "die" of the verb; the ultimate origin is the pre-Teutonic verbal stem dau-; cf.

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  • The war was brought to an end by the treaty of Verdun (August 843),which gave to Charles the Bald the kingdom of the western Franks, which practically corresponded with what 1 For Charles I., Roman emperor, see Charlemagne; cf.

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  • See Marquette's Journal, first published in Melchissedech Thevenot's Recueil de Voyages (Paris, 1681), and fully given in Martin's Relations inedites, and in Shea's Discovery and Exploration of the Mississippi Valley (New York, 1852); cf.

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  • Arrone - though the ancient name does not occur in literature - the stream which forms the outlet to the lake of Bracciano, anc. Lacus Sabatinus),2 Sabatina (called after this lake), Stellatina (named from the Campus Stellatinus, near Capena; cf.

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  • The latter, however, on account of his misgovernment was deserted by most of the leading nobles, and with the exception of Hampshire the whole kingdom came into the hands cf Cynewulf.

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  • Fleury, Etudes revolutionnaires (2 vols., 1851), with which cf.

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  • The Church and the Ministry, p. 116; cf.

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  • In the controversy between Walter Travers and Richard Hooker he interposed by prohibiting the preaching cf the former; and he moreover presented Hooker with the rectory of Boscombe in Wiltshire, in order to afford him more leisure to complete his Ecclesiastical Polity, a work which, however, cannot be said to represent either Whitgift's theological or his ecclesiastical standpoint.

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  • The name appears to be Slavonic in origin, cf.

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  • Russian sobol, whence it has been adapted into various languages, cf.

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  • For the general belief that he should return for the restoration of Israel cf.

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  • Layard, through his assistant Hormuzd Rassam, devoted two or three days to excavating on the site, but owing to the want of pasturage and the fear of Bedouin attacks he left the spot after finding a broken clay cylinder 1 Cf.

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  • He returned to London with a considerable collection of plants and other curiosities, cf which the former were sent to Ray and utilized by him for his History of Plants.

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  • The apocryphal Ada Timothei (Greek and Latin) have been edited by Usener (Bonn, 1877); cf.

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  • At Berlin powerful influences, notably that of Herr von Holsteinthat mysterious omnipotence behind the throne were working for this end; the crippling of Russia seemed too favorable an opportunity to be neglected for crushing the menace cf French armaments.

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  • The sections cf the former are Potae Latini mcdii aevi, Libri confraternitatum and Necrologia Gertnaniae, and of the latter Epistolae saeculi XIII.

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  • The Greek king, on his way back to fight for Tarentum against Rome, had to cut his way through Carthaginians and Mamertines 1 For the ensuing years cf.

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  • From the Greek authors only a few notices have been preserved, especially by Justin (and in the prologues of Trogus) and Strabo; for the later times we get some information from the Byzantine authors and from Persian and Armenian sources; cf.

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  • The United States, asserting that expatriation is an inalienable right of man, maintains that, to lose his right to American protection, the emigrant who has been naturalized in the United States must have done that for which he might have been tried and punished at the moment of his departure; it claims to protect him against the exaction of what at that moment was merely a future liability ' Cf.

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  • Finally, if Luther advanced in his contest with the papacy with greater and greater energy, he did so because he was borne on by 1 Latin text by Sackur, cf.

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  • See the articles in Herzog-Hauck's Realencyklopddie and the Allgemeine deutsche Biographic; and cf.

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  • An educated Greek, who knew something (as many at that time did) cf the Greek translation of the ancient Hebrew Scriptures, if he had picked up this letter before he had ever heard the name of Jesus Christ, would have been deeply interested in these opening words.

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  • On the west side the slope is gradual, especially in the broad plain that skirts the coast for the greater part cf its length; on the east side it is steep - precipitous indeed, towards the southern end - and intersected by valleys worn to a tremendous depth by the force of the torrents that once ran down them.

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  • The whole subject involves also the various forms and developments of heroand saint-cults, on which cf.

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  • Vincent, Canaan, p. 204; cf.

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  • Montefiore, in the Hibbert Lectures, 1892, p. 320, cf.

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  • Smith brings Israel into closer relationship with Arabia "; cf.

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  • The history of these centuries is of fundamental importance in any attempt to " reconstruct " biblical history., The fall of Samaria and Judah was a literary as well as a political catastrophe, and precisely how much earlier material has been 6 Cf.

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  • It further authorized the addition of two members to the executive councils at Madras and Bombay, and the creation cf an executive council in Bengal and also (subject to conditions) in other provinces under a lieutenantgovernor.

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  • The belief in the imminent collapse of the Ottoman dominion was weakened almost to extinction; so was the belief, which inspired the treaty cf 1856, in the capacity of Turkey to reform and develop itself on European lines.

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  • In 1902 he succeeded 1 Cf.

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  • It is greatly to be desired that a general survey of the heavens, or cf typical regions of the heavens, should be made with a view to determining all the stars which have an appreciable parallax.

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  • The correctness cf this hypothesis has long been under suspicion, but it has generally been accepted as the best simple approximation to the actual distribution of the motions that could be made.

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  • The Kharijites, of whom a great many had emigrated 1 Cf.

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  • In the years 830, 831 and 832 he made expeditions into Asia Minor with such success that Theophilus, the Greek emperor, sued for peace, which Mamun 1 Cf.

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  • The root is kas-, cf.

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  • Perhaps the sloughing more than any other feature stimulated primitive speculation; cf.

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  • This looks like the assumption of indigenous traits by a foreigner - cf.

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  • One may recall the old cult of Sabazios where 9 Cf.

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  • Consider, for example, a frame whose sides form the six sides of a hexagon ABCDEF and the three diagonals AD, BE, CF; and suppose that it is required to find the stress in CF due to a given system of extraneous forces in equilibrium, acting on the joints.

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  • Imagine the bar CF to be removed, and consider a deformation in which AB is fixed.

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  • In this case the kinetic energy is given by 2T = M0 (u1 +v2+w1) +AP2 +Bq2 +Cr2 2Fqr 2Grp 2Hpq, (13) where M0 is the mass, and A, B, C, F, G, H are the moments and products of inertia with respect to the mass-centre; cf.

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  • Demonstralion.From C draw CF perpendicular to OA, and CG

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  • For a long series of suggested bases of classification see Raoul de la Grasserie, Des Religions Comparees au Point de Vue Sociologique (1899), chap. xii.; cf.

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  • The award of the angel-judges at the Bridge of Assembly, soon after death, despatched the individual to his appropriate lot in the homes of Good or Evil Thought, Word 1 Cf.

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  • The uniform gloom of this, the most dirge-like of all the pieces, is unrelieved by a single ray of hope, even the hope of vengeance; cf.

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  • With verse 3 " Judah migrated from oppression; From greatness of servitude; She settled among the nations, Without finding a resting-place," cf.

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  • Its contents, even if they go back to lost parts of the Avesta, are merely a late patch- oroas Cf work, based on the legendary tradition and devoid of historica foundation.

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  • On awn-0 as applied to God, cf.

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  • Israel or distinguished Israelites, the root being the same as in Jeshurun; (2) that Jashar (" lc) is a transposition of shir C, song); (3) that it should be pointed Yashir (W, sing; cf.

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  • Fenwick, bishop cf Boston, and chartered in 1865; in 1910 it had 30 instructors and 450 students.

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  • But this error of thought would be easily concealed from a mind with the rabbinical training of Paul's" (Schmiedel, in Hibbert Journal, 1902, pp. 548549) Cf.

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  • Such was the tension of feeling that the " princes," who 1 Cf.

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  • The latest connected Babylonian inscription is that of Antiochus Soter (280-260 B.C.), but the language was probably spoken until Hellenic times; cf.

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  • Formerly a part cf the county of Henneberg, Ilmenau came in 1631 into the possession of electoral Saxony, afterwards passing to Saxe-Weimar.

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  • In man, too, there is a Logos which is his characteristic possession, and which is ivBcaeeros, as long as it is a thought resident within his breast, Cf.

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  • In the riper period cf art the type is softer, and Apollo appears in a form which seeks to combine manhood and eternal youth.

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  • In course cf time they formed a valuable counterpoise to the Dutch colonists, and they now constitute the most progressive element in the colony.

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  • The feeling caused by the hanging cf these men was deepened by the circumstances of the execution - for the scaffold on which the rebels were simultaneously swung, broke down from their united weight and the men were afterwards hanged one by one.

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  • The use of the name of an animal for a mechanical device is not uncommon, cf.

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  • For these dates cf.

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  • They seemed about to rend the land in twain, but they really cured the English of their desperate particularism, and drove all the tribes to take as their common rulers the one great line of native kings which survived the Danish storm, and maintained itself for four generations cf desperate fighting against the invaders.

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  • The name " Catholic " is one which Protestant Christians may well 3 Cf.

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  • Baal, "lord," is the ordinary title or word for a deity, especially a local deity, cf.

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  • Baalgad, the Baal of Fortune.4 For the " Fly-god," sometimes interpreted as the "averter of insects," cf.

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  • The further suggestion has been made that zebul itself in the sense of "dung" is a term for a heathen deity, cf.

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  • The names Zebulun, 'Izebel (Jezebel), suggest that Zebul may be an ancient name of a deity; cf.

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  • These incidents seem to have been chosen for the purpose of casting light on the religious history and character of the people and showing how later generations explained the origin of various place names, cf.

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  • As seven is the perfect number and as Balaam had ordered seven altars to be built, the Redactor thought it would be well to have seven M6shalim or metrical oracles; and so he added other three which are certainly not pertinent to the situation, as they allude not merely to the Assyrian empire but to the Macedonian, and even, as some maintain, to the Roman empire, cf.

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  • It appears with the generic meaning of "serpent" in the older forms of many Teutonic languages, cf.

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  • See generally Herzog-Hauck, Realencyklopadie; and cf.

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  • Finally it has become apparent that many problems hitherto left for political economy to solve belong more properly to the moralist, if not to the moral philosopher, and it may be confidently expected that with the increased complexity of social life and the disappearance of many sanctions of morality hitherto regarded as inviolable, the future will bring a renewed and practical 1 Cf.

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  • By statute in some states, upon absence cf one spouse from the state for five years without being heard of, the other may marry again without committing bigamy, in other states the period is seven years.

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  • The election cf May 1869 resulted in 4,438,000 votes given for the government, and 3,355, 000 for the opposition, who also gained 90 representatives.

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  • Kittel certainly puts it too strongly when he asserts that D quotes always from E and never from J, for some of the passages alluded to in D may just as readily be ascribed to J as to E, cf.

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  • The inference as to diversity of authorship is much more conclusive when difference of standpoint can be proved, cf.

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  • With the interest taken in these tribes, cf.

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  • But the Greek translators read the former orim and connected it with torah, " decision"; it would thus = "doctrine"; so Symmachus, cf.

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  • Thus Homer adopts the system 5 Cf.

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  • The empire of Brazil and the republics of Mexico and Colombia were recognized by Great Britainin the following year; the recognition of the other states was only postponed until they should have given proof cf their stability.

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  • He obtained (1865) from the sultan of Turkey a firman assigning to him the administration of Suakin and Massawa; the lease which Mehemet Ali had of these ports having lapsed after the death cf that pasha.

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  • Frosch; Skeat suggests a possible original source in the root meaning "to jump," "to spring," cf.

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  • See the article in Herzog-Hauck, Realencyklopddie, and cf.

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  • The absence cf the so-called cinnamon-leaves and the Smilaceae, which always enter into the composition of Middle Eocene and Oligocene floras, is noticeable.

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  • Among the more abundant plants are nucules cf several species of Chara, and drifted fruits and seeds of water-lilies, of Folliculites (now generally referred to Stratiotes) and of Limnocarpus (allied to Potamogeton); there is little else mixed with these.

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  • Soc. xxii., 1884, p. 43; cf.

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  • Xaivav, to gape, cf.

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  • If such a coincidence appears incredible, we may doubt whether the belief that is common to Greeks and Cahrocs and Ahts was produced, in Greek minds by an etymological confusion, in Australia, America and so forth by some 6 Cf.

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  • The main sink route of SF 5 CF 3 from the earth's atmosphere is low-energy electron attachment in the mesosphere.

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  • Furthermore, the development of characteristic lung histopathology in CF individuals is a gradual process that occurs over years.

    0
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  • This is because the CF affects the pancreas, which makes it hard for people with CF to digest food.

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  • Examples include chronic pancreatitis, reduced or lack of fertility, and CF.

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  • This gives the water a low cf and low pH.

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  • Nevertheless, mouse models of CF clearly demonstrate a range of abnormal pulmonary phenotypes as a result of the Cftr mutation.

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  • Newborn screening may therefore improve prognosis of people with CF.

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  • Perhaps the final redaction of the Fourth Gospel aimed at a broader reading public; cf.

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  • Underlying molecular defect CF is caused by mutations in the gene encoding the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) protein.

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  • Silver Point is also becoming the controlling shareholder of CF Gomma's Polish subsidiary.

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  • However, you don't actually need an ejector; CF cards are reasonably easy to extract using your finger tips.

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  • It is an unconscious, universal sentiment, not the personal, conscious and rational sentiment cf the superior few.

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  • The chief incident cf the movement towards conciliation consisted, however, in the publication of a pamphlet entitled La Conciliazione by Father Tosti, a close friend and confidant of the pope, extolling the advantages of peace between Vatican and Quirinal.

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  • It is thus used of the fixtures, machinery, apparatus necessary for the carrying on of an in.dustry or business, and in colloquial or slang use, of a swindle, a carefully arranged plot or trap laid or fixed to deceive; cf.

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  • Walch's Bibliotheca Theologica (1757) not published complete until 1663) was universally understood as hinting conclusions hostile to Christianity (cf.

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  • It is this close automatic interdependence cf engir e and boiler which makes the locomotive so extraordinarily w ell suited for the purpose of locomotive traction.

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  • Making the substitution in any symbolic product the only determinant factors that present themselves in the numerator are of the form (af), (bf), (cf),...and every symbol a finally appears in the form.

    0
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  • The simplest invariant is S = (abc) (abd) (acd) (bcd) cf degree 4, which for the canonical form of Hesse is m(1 -m 3); its vanishing indicates that the form is expressible as a sum of three cubes.

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  • The Maori story, told by Grey and others, of the rending apart of Rangi (= Langi, heaven) 5 See Schoolcraft, Myth of Hiawatha (1856), pp. 35-39; and cf.

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  • Just below Brugg the Reuss and the Limmat join the Aar, while around Brugg are the ruined castle cf Habsburg, the old convent of Königsfelden (with fine painted medieval glass) and the remains of the Roman settlement of Vindonissa [Windisch].

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  • Dodona; the sacred oak of which the Argo was built); also (b) it was believed that the divine essence could be made to enter - transubstantiated as it were - into an image (cf.

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  • Canon is concerned) of that theory of which examples recur in Judges, Samuel and Kings, and this treatment of history in accordance with religious or ethical doctrines finds its continuation in the didactic aims which characterize the later non-canonical writings (cf.

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  • For the lower and imperfect world, which in that system too is conceived and assumed, is the nebulous world of the non-existent and the formless, which is the 1 Cf.

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  • The assonance of these names is probably intentional, cf.

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  • To construct the parabola when the focus and directrix are given, draw the axis CD and bisect CF at G, which gives the vertex.

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  • Schubert's Masses show rather the influence of Beethoven's not very impressive first Mass, which they easily surpass in interest, though they rather pathetically show an ignorance cf the meaning of the Latin words.

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  • Anna's New World of Words, 1611) translates as "a frock, a horseman's cote, a long cote; also a habitation or dwelling," and it is usually held that this in turn is derived from casa, a house (cf.

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  • Holtzmann, pp. 92 seq., and Von Soden in Theologische Abhandlungen, 18 9 2, pp. 1 331 35) have suggested that Luke may have been the amanuensis (cf.

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  • Burns's John Barleycorn); but it is better to refer it to the tearing of the flesh of the victim at sacrifices at which the deity or the sacred animal was slain, and sacramentally eaten raw (cf.

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  • Lamentations) Yahweh's jealousy against the semi-heathen Judah has become a jealousy for his people, and we appear to move in the thought of Haggai and Zechariah, where the remnant are comforted by Yahweh's return and the dispersed exiles are to be brought back (cf.

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  • Apollo Oulios), Xuaia ("purifier,") and cccm Lpa, " she who saves from all evils" (cf.

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  • The crucial, mucous secreting glands in human CF patients are the serous gland.

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  • Silver Point is also becoming the controlling shareholder of CF Gomma 's Polish subsidiary.

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  • However, you do n't actually need an ejector; CF cards are reasonably easy to extract using your finger tips.

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  • In vitro studies have shown that CF sputum reduces transfection efficiency.

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  • By using PGD, couples at risk of having a child with CF can undergo IVF, and then implant only unaffected embryos.

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  • Cystic fibrosis (CF) is an inherited disease that affects the lungs, digestive system, sweat glands, and male fertility.

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  • Many of the symptoms of CF can be treated with drugs or nutritional supplements.

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  • Close attention to and prompt treatment of respiratory and digestive complications have dramatically increased the expected life span of a person with CF.

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  • While in the 1970s, most children with CF died by age two, in the early 2000s about half of all people with CF live past age 31.

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  • That median age is expected to grow as new treatments are developed, and it is estimated that a person born in 1998 with CF has a median expected life span of 40 years.

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  • The gene that, when defective, causes CF is called the CFTR gene, which stands for cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator.

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  • A simple defect in this gene leads to all the consequences of CF.

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  • There are over 500 known defects in the CFTR gene that can cause CF.

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  • The gene defects in CF are called point mutations, meaning that the gene is mutated only at one small spot along its length.

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  • In CF, the CFTR protein cannot allow chloride ions out of the mucus-producing cells.

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  • A carrier will not have symptoms of CF but can pass on the mutated CFTR gene to his/her children.

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  • When two carriers have children, they have a one-in-four chance of having a child with CF each time they conceive.

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  • Approximately one in every 25 Americans of northern-European descent is a carrier of the mutated CF gene, while only one in 17,000 African Americans and one in 30,000 Asian Americans are carriers.

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  • Two white Americans with no family history of CF have a one in 2,500 chance of having a child with CF.

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  • It may seem puzzling that a mutated gene with such harmful consequences would remain so common; one might guess that the high mortality of CF would quickly lead to loss of the mutated gene from the population.

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  • It is believed that having one copy of the CF gene is enough to prevent the full effects of cholera infection, while not enough to cause the symptoms of CF.

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  • Approximately 10 to 15 percent of babies who inherit CF have meconium ileus at birth.

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  • Presence of meconium ileus is considered highly indicative of CF.

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  • In CF, thick mucus blocks the pancreatic duct, which is eventually closed off completely by scar tissue formation, leading to a condition known as pancreatic insufficiency.

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  • Because nutrients are only poorly digested and absorbed, the person with CF is often ravenously hungry, underweight, and shorter than expected for his age.

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  • When CF is not treated for a longer period, a child may develop symptoms of malnutrition, including anemia, bloating, and, paradoxically, appetite loss.

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  • Diabetes becomes increasingly likely as a person with CF ages.

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  • Gallstones affect approximately 10 percent of adults with CF.

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  • Somewhat less than 10 percent of people with CF do not have gastrointestinal symptoms.

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  • Swelling of the sinuses within the nose is common in people with CF.

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  • This usually shows up on an x ray and may aid the diagnosis of CF.

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  • Nasal polyps, or growths, affect about one in five people with CF.

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  • While nasal polyps appear in older people without CF, especially those with allergies, they are rare in children without CF.

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  • The lungs are the site of the most life-threatening effects of CF.

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  • People with CF live with chronic populations of bacteria in their lungs, and lung infection is the major cause of death for those with CF.

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  • The thickened mucus of CF prevents easy movement out of the lungs and increases the irritation and inflammation of lung tissue.

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  • A person with CF is likely to cough more frequently and more vigorously as the lungs attempt to clean themselves out.

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  • Bronchitis, bronchiolitis, and pneumonia are frequent in CF.

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  • These white blood cells also provoke more inflammation, continuing the downward spiral that marks untreated CF.

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  • People with CF have sweat that is much saltier than normal, and measuring the saltiness of a person's sweat is the most important diagnostic test for CF.

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  • While most older children and adults with CF compensate for this extra salt loss by eating more salty foods, infants and young children are in danger of suffering its effects (such as heat prostration), especially during summer.

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  • Some 98 percent of men with CF are sterile, due to complete obstruction or absence of the vas deferens (the tube carrying sperm out of the testes).

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  • While boys and men with CF form normal sperm and have normal levels of sex hormones, sperm are unable to leave the testes, and fertilization is not possible.

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  • Most women with CF are fertile, though they often have more trouble getting pregnant than women without CF.

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  • Families with a history of CF may wish to have all children tested, especially if there is a child who already has the disease.

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  • Some hospitals require routine screening of newborns for CF.

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  • The sweat test is both the easiest and most accurate test for CF.

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  • A person with CF will have salt concentrations that are 1.5 to 2 times greater than normal.

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  • Virtually every person who has CF will test positively on it, and virtually everyone who does not will test negatively.

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  • The discovery of the CFTR gene in 1989 allowed the development of an accurate genetic test for CF.

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  • Genes from a small blood or tissue sample are analyzed for specific mutations; presence of two copies of the mutated gene confirms the diagnosis of CF in all but a very few cases.

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  • However, since there are so many different possible mutations and since testing for all of them would be too expensive and time-consuming, a negative gene test cannot rule out the possibility of CF.

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  • Couples planning a family may decide to have themselves tested if one or both have a family history of CF.

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  • Many couples who already have one child with CF decide to undergo prenatal screening in subsequent pregnancies and use the results to determine whether to terminate the pregnancy.

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  • Siblings in these families are also usually tested, to determine if they will develop CF and to determine if they are carriers, to aid in their own family planning.

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  • Some states in the early 2000s require screening of newborns for CF, using a test known as the IRT test.

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  • This blood test measures the level of immunoreactive trypsinogen, which is generally higher in babies with CF than those without it.

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  • However, treatment advanced during the last quarter of the twentieth century, increasing both the life span and the quality of life for most people affected by CF.

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  • People with CF usually require high-calorie diets and vitamin supplements.

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  • Height, weight, and growth of a person with CF are monitored regularly.

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  • Most people with CF need to take pancreatic enzymes to supplement or replace the inadequate secretions of the pancreas.

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  • Because of incomplete absorption even with pancreatic enzymes, a person with CF needs to take in about 30 percent more food than a person without CF.

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  • Some people with CF cannot absorb enough nutrients from the foods they eat, even with specialized diets and enzymes.

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  • The key to maintaining respiratory health in a person with CF is regular monitoring and early treatment.

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  • People with CF live with chronic bacterial colonization; that is, their lungs are constantly host to several species of bacteria.

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  • Exercise is another important way to maintain health, and people with CF are encouraged to maintain a program of regular exercise.

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  • In addition, clearing mucus from the lungs helps to prevent infection, and mucus control is an important aspect of CF management.

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  • For this technique, the person with CF lies on a tilted surface with head downward, alternately on the stomach, back, or side, depending on the section of lung to be drained.

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  • People with CF may pick up bacteria from other CF patients.

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  • This is especially true of Burkholderia cepacia, which is not usually found in people without CF.

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  • At a minimum, CF centers recommend avoiding prolonged close contact between people with CF and scrupulous hygiene, including frequent hand washing.

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  • Lung transplantation has become increasingly common for people with CF, although the number of people who receive lungs was as of 2004 much lower than those who want them.

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  • Liver transplants are also done for CF patients whose livers have been damaged by fibrosis.

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  • Long-term use of ibuprofen has been shown to help some people with CF, presumably by reducing inflammation in the lungs.

    0
    0
  • While promising, these results would apply to only about 5 percent of those with CF.

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  • Gene therapy is the most ambitious approach to curing CF.

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  • People with CF may lead relatively normal lives, with the control of symptoms.

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  • The possible effect of pregnancy on the health of a woman with CF requires careful consideration before she and her partner begin a family; as do issues of longevity, and the children's status as carriers.

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  • Although most men with CF are functionally sterile, new procedures for removing sperm from the testes are being tried and may offer more men the chance to become fathers.

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  • Approximately half of people with CF live past the age of 30.

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  • Because of better and earlier treatment, a person born in 2004 with CF is expected, on average, to live to age 40.

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  • There is no known way to prevent development of CF in a person with two defective gene copies.

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  • The sweat test is used to diagnosis cystic fibrosis (CF).

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  • The sweat test is administered as soon as CF is suspected, either because of family history or symptoms, such as frequent colds, recurrent lung infections, recurrent diarrhea, difficulty absorbing food, and slower-than-normal growth.

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  • Because prompt diagnosis and treatment can often ease the severity of CF, sweat tests may be administered as early as the first week of life.

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  • This timing is recommended only when a family history of CF exists or the newborn exhibits symptoms specific to the disorder.

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  • Diagnosis of CF is made based on two or more sweat tests with abnormal chloride readings.

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  • To have CF, a child must inherit a gene for the disorder from both parents.

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  • Because siblings of CF patients have a 25 percent chance of having the disorder, they should also be tested.

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  • It cannot determine whether a child is a carrier of a single CF gene that can be passed on to the next generation.

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  • Individuals with CF produce a higher than normal level of sodium chloride (salt) in their sweat.

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  • A sodium level greater than 90 mEq/L is indicative of CF.

    0
    0
  • A chloride reading of greater than 60 mEq/L is indicative of CF.

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  • However, these conditions have distinct symptoms that differ substantially from CF.

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  • However, new interventions in the treatment of CF are increasing the age span of people with CF every year.

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  • Cystic Fibrosis (CF) is a genetic lung disease.

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  • The eschatology is similar to that taught in the similitudes of the Book cf Enoch.

    1
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  • Just below Brugg the Reuss and the Limmat join the Aar, while around Brugg are the ruined castle cf Habsburg, the old convent of Königsfelden (with fine painted medieval glass) and the remains of the Roman settlement of Vindonissa [Windisch].

    1
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