Uses Sentence Examples

uses
  • You will see from her letter that she uses many pronouns correctly.

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  • Nearly everyone uses ball point pens.

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  • I recently gained access to this database that the company's owner uses.

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  • Huygens (Descriptio automati planetarii, 1703) uses the simple continued fraction for the purpose of approximation when designing the toothed wheels of his Planetarium.

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  • She had been familiar with most herbs and their uses since she was a child, due to her father's business, but she had never actually seen the herbs growing.

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  • Eusebius in his Onomasticon uses it as a central point from which the distances of other towns are measured.

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  • The Hyoid apparatus is, in its detail, subject to many variations in accord with the very diverse uses to which the tongue of birds is III.

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  • But this genealogy, though it is attributed to Hesiod, is apparently post-Homeric; and it is clear that the Ionian name had independent and varied uses and meanings in very early times.

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  • He uses "radicatum" for power (for root, power, exponent, his words are radix, radicatum, index).

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  • Its viscid character, and its non-liability to dry and harden by exposure to air, also fit it for various other uses, such as lubrication, &c., whilst its peculiar physical characters, enabling it to blend with either aqueous or oily matters under certain circumstances, render it a useful ingredient in a large number of products of varied kinds.

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  • Although Polybius and Dionysius of Halicarnassus frequently find fault with him, the first uses him as his chief authority for the Second Punic War.

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  • Good looking, except he uses Fran Tarkenton's barber.

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  • As it uses the Baudot telegraph alphabet it has an advantage in theory over the Wheatstone using the Morse alphabet in regard to the speed that can be obtained on a long telegraph line in the ratio of eight to five, and this theoretical advantage is more or less realized in practice.

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  • Leo, the saint's favourite disciple and companion on Mount Alverno at the time, which describes the circumstances of the stigmatization; Elias of Cortona, the acting superior, wrote on the day after his death a circular letter wherein he uses language clearly implying that he had himself seen the Stigmata, and there is a considerable amount of contemporary authentic second hand evidence.

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  • He uses them for approximations.

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  • The first "detectives" appointed numbered only a dozen, three inspectors and nine sergeants, to whom, however, six constables were shortly added as "auxiliaries," but the number was gradually enlarged as the manifest uses of the system became more and more obvious.

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  • But the influence of the court of Rome has gradually gone much beyond this, and has superseded almost all the local "uses."

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  • But side by side with this language of everyday life a purer form of Dutch has continued to exist and find its uses under certain conditions.

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  • But at times he uses language that almost compels one to attribute to him the popular view of conscience as passing its judgments with unerring certainty on individual acts.

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  • The confiscation of ecclesiastical property at the time of the Reformation affected many of the trusts of the companies; and they were compelled to make returns of their property devoted to religious uses, and to pay over the rents to the crown.

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  • Papias uses the term "the Elders," or Fathers of the Christian community, to describe the original witnesses to Christ's teaching, i.e.

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  • The uses to which all the parts and products of the bamboo are applied in Oriental countries are almost endless.

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  • It is, however, the stem of the bamboo which is applied to the greatest variety of uses.

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  • The prince uses his power to promote religion, and everything prospers in his hands.

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  • Tacitus uses the name Suebi in a far wider sense than that defined above.

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  • It may be in this wide charismatic sense that Paul uses the term in 1 Cor.

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  • He is at his best in the adaptation of the symbolism of old legend to modern uses.

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  • He also published Sermons for the New Life (1858); Christ and his Salvation (1864); Work and Play (1864); Moral Uses of Dark Things (1868); Women's Suffrage, the Reform against Nature (1869); Sermons on Living Subjects (1872); and Forgiveness and Law (1874).

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  • Theocritus uses it so frequently in the Bucolics that it has become a mannerism.

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  • It is true that, as a matter of fact, the earliest uses of the word (the verb /xXoa04Eiv occurs in Herodotus and Thucydides) imply the idea of the pursuit of knowledge; but the distinction between the aogios, or wise man, and the 4nXoaoa50s, or lover of wisdom, appears first in the Platonic writings, and lends itself naturally to the so-called Socratic irony.

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  • The arrangement of the building and floor framings is in a great measure governed by the architectural effect sought and by the arrangement and proper planning of the interior according to the intended uses; the positions of columns, girders and floor beams are usually the result of particular requirements, and unless complicated and expensive framing is to be expected the distance between columns must be kept within the limits of simple girder construction.

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  • He uses the vernacular with an economy which no other English writer has rivalled.

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  • In the Michael Crichton novel Timeline, one of the main characters uses the Greek fire.

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  • I know the list of nefarious uses of the Internet—but on balance, we are building it for good purposes.

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  • Richard Hooker, again with traces of Aquinas, uses the conception as a weapon against Puritanism, with its aggressive positivism of scriptural precept.

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  • He is a most difficult writer; different readers understand him differently; and he uses in the earlier parts of his Critique of Pure Reason much of the language of intuitionalism.

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  • Causality is one of the " categories " which out mind uses in building up orderly experience.

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  • They were to be applied to pious uses.

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  • The applications of anthropogeography to human uses give rise to political and commercial geography, in the elucidation of which all the earlier departments or stages have to be considered, together with historical and other purely human conditions.

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  • This fact is overshadowed in England, partly by the habitual use of the word "gentleman" (q.v.) in various secondary uses, partly by the prevalent confusion between ai dg retry.

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  • The word "gentleman" has lost its original meaning in a variety of other uses, while the word "nobleman" has come to be confined to members of the peerage and a few of their immediate descendants.

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  • It may be presumed that he took his degree, as he uses the title of "Syr" in his translation of Sallust, and in his will he is called doctor of divinity.

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  • What does distinguish Hebrew prophecy from all others is that the genius of a few members of the profession wrested this vulgar but powerful instrument from baser uses, and by wielding it in the interest of a high morality rendered a service of incalculable value to humanity.

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  • From the text which Philo uses, it is probable that the translation had been transmitted in writing; and his legend probably fixes the date of the commencement of the undertaking for the reign of Ptolemy Lagus.

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  • The building, of beautiful classical design, and admirably adapted to its uses, was completed in 1916.

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  • It is not only the conditions of growth, but the uses to which the different crops are put, that have to be considered in the case of rotation.

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  • Where not exposed to the weather the wood is probably as lasting as that of the pine, but, not being so resinous, appears less adapted for out-door uses.

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  • In times of scarcity the Norse peasant-farmer uses the sweetish inner bark, beaten in a mortar and ground in his primitive mill with oats or barley, to eke out a scanty supply of meal, the mixture yielding a tolerably palatable though somewhat resinous substitute for his ordinary flad-brod.

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  • Vessels for culinary, table, and luxurious uses show an infinite variety of form and purpose.

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  • Thus as life is transcendent and yet immanent in body, and mind in brain, and both utilize their organs, so God, transcendent and immanent, uses the course of nature for His own ends; and the emergence both of life and mind in that course of nature evidences such a divine initiative as is assumed in the recognition of the possibility of miracles.

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  • That officer uses the title of king's proctor when he appears in certain matrimonial causes.

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  • This property is usually obtained by mixing soft and hard soaps, or, more rarely, by adding gum tragacanth to a hard soap. In the textile trades the wool scourer employs a neutral olive-oil soap, or, on account of its cheapness, a neutral curd or curd mottled brand; the cotton cleanser, on the other hand, uses an alkaline soap, but for cleaning printed cottons a neutral olive-oil curd soap is used, for, in this case, free alkali and resin are objectionable; olive-oil soap, free from caustic alkali, but often with sodium carbonate, is also used in cleansing silk fibres, although hard soaps free from resin are frequently employed for their cheapness.

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  • Reference should be made to the separate articles on the different elements and the more important compounds for their preparation, properties and uses.

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  • What it becomes in the mind of the Nibelung is grimly evident when Alberich uses his ring in Nibelheim.

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  • Haydn uses a true Straussian discord in The Seasons, in order to imitate the chirping of a cricket; but the harshest realism in Gatterdammerung (the discord produced by the horns of Hagen and his churls in the mustering-scene in the second act) has a harmonic logic which would have convinced Corelli.

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  • There are certain special uses of the word "conscience."

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  • It is not improbable that all dogs sprang from one common source, but climate, food and cross-breeding caused variations of form which suggested particular uses, and these being either designedly or accidentally perpetuated, the various breeds of dogs arose, and became numerous in proportion to the progress of civilization.

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  • Speculators either directly employed slaves as artisans or commercial and banking agents, or hired them out, sometimes for work in mines or factories, sometimes for service in private houses, as cooks, flute-players, &c., or for viler uses.

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  • For the text of scripture he uses both the Latin versions, the Itala and the Vulgate, often comparing them together.

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  • The various uses to which the papyrus plant was applied are also enumerated by Theophrastus.

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  • The two layers thus " woven " - Pliny uses the word texere in describing this part of the process - formed a sheet (plagula or net), which was then soaked in water of the Nile.

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  • The coco palm (Cocos nucifera) is also put to varied uses.

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  • The Coptic patriarch uses an iron cross-staff.

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  • Lower Euclid Avenue (the old country road to Euclid, 0., and Erie, Pa.) is given up to commercial uses; the eastern part of the avenue has handsome houses with spacious and beautifully ornamented grounds, and is famous as one of the finest residence streets in the country.

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  • Callias And Hipponicus The exports from Callao are guano, sugar, cotton, wool, hides, silver, copper, gold and forest products, and the imports include timber and other building materials, cotton and other textiles, general merchandise for personal, household and industrial uses, railway material, coal, kerosene, wheat, flour and other food stuffs.

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  • The power to bless in this ecclesiastical sense is reserved to priests alone; the blessing of the paschal candle on Holy Saturday by the deacon being the one exception that proves the rule, for he uses for the purpose grains of incense previously blessed by the priest at the altar.

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  • The uses of the other parts and products of this tree are the same as those of the date palm products.

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  • From the 9th century onwards, however, this was changed; everywhere in the West the Roman use ousted the regional uses.

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  • Custom in this respect was, however, exceedingly varied for a long time, numerous important Churches having their own "uses," and it was not until the time of the Reformation that the Roman use was fixed and became the norm of the Churches of the Roman obedience.

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  • The outcome has been that in the Church of England, and in many of her daughter Churches, there exists a bewildering variety of "uses," varying from that of Sarum and that of Rome down to the closest possible approximation to the Geneva model.

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  • Thirty years after the Ridsdale judgment, the ritual confusion in the Church of England was worse than ever, and the old ideal expressed in the Acts of Uniformity had given place to a desire to sanctify with some sort of authority the parochial "uses" which had grown up. In this respect the dominant opinion in the Church, intent on compromise, seems to have been expressed in the Report presented in 1908 to the convocation of the province of Canterbury by the sub-committee of five bishops appointed to investigate the matter, namely, that under the Ornaments Rubric the vestments prescribed in the first Prayer Book of Edward VI.

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  • There can be little doubt that with a fall in price further uses for rubber would arise, leading to an increased demand, and among them may be mentioned its utilization as a road material.

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  • Though Siberia has within itself all the raw produce necessary for prosperous industries, it continues to import from Russia all the manufactured articles it uses.

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  • Many other uses of mica might be mentioned.

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  • In regard to the ancients' knowledge of lead compounds, we may state that the substance described by Dioscorides as, uoXv,3Saiva was undoubtedly litharge, that Pliny uses the word minium in its present sense of red lead, ana that white lead was well known to Geber in the 8th century.

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  • While he also prevents interruption of the operation by means of water-jackets, he uses hot-blast, and produces, besides metallic lead, large volumes of lead fumes which are drawn off by fans through long cooling tubes, and then forced through suspended bags which filter off the dust, called "blue powder."

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  • In addition to the above three meanings strange uses of the term appear in the western church.

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  • Thus the work was composed before 190, and, since it most probably uses the martyrdom of Polycarp, after 155.

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  • For the Stoic and Neoplatonic uses of Aoyos, as also for those of Philo Judaeus and the Fathers, see Logos.

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  • In the Tableau Elementaire, published in 1795, Cuvier adopts Linnaeus's term in its earlier sense, but uses the French word "Reptiles," already brought into use by Brisson, as the equivalent of Amphibia.

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  • Among the palms there are several of great economic value, not only as food producers but also for various domestic uses.

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  • The varied uses of india-rubber in modern times, however, have given them a greatly enhanced importance and value.

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  • In 1910 it was renamed and appropriated to the uses of the Royal Scottish Academy of Painting, Sculpture and Architecture, which was instituted in 1826, and incorporated by royal charter in 1838, on the model of the Royal Academy in London.

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  • Thus St Ignatius in writing to the Romans never refers to any presiding bishop, and somewhat earlier Clement of Rome in his epistles to the Corinthians uses the terms presbyter and episcopus interchangeably.

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  • Yet, in the following year, the whole of the property of the Catholic Church there was diverted to secular uses, and the Calvinists were simultaneously banished, though they regained complete tolerance in 1564, a privilege at the same time extended to the Unitarians, who were now very influential at court and converted Prince John Sigismund to their views.

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  • Robert Recorde in his Whetstone of Witte (1557) uses the variant algeber, while John Dee (1527-1608) affirms that algiebar, and not algebra, is the correct form, and appeals to the authority of the Arabian Avicenna.

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  • For the later period he uses the Greek Esther, with its additions, I Maccabees, Polybius, Strabo and Nicolaus of Damascus.

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  • Zigabenus (c. 1100), in his Panoplia, uses beside Esc. an independent source.

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  • The latter gave rise, on the one hand, to the modern science of botany, on the other to a more rational knowledge of drugs and their uses.

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  • Arcana were often shown to be such by their physical properties, not only by such as heat, cold, &c., but by fortuitous resemblances to certain parts of the body; thus arose the famous doctrine of "signatures," or signs indicating the virtues and uses of natural objects, which was afterwards developed into great complexity.

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  • The principal terminus of the Great Eastern Railway is in Liverpool Street (City), but the company also uses Fenchurch Street (City), the terminus of the London, Tilbury & Southend railway, and St Pancras.

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  • The Meditationes sacrae (1606), a work expressly devoted to the uses of Christian edification, has been frequently reprinted in Latin and has been translated into most of the European languages, including Greek.

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  • If we may assume that the writer who uses the first person plural in Acts xvi.

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  • These differences arise primarily from the fact that glass for optical uses is required in comparatively large and thick pieces, while for most other purposes glass is used in the form of comparatively thin sheets; when, therefore, as a consequence 5 and crown glass.

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  • One of the few uses of crown-glass of this kind is the glass slides upon which microscopic specimens are mounted, as well as the thin glass slips with which such preparations are covered.

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  • Its chief uses are in glass-making to promote fluidity, in metallurgy to oxidize impurities, as a constituent of gunpowder and in pyrotechny; it is also used in the manufacture of nitric acid.

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  • Although the fact has been controverted, there cannot be a doubt that the knowledge of tobacco and its uses came to the rest of the world from America.

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  • Grecian tobacco is grown from Turkish seed and closely resembles Turkish tobacco in character and uses.

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  • He now uses his knowledge to warn his readers, with intense passion, against all compromise between Judaism and the Gospel.

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  • It is an account of a little garden that he used to tend with his own hands, and is largely made up of descriptions of the various herbs he grows there and their medicinal and other uses.

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  • He was the author of numerous papers on light and in 1903 published Light Waves and Their Uses, being Lowell lectures for 1899.

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  • He uses rather " the Son of God," in a peculiar Adoptianist sense, which, as taken for granted in a work by the bishop's own brother, must be held typical of the Roman Church of his day.

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  • This is probably the first notice of the application of the camera to cartography and the reproduction of drawings, which is one of its principal uses at the present time.

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  • Four of the medieval historians from whom he quotes most frequently are Sigebert of Gembloux, Hugh of Fleury, Helinand of Froidmont, and William of Malmesbury, whom he uses for Continental as well as for English history.

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  • But while every one appreciates the magnitude of the relief that would thus be afforded, there has as yet been little substantial progress A language which has been adapted from its infancy to ideographi transmission cannot easily be fitted to phonetic uses.

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  • But the project failed signally, and indeed it may well be doubted whether the Japanese language can be adapted to such uses.

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  • To this day the spoken language of Japanese women is appreciably simpler and softer than that of the men, and to this day while the educated woman uses the hiragana syllabary in writing, eschews Chinese sords and rarel pens an ideograph, the educated man employs the ideograp entirely, and translates his thoughts as far as possible into thi mispronounced Chinese words without recourse -to which it would be impossible for him to discuss any scientific subject, or even tc refer to the details of his daily business.

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  • The Japanes kinzoku-shi (metal sculptor) uses thirty-six principal classes 0, chisel, each with its distinctive name, and as most of thes classes comprise from five to ten sub-varieties, his cuttinl and graving tools aggregate about two hundred and fifty.

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  • The ozone so prepared has numerous uses, as, for example, in bleaching oils, waxes, fabrics, &c., sterilizing drinking-water, maturing wines, cleansing foul beer-casks, oxidizing oil, and in the manufacture of vanillin.

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  • Contemporaneously appeared The Dumb Philosopher, or Dickory Cronke, who gains the power of speech at the end of his life and uses it to predict the course of European affairs.

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  • Among the manufactures are brass and copper work, wire for electrical uses, foundry and machine-shop products, locomotives, knit goods, tin cans and canned goods (especially vegetables).

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  • One species of Limnophilus uses small but entire leaves; another, the shells of the pondsnail Planorbis; another, pieces of stick arranged transversely with reference to the long axis of the tube.

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  • Rossall Hall was the seat of Sir Peter Fleetwood, but was converted to the uses of the school on its foundation in 1844.

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  • It is one of the headquarter stations of the Channel Squadron, which uses the harbour at Castletown Bearhaven on the northern shore, behind Bear Island, near the mouth of the bay.

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  • He uses a word used by Ignatius of the oath taken on confession of the Christian faith.

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  • Two uses of water are mentioned by Pausanias.

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  • Reynolds, in his investigation, introducing no new form of law of distribution of velocities, uses a linear quantity, proportional to the mean free path of the gaseous molecules, which he takes to represent (somewhat roughly) the average distance from which molecules directly affect, by their convection, the state of the medium; the gas not being uniform on account of the gradient of temperature, the change going on at each point is calculated from the elements contributed by the parts at this particular distance in all directions.

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  • Fabre states that the lastnamed insect uses a stone for the temporary closing of her burrow, and the Peckhams have seen a female Ammophila take a stone between her mandibles and use it as a hammer for pounding down the earth over her finished nest.

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  • Among other uses and consequences of his treatise, Collier thinks it furnishes an easy refutation of the Romish doctrine of transubstantiation.

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  • Aristotle also uses the term for the science of probable reasoning as opposed to demonstrative reasoning (a7robECKTCK?7).

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  • Its medicinal uses depend on the contained benzoic acid.

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  • Pliny uses it similarly of the oath by which the Christians of Bithynia bound themselves at their solemn meetings not to commit any act of wickedness.

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  • Tertullian (c. 160-240) uses it in both senses, of an oath, as in the passage of his treatise About Spectacles, where he says that no Christian " passes over to the enemy's camp without throwing away his arms, without abandoning the standards and sacraments of his chief."

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  • But because he uses the language of the Greek mysteries, Philo never imitated the thing itself; and he is ever ready to denounce it in the bitterest terms. Clement and Origen really meant no more than he.

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  • It uses physical force to compel men to obey the laws.

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  • The states in the Catholic League were permitted to retain for their own uses about one-fifth of the ecclesiastical revenue; the clergy was to be subjected to careful discipline; and only authorized preachers were to be tolerated, who based their teachings on the works of the four Latin Church fathers.

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  • This was based upon ancient " uses," and represented no revolutionary change in the traditions of the " old religion."

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  • At the time of the secularization of Church properties there were about 120 religious edifices in the city - churches, convents, monasteries, &c. - many of which were turned over to secular uses.

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  • The study of Indian textiles includes an account of their fibres, tools, processes, products, ornaments and uses.

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  • The uses to which the textiles were put were for clothing, furniture for the house, utensils for a thousand industries, fine arts, social functions and worship.

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  • It consists of precepts relating to church life, which are couched in the second person plural; whereas The Two Ways uses throughout the second person singular.

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  • In Chrismann the word " dogma " has superseded the word " article "; Holden uses both, though " article " has the preponderance.

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  • In Some Dogmas of Religion (1906), he uses " dogma " of affirmations, whether supported by reasoning or merely asserted, if they claim " metaphysical " value, metaphysics being defined as " the systematic study of the ultimate nature of reality."

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  • Here he uses the language of 1 Tim.

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  • Wagner, writing of the censuses of Sweden, said to have been taken in the 18th century, uses these words, "Since 1749 careful parish registers have been kept by the clergy and have in general the value of censuses."

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  • The Statute of Uses (1535), by converting the bargainee's interest into a legal estate, had an effect contrary to the intention of its framers.

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  • And above all stand the uses of " Life," " Eternal Life."

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  • Justin Martyr (163-167) certainly uses the Gospel; but his conception of Jesus' life is so strictly Synoptic that he can hardly have accepted it as from an apostolic eyewitness.

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  • This opinion is not improbable, as the earlier books of the Old Testament cannot have been unknown in his age; and the critical analysis of the canonical book of Kings is advanced enough to enable us to say that in some of the parallel passages the chronicler uses words which were not written in the annals but by one of the compilers of Kings himself.

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  • For hinges, Leibbrand, of Stuttgart, uses sheets of lead about i in.

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  • The mint, the arsenal and several convents (now ruined or converted to other uses) are also noteworthy.

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  • Diderot himself, who in such matters is almost absolutely trustworthy, does not claim the suggestion, but uses words which imply that it was at least partly his.

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  • In the New Testament, the English version uses " atonement " 1 Lev.

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  • The Confession of Augsburg uses words equivalent to the Articles quoted above which were based upon it.

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  • He writes in rhyming alexandrines, and in the latter part of the work uses middle rhymes.

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  • In concluding treaties with the vassal princes since 1905, the Dutch have kept in view the necessity of compelling them properly to administer the revenues of their states, which some of them formerly squandered in their personal uses.

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  • Medicinal uses were ascribed to the species, but none appear to have any marked properties in this respect.

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  • He did not refuse to speak of Mary as being the mother of Christ or as being the mother of Emmanuel, but he thought it improper to speak of her as the mother of God, and Leo in the Letter to Flavian which was endorsed at Chalcedon uses the term "Mother of the Lord" which was exactly what Nestorius wished.

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  • But besides these high metaphysical necessities for a medium, there were more mundane uses to be fulfilled by aethers.

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  • It is impossible to get behind the Christian uses, in which from the earliest times it was employed as the equivalent of the Latin sacer and sanctus.

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  • See "Graphite and its Uses," Bull.

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  • Mines, torpedoes and submarines were all employed, and with the "Monitor" may fairly be said to have begun the application of mechanical science to the uses of naval war.

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  • He was the son of Archibald Cochrane, 9th Earl (1749-1831), who is remembered as a most ingenious, but also most unfortunate, scientific speculator and inventor, who was before his time in suggesting and attempting new processes of alkali manufacture, and various other uses of applied science.

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  • Many species have a special glandular organ at the back of the head, which Sida crystalline uses for attaching itself to various objects.

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  • Muller, our leading authority, adopts the confusing plan of calling them second maxillae in the Cypridinidae (including Asteropidae), maxillipeds in the Halocypridae and Cyprididae, and first legs in the Bairdiidae, Cytheridae, Polycopidae and Cytherellidae, so that in his fine monograph he uses the term first leg in two quite different senses.

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  • After the time of Sulla these societies were regarded by the government with suspicion, mainly on account of the political uses to which they were turned, and various measures were passed for their suppression in Rome and Italy.

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  • The Greek church uses leavened.

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  • This idea that to partake of sacrifice is to devote oneself to the deity, lies at the root of the ancient idea of worship, whether Jewish or heathen; and St Paul uses it as being readily understood.

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  • The view has been held that in the Eucharist the elements are only consecrated as regards the particular purpose of reception in the service itself, and that consequently what remains unconsumed may be put to common uses.

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  • Perrault also uses fee for anything that has magical quality; "the key was fee," had mana, or wakan, savage words for the supposed "power," or ether, which works magic or is the vehicle of magical influences.

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  • Sidney has a public library, and a monumental building, a memorial, erected in 1875, to the soldiers in the American Civil War, and now devoted to various public uses.

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  • The indigo and cotton plantations yield little profit, owing to foreign competition, and have in most cases been converted to other uses.

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  • Oil was produced in 1908 in sixteen states., This productive area is divided by the United States Geological Survey into six fields (in addition to some scattering states) with reference to the quality of oil that they produce, such quality determining their uses.

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  • While serving the government as a silent weapon against political adversaries or dangerous writers and as a means of punishing culprits of high birth without the scandal of a suit at law, the lettres de cachet had many other uses.

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  • It is possible that the Liber Pontificalis refers to the office under the Latin synonym, when it says of Pope Victor (186-197) that he made sequentes cleros, a term - sequens - which Pope Gaius (283-293) uses in the sense of acolyte.

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  • Especially in this last he shows a tendency to epigram and often uses humorous and pathetic expressions.

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  • After the raising of the duty on barley under the McKinley and Dingley tariffs that trade was practically destroyed and Canadian farmers were obliged to find other uses for this crop. Owing to the development of the trade with the mother-country in dairying and meat products, barley as a home feeding material has become more indispensable than ever.

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  • Aristotle was primarily a metaphysician, a philosopher of things, who uses the objective method of proceeding from being to thinking.

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  • When these fires occur while the trees are full of sap, a curious mucilaginous matter is exuded from the half-burnt stems; when dry it is of pale reddish colour, like some of the coarser kinds of gum-arabic, and is soluble in water, the solution resembling gumwater, in place of which it is sometimes used; considerable quantities are collected and sold as " Orenburg gum "; in Siberia and Russia it is occasionally employed as a semi-medicinal food, being esteemed an antiscorbutic. For burning in close stoves and furnaces, larch makes tolerably good fuel, its value being estimated by Hartig as only one-fifth less than that of beech; the charcoal is compact, and is in demand for iron-smelting and other metallurgic uses in some parts of Europe.

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  • The Manchester Lectures (July 1857) treated the moral and social uses of art, now embodied in A Joy for Ever.

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  • Every observer should not only record the resolving power of the instrument he uses, but also the purity-factor as defined above.

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  • Although the Sarum Use prevailed far the most widely, yet there were separate Uses of York and Hereford, and also to a less degree of Lincoln, Bangor, Exeter, Wells, St Paul's, and probably of other dioceses and cathedral churches as well.

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  • The word "mean" (like the French moyen) had also the sense of middling, moderate, and this considerably influenced the uses of "mean" (3).

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  • The descent in meaning from that which is shared alike by several to that which is inferior, vulgar or low, is paralleled by the uses of "common."

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  • The clinical uses of physostigmine are based upon the facts of its pharmacology, as above detailed.

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  • The oculist uses it for at least six purposes.

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  • It is true that at all times churches have been put to secular uses; in periods of unrest, as among the Nestorian Christians now, they were sometimes built to serve at need as fortresses; their towers were used for beacons, their naves for meetings on secular affairs.

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  • Pictures and stories, carved or painted, seemed no longer necessary now that the open Bible was in the hands of the common people; they had been too often prostituted, moreover, to idolatrous uses, - and " idolatry " was the worst of blasphemies to the re-discoverers of the Old Testament.

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  • A Klages (Ber., 1902, 35, pp. 2633 et seq.) has shown that if one uses an excess of magnesium and of an alkyl halide with a ketone, an ethylene derivative is formed.

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  • The misapprehension of the significance of µera led to various mistaken uses of the term " metaphysics," e.g.

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  • He uses this psychical causality to carry out his voluntarism into detail, regarding it as an agency of will directed to ends, causing association and understanding, and further acting on a principle which he calls the heterogony of ends; remarking very truly that each particular will is directed to particular ends, but that beyond these ends effects follow as unexpected consequences, and that this heterogony produces social effects which we call custom.

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  • He applies universal experience to explain how we come, falsely in his opinion, to believe that the object of experience is an independent thing; and he uses three arguments, which are respectively those of Schuppe, Avenarius and Wundt.

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  • Though we cannot apportion the rooms to their precise uses, the great hall was plainly the basilica, for meetings and business; the rooms behind it were perhaps law courts, and some of the rooms on the other three sides of the quadrangle may have been shops.

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  • Speaking broadly, red is the colour for feasts of martyrs, white for virgins, violet for penitential seasons, &c.; no less than sixty-three different uses differing in details have been enumerated.

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  • Argensola (1609) uses the forms islas Malucas, Maluco, and el Maluco; Coronel (1623), islas del Moluco; and Camoens, Maluco.

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  • In the British Isles, especially Ireland, there is (in addition to the Celtic-speaking elements) a considerable population which claims Celtic nationality though it uses no language but English; and further all Teutonic communities contain to a greater or less degree certain immigrant (especially Semitic) elements which have adopted the languages of their neighbours.

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  • But it may simply be an extension of the meaning of "right," or of the sense of "leave" which is found in early uses of the French loi.

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  • The floors and even the walls of important buildings are made of this combination, and long span bridges, tall factory chimneys, and large water-tanks are among the many novel uses to which it has been put.

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  • The uses of aluminium are too numerous to mention.

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  • The amice was worn first simply as a shoulder-cloth, but at the end of the 9th century the custom grew up of putting it on over the head and of wearing it as a hood, either while the other vestments were being put on or, according to the various uses of local churches, during part of the Mass, though never during the canon.

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  • Every word of the Koran was to be taken in a literal sense, but that sense was to be learned from other uses in the Koran itself, not from the meaning in other literature of the time.

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  • Whether a spore results from the sexual union of two similar gametes (zygospore) or from the fertilization of an egg-cell by the protoplasm of a male organ (oospore); or is developed asexually as a motile (zoospore) or a quiescent body cut off from a hypha (conidium) or developed along its course (oidium or chlamydospore), or in its protoplasm (endospore), are matters of importance which have their uses in the classification and terminology of spores, though in many respects they are largely of academic interest.

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  • Nevertheless the press uses much less power than the hammer, because much of the force of the latter is dissipated in setting up useless - indeed harmful, and at times destructive - vibrations in the foundations and the surrounding earth and buildings.

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  • We arrive thus at two distinct and opposite uses and values of fur.

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  • Professor Bayley Balfour, F.R.S., the Regius Keeper of the Royal Botanic Garden in Edinburgh, has described an arboretum as a living collection of species and varieties of trees and shrubs arranged after some definite method - it may be properties, or uses, or some other principle - but usually after that of natural likeness.

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  • Two later dialogues On the Uses of Foreign Travel were printed in 1763.

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  • If a woman administers to herself any poison or other noxious thing, or unlawfully uses any instrument or other means to procure her own miscarriage, she is guilty of felony.

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  • The principal uses of rape oil are for lubrication and lighting; but since the introduction of mineral oils for both these purposes the importance of rape has considerably decreased.

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  • Holland, in Europe, comes next to England, and uses principally the product of her dependency Java.

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  • Matthew also uses the Marcan narrative, but adds to it a new section from some other source which suggests that the name of Peter was conferred on this occasion - not, as Mark says, at the first mission of the Twelve - and confers on him the keys of the kingdom of heaven and the right of binding and loosing.

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  • This sentiment, since it could not be turned to the uses of a united Germany, might be made to serve the purposes of particularism.

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  • If a cardinal, as rarely is the case, he uses the title pro-nuntius.

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  • The attribution of the Crucifixion to the Jews appears in several 2nd-century documents; Justin actually uses the words "He was pierced by you" in his dialogue with Trypho the Jew.

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  • Thus, forgan means really " redemption," but Mahomet uses it for " revelation."

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  • Illiyun, which Mahomet uses of a heavenly book (Sara 83; 18, 19), is clearly the Hebrew elyon, " high " or " exalted."

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  • From the root idea of obligation to serve or give something in return, involved in the conception of duty, have sprung various derivative uses of the word; thus it is used of the services performed by a minister of a church, by a soldier, or by any employee or servant.

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  • A man may, however, possess any number of concubines, who, though objects of jealousy to the legal wife, are tolerated by her in consideration of her superior position and power over them, a power which she often uses with great tyranny; but certain privileges are possessed by concubines, especially if they have borne Sons to their master.

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  • Each form has special uses, generally difficult to define.

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  • The table on the opposite page shows the uses of a few of the commoner signs.

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  • The language was now formed, and was being employed for almost all the uses of science and philosophy.

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  • The external uses of the drug are mainly analgesic. The liniment or plaster of belladonna will relieve many forms of local pain.

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  • The uses of atropine in cardiac affections are still obscure and dubious.

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  • Omitting numerous minor applications of this drug, we may pass to two therapeutic uses which are of unquestionable utility.

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  • E regularly uses the phrase "and Pharaoh's heart was strong (pin)," or "and Yahweh made strong (p'Tn) Pharaoh's heart" and "he would not let the children of Israel (or, them) go."

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  • All these names are derived from the size and appearance of the crystals, their uses and the modes of their production.

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  • Butter and cheese salts are not stove-dried, but left in their more or less moist condition, as being thus more easily applied to their respective uses.

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  • Completely "useless" knowledge becomes impossible, though the uses of knowledge may still vary greatly in character, in directness, and in the extent and force of their appeal to different minds.

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  • Psychology recognizes two uses of the term.

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  • The theologians of the 4th and 5th centuries were at one with the masses in recognizing the religious uses of the pilgrimages.

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  • In any case that is one of the uses to which it is put at present.

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  • From these specific uses the word has come into general use as a synonym of "aristocrat" or "noble," and implies the possession of such qualities as are generally associated with long descent, hereditary good breeding and the like.

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  • During this process the wood shrinks considerably, and unless much care and attention are given to the drying wood it will warp and shake sufficiently to unfit it for practical uses.

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  • He would have known that " Jesus " was the Greek form of Joshua; that " Christ " was the Greek rendering of Messiah, or Anointed, the title of the great King for whom the Jews were looking; he might further have remembered that " the Lord " is the expression which the Greek Old Testament constantly uses instead of the ineffable name of God, which we now call " Jehovah " (q.v.).

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  • If in one mysterious passage Jesus speaks of " the Father " and " the Son "- terms with which the Gospel of St John has made us familiar St Mark also in one passage uses the same impressive terms " the Son " and " the Father."

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  • Cicero uses the name vicarius to describe an under-slave kept by another as part of his private property.

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  • As to colour, he follows Goethe, and uses strong language against Newton's theory, for the barbarism of the conception that light is a compound, the incorrectness of his observations, &c. In chemistry, again, he objects to the way in which all the chemical elements are treated as on the same level.

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  • The convents have been suppressed, and in many cases converted to secular uses.

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  • This meant that throughout all Germany medieval ecclesiastical rule was to be upheld, and that none of the revenues of the medieval church could be appropriated for Protestant uses.

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  • It may be said generally that while Luther insisted on a service in the vernacular, including the singing of German hymns, he considered it best to retain most of the ceremonies, the vestments and the uses of lights on the altar, which had existed in the unreformed church, while he was careful to explain that their retention might be dispensed with if thought necessary.

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  • Their peculiarities have naturally marked out each of them for special uses and methods of treatment.

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  • The metal-work of Belgium is based at present entirely on that of France, without attaining the same standard, unless designed for ecclesiastical uses.

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  • The engineer uses paints for his iron and steel.

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  • A vigorous effort was made during the last fifteen years of the 19th century to bring the two uses into harmony by beginning the astronomical day at midnight.

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  • Wycliffe uses "richessis."

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  • When writing to Atticus he eschews all ornamentation, uses short sentences, colloquial idioms, rare diminutives and continually quotes Greek.

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  • They were applied to other P Y PP uses less justifiable or defensible; they served to execute the will of the despotic master upon all who set themselves in opposition to his authority, or were decreed, more or less wisely but still arbitrarily, by a government in the best interests of society, organized for the general good.

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  • The combination Johannes Scotus Erigena has not been traced earlier than Ussher and Gale; even Gale uses it only in the heading of the version of St Maximus.

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  • The indigenous economic plants are few, and are of no commercial value, excepting wild ginseng,bamboo, which is applied to countless uses, and "tak-pul" (Hibiscus Manihot), used in the manufacture of paper.

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  • In all its uses, however, the common meaning is combination.

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  • They overlooked the fact that man thinks long before he speaks, makes judgments which he does not express at all, or expresses them by interjections, names and phrases, before he uses regular propositions, and that he does not begin by conceiving and naming, and then proceed to believing and proposing.

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  • A deduction is often like an induction, in inferring from particulars; the difference is that deduction combines a law in the major with the particulars in the minor premise, and infers syllogistically that the particulars of the minor have the predicate of the major premise, whereas induction uses the particulars simply as instances to generalize a law.

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  • It is not syllogism in the form of Aristotle's or Wundt's inductive syllogism, because, though starting only from some particulars, it concludes with a universal; it is not syllogism in the form called inverse deduction by Jevons, reduction by Sigwart, inductive method by Wundt, because it often uses particular facts of causation to infer universal laws of causation; it is not syllogism in the form of Mill's syllogism from a belief in uniformity of nature, because few men have believed in uniformity, but all have induced from particulars to universals.

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  • The adducing of a witness for which he uses the verb is not an idea that covers all the uses.

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  • Combebiac does not use K; and in place of, n he uses, u =1 7 - E, so that, u 2 = I, wµ = - µw = w, w 2 = o.

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  • Jesus uses parable after parable to establish its meaning.

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  • The Bible interpreted by man's unaided intelligence is as valueless as other writings, but it has a sacramental value when the Holy Spirit accompanies its teaching, and the power of God uses it and makes the soul capable of holiness.

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  • The Holy Spirit, the determining factor in the religious life, uses the Bible as his means, and calls the intelligence into action.

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  • Klein also prepares a new prophylactic from the dried organs of a guinea-pig, and one of the most interesting experiments is that of Strong (Archiv far Schiff sand tropische Hygiene, April, 1906), who uses for producing immunity in man a living virulent culture of the bacillus pestis.

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  • One important analogy exists for the way in which our author would handle any written sources he may have had by him, namely, the manner in which he uses Mark's Gospel narrative in compiling his own Gospel.

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  • If, indeed, it were proved that Acts uses the later works of Josephus, we should have to place the book about A.D.

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  • The uses of an electroscope are, first, to ascertain if any body is in a state of electrification, and secondly, to indicate the sign of that charge.

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  • Paley refers several times to Nieuwentyt, who uses the famous illustration of the watch.

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  • The later words for it (voµos, pi p -pa) are unknown, and the terms which he uses (311cn and 6Eµts) mean merely " custom."

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  • Homer uses no constructions loosely or without corresponding differences of meaning.

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  • Just as modern poetical Italian uses many older grammatical forms peculiar to itself, so the language of poetry, even in Homeric times, had formed a deposit (so to speak) of archaic grammar.

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  • Nor do Buddhist places of worship appear as a rule to have been destroyed by Hindu sectaries, but they seem rather to have been taken over by them for their own religious uses; at any rate there are to this day not a few Hindu shrines, especially in Bengal, dedicated to Dharmaraj," the prince of righteousness,"as the Buddha is commonly styled.

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  • There are now no medicinal uses of this substance.

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  • It is not easy to determine what gifts are to be regarded as gifts to superstitious uses.

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  • The act may still be of value in the construction of old grants, and in affording examples of what the legislature regarded as superstitious uses.

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  • The court may compel discovery of a secret trust for superstitious uses.

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  • It should be noticed that the doctrine of superstitious uses is not confined to the Roman Catholic religion, though the question has generally arisen in the case of gifts made by persons of that religion.

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  • Guicciardini seems to glory in his disillusionment, and uses his vast intellectual ability for the analysis of the corruption he had helped to make incurable.

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  • Its special uses are in ulceration of the mouth or tongue (ulcerative stomatitis), tonsillitis and pharyngitis.

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  • Much of the bituminous coal, especially that of the Canyon City field, is so hard and clean as to be little less desirable than anthracite; it is the favoured coal for domestic uses in all the surrounding states.

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  • The Professional works include the Reading on the Statute of Uses, the Maxims of Law and the treatise (possibly spurious) on the Use of the Law.

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  • This fruitful conception, however, Bacon does not work out; and though he uses the word cause, and identifies form with formal cause, yet it is perfectly apparent that the modern notions of cause as dynamical, and of nature as in a process of flow or development, are foreign to him, and that in his view of the ultimate problem of science, cause meant causa immanens, or underlying substance, effects were not consequents but manifestations, and nature was regarded in a purely statical aspect.

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  • On the 4th of November 1555 Pole opened, in the chapel royal at Westminster, a legatine synod, consisting of the united convocations of the two provinces, for the purpose of laying the foundations of wise and solid reforms. In the Reformatio Angliae which he brought out in 1556, based on his Legatine Constitutions of 1555, he ordered that every cathedral church should have its seminary, and the very words he uses on this subject seem to have been copied by the Council of Trent in the twenty-third session (1563).

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  • Greek was well understood in cultured Palestine; hence the latter recension uses many Greek terms which it does not explain; whereas in the Bab.

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  • The portion, however, of the letter of the 19th of July, cited above, in which Louvois uses the words "ce n'est qu'un valet," does not, in the present writer's judgment, refer to Dauger at all, but to something which had been mooted in the meanwhile with a view to obtaining a valet for Fouquet.

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  • It has been modified by Herreshoff, who uses a large hollow revolving central shaft cooled by a current of air.

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  • Ferrous chloride is not much used; the Douglas-Hunt process uses a mixture of salt and ferrous sulphate which involves the formation of ferrous chloride, and the new Douglas-Hunt process employs sulphuric acid in which ferrous chloride is added after leaching.

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  • To-day, by reason of other uses to which electricity is applied, electrically deposited copper of high conductivity is in everincreasing demand, and commands a higher price than copper refined by fusion.

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  • Josephus uses the term of the national restoration of the Jews, Plutarch of the transmigration of souls, and Cicero of his own return from exile.

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  • But, freely as Livy uses this privilege of speechmaking, his correct taste keeps his rhetoric within reasonable limits.

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  • He estimates that i in every 12 or 14 of the population uses the drug, and that the habit is increasing.

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  • Then he uses the flattened end of the dipper to scrape away any little residue there may be left around the orifice, and proceeds to prepare another pipe.

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  • Borchers uses the alloy, granulated, in an anode chamber separated from the cathode cell by a porous partition through which the current, but not electrolyte, can pass freely.

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  • Josephus uses the word of Nazirites and of the temple treasure of Jerusalem.

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  • Jeremiah, he thinks, always uses the same metre.

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  • Tertullian (2nd century) uses processio and procedere in the sense of "to go out, appear in public," 1 and, as applied to a church function, processio was first used in the same way as collecta, as the equivalent of the Greek vuva es, i.e.

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  • Quartz is a mineral which is put to many uses.

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  • There are, however, many passages in his sermons in which he rises to loftier thought and uses more dignified language.

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  • In the latter, which is his greatest work, Dositheiu uses not only Greek texts, but also Slavonic legends and other MS. material; and he includes a goodly number of the apocryphal legends of saints.

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  • It also uses the burrow as a safe retreat during moulting and guards its cocoon and young in its depths.

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  • This article is confined to the collection and storage of water for domestic and industrial uses and irrigation, and its purification on a large scale.

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  • Now, all the uses of water, of whatever kind they may be, produce some such irregular diagrams as these, which can never be confused with the uniform horizontal line of leakage, but are always superimposed upon it.

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  • It is this leakage line that the waterworks engineer uses to ascertain the truth as to the leakage and to assist him in its suppression.

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  • By the adoption of this method great reductions in the quantity of water used and wasted are in some cases effected, and the water tenant pays for the leakage or waste he permits to take place, as well as for the water he uses.

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  • Again, the probability that the passage in Jeremiah incorporates disjointed fragments of an older oracle is greatly increased by the fact that the prophecy against Moab in the preceding chapter uses, in the same way, Isa.

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  • So that if, for example, a fishmonger uses such a machine to ascertain the weight of a piece of fish which he places in the goods - pan, and thereby depresses it down upon its stop, and then places weights in the weights-pan till the goods-pan rises, the customer is charged for more than the real weight of the fish.

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  • The ritual uses of these altars are sufficiently explained by their names.

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  • It contains a beautiful Gothic Evangelical church, an old castle, once a monastery (founded 975, dissolved 1546), and now devoted to secular uses, and a classical school.

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  • The wood is applied to many uses in the United States.

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  • The economic sources are treated under Iron And Steel below; in the same place will be found accounts of the manufacture, properties, and uses of the metal, the present article being confined to its chemistry.

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  • The Church's first creed had been " the Fatherhood of God and the Messiahship of Jesus " (A Ritschl); but the " Rule of Faith " (Irenaeus; Tertullian, who uses the exact expression; Origen)- that summary of religiously important facts which was meant to ward off error without reliance on speculations such as the Logos doctrine - built itself up along the lines of the baptismal formula of Matt.

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  • Western Christendom wishes to call Christ God; even the Ritschlian school uses the wonted language in the light of its own definitions.

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  • One may also venture to declare that Dogmatic rests upon philosophical and historical studies, and exists for practical uses.

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  • Cork possesses a combination of properties which peculiarly fits it for many and diverse uses, for some of which it alone is found applicable.

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  • Since all rational activity is for some end, the different arts or functions of human industry are naturally defined by a statement of their ends or uses; and similarly, in giving an account of the different artists and functionaries, we necessarily state their end, " what they are good for."

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  • He does not with Price object to its being called the " moral sense," provided we understand by 1 It is to be observed that whereas Price and Stewart (after Butler) identify the object of self-love with happiness or pleasure, Reid conceives this " good " more vaguely as including perfection and happiness; though he sometimes uses " good " and happiness as convertible terms, and seems practically to have the latter in view in all that he says of self-love.

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  • Indeed, the acquired tendency to virtuous conduct may become so strong that the habit of willing it may continue, " even when the reward which 3 I should be observed that Austin, after Bentham, more frequently uses the term " moral " to connote what he more distinctly calls " positive morality," the code of rules supported by common opinion in any society.

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  • But used in the sense in which Green habitually uses it self-realization implies, as he puts it, the fulfilment by the good man of his rational capacity or the idea of a best that is in time, i.e.

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  • The principal uses to which flint has been put are the fabrication of weapons in Palaeolithic and Neolithic times.

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  • Years before the danger from Macedon was urgent, Demosthenes had begun the work of his life, - the effort to lift the spirit of Athens, to revive the old civic loyalty, to rouse the city into taking that place and performing that part which her own welfare as well as the safety of Greece ca uses.

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  • Burke uses, in reference to Hyder Ali, the same image which Demosthenes uses in reference to Philip. "Compounding all the materials of fury, havoc, desolation, into one black cloud, he hung for a while on the declivity of the mountains.

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  • Other uses, more or less technical, of the word are, in leather-dressing, for the whole untrimmed hide; in mining and geology, for the "outcrop" or appearance at the surface of a vein or stratum and, particularly in tin mining, of the best part of the ore produced after dressing.

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  • The literature about the horse and its history and uses is voluminous, and is collected up to 1887 in Huth's Works on Horses, &c., a bibliographical record of hippology.

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  • In anatomy, it is, among other uses, applied to the second cervical vertebra, and in botany itmeans the stem.

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  • It`was held by Gregory of Nyssa, Ambrose, who uses the phrase pia fracas, Augustine, Leo I., and Gregory I., who expresses it in its worst form.

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  • The first method uses the objective screw micrometer.

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  • In Lacaze-Duthiers's highly-elaborated memoir it should be noticed that he uses the term " cirrhes " rather misleadingly, not for cirrhiform feet, but as the equivalent of setae.

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  • The tables on the following pages contain chiefly the most important oils and fats together with their sources, yields and principal uses, arranged according to the above classification, and according to the magnitude of the iodine value.

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  • Essential oils have an extensive range of uses, of which the principal are their various applications in perfumery (q.v.).

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  • Binz, for instance, defines it as treating of the origin, nature, chemical and physical qualities, physiological actions, and therapeutical uses of drugs; in France and in Italy it is restricted to the mere description of medicines and their preparations, the action and uses of which as remedies are included in the term therapeutics.

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  • Their chief uses are in medicine.

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  • The latest extension of the word, proposed in the interests of philosophy or psychology, uses it of the principle according to which man is said to interpret all things (not God merely) through himself.

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  • Everyone uses cell phones.

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  • I found an email the owner sent to an email address we know Czerno uses.

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  • While maintaining a strict, no nonsense demeanor, Frost uses encouragement and positivity as her core techniques.

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  • An American English dictionary uses the pronunciation of American accented speech.

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  • There is no doubt that Mrs. Ramotswe is a novice; but, she uses her feminine guile to get to the heart of the matter.

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  • Business Inc. uses advanced tools to help the demands of the artist, which enable him/her to focus on the creation.

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  • The world's smallest abacus now uses individual molecules (13 November 1996 ).

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  • The nursery also uses interactive whiteboard technology and has broadband access to the internet.

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  • Queens ' uses the Bliss classification scheme and subjects are ordered alphabetically according to class mark.

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  • She is a medical practitioner and she told me that she still uses small accumulators with her patients to assist the healing of wounds.

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  • Acupressure India - Dr. Batra's clinic in in Chandigarh, India, uses acupressure India - Dr. Batra's clinic in in Chandigarh, India, uses acupressure to relieve a variety of complaints.

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  • The building is readily adaptable to a variety of alternative uses.

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  • The BLP uses a face-down chip, with the lead-frame attached by thermoplastic adhesive, and is bonded with gold wire before being transfer-moulded.

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  • Scholarly review of the many uses for fossils, up to the present day, including adornment, magic and medicine.

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  • He uses agate for the Fool, diamond for Strength, and carnelian for Justice.

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  • The population selected was all RAF helicopter aircrew using NVGs at RAF Aldergrove, Northern Ireland; this population uses NVGs intensively.

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  • Children who are very heavy sleepers may need an alarm clock that uses a vibrating pad and a flashing light to wake them.

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  • Casting uses a range of casting technologies on ferrous and non-ferrous alloys.

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  • Dominic uses a computer for all writing activities - apart from examinations when he has an amanuensis.

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  • The schematic of our preamplifier is very simple because it uses a very low-noise dual operational amplifier is very simple because it uses a very low-noise dual operational amplifier.

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  • Peter Watkins uses TV broadcasting, a deliberate anachronism, to stage his tale of the Paris Commune.

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  • Each module uses today's hottest marketing and financial analytics to underscore the importance of making quality management decisions.

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  • Another system uses a sacrificial anode tied to the rebar on either side of the patch repair.

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  • Uses A broad-spectrum anthelmintic for the treatment and control of adult and immature roundworms of the gastro-intestinal tract in horses and other equines.

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  • In fact any domestic appliance, which uses electricity, from a fridge to a vacuum cleaner, will generate an EMF.

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  • Determining whether Shakespeare uses archaisms consciously requires a close examination of his language word by word.

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  • The instrument uses 400 optical fibers, which a robotic arm takes about one hour to position with incredible accuracy.

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  • Another standing army uses 20th century style assault rifles firing glass ammunition.

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  • The project uses state-of-the art " smart technologies ", which help frail elderly people to live independently in their own homes.

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  • Fox uses material ' so artless ' that the listener can hear each tone and how they are disposed.

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  • Anyone who uses your premises, and who disturbs asbestos that has deteriorated or been damaged and releases fibers, can be at risk.

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  • Asbestos cement One of the most common uses of asbestos cement One of the most common uses of asbestos in the home is in asbestos cement products.

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  • The Infant Distraction Test uses similar principles, but the VRA assessment should always be carried out at a specialist audiology clinic.

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  • Ot uses the term avant-garde to indicate its focus on artists and art movements that have led the filed in breaking with successive traditions.

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  • Balloon animals, balloon bouquets, balloon animals, balloon bouquets, balloon decorations - the uses of balloons at a party are endless.

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  • In the US, the data is sent after the first ring tone and uses the 1200 baud Bell 202 tone modulation.

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  • Not surprisingly, therefore, goat's beard has also had its culinary uses.

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  • Durabak - Do It Yourself truck Bedliners Uses include truck bed liner and concrete floor coating.

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  • Charlesworth explains why he uses a bevel that has three angles on it.

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  • Fiona makes contact with an oil company bigwig and uses the knowledge of her extra-marital affair to blackmail her for information.

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  • The ZPrinter System uses a binder colored with standard food dyes.

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  • We are developing a new method of screening potentially bioactive molecules which uses a combination of enzymes to select active structures.

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  • This bitmap uses its own memory, so you can destroy the original bitmap without affecting the converted one.

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  • When God punishes he does so as a craftsman who uses a blast furnace to refine the metal he is working with.

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  • This net uses the highest quality terylene bobbinet netting and the classical ' bell ' design renowned for its simplicity and ease of use.

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  • This massage uses Japanese style bodywork applying pressure to the body through hand & foot pressure.

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  • For example, RUDI currently uses the ' Netscape Verity ' search engine which allows full text Boolean searching.

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  • Borstal trainees were released at the outbreak of war and premises converted to other uses.

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  • It is an indoor skiing facility that uses real snow it also house a bowling alley, multiplex cinema, climbing walls and restaurants.

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  • For example, HTML uses angle brackets to enclose HTML tags.

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  • The Caponord's ABS system uses BH DOT hydraulic hoses in flexible metal braid with PTFE inner tubing.

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  • The Cobb uses 4 - 9 standard barbecue briquettes which will provide enough heat to cook on for about 3 hours.

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  • British Thoracic Society guidelines state that anyone who uses a bronchodilator three or more times a week should be treated with an anti-inflammatory drug.

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  • This deodorant also uses some ingredients from the ingrown hair / razor bump product to give added cover.

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  • Whiplash uses more fiber bundles when braiding, contributing to the performance and knot strength.

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  • For a start I would prefer that whoever uses the space is a local businessperson.

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  • Anyone who uses the phrase ' easy as taking candy from a baby ' has never tried taking candy from a baby ' has never tried taking candy from a baby.

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  • The Professor uses scalpel to cut into the rabbit's leg to insert a venous cannula.

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  • Phantom uses a Global Positioning Satellite System and 24 hour monitoring center to greatly improve the chances of recovering a stolen caravan.

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  • It uses cartograms and additional statistical views of a data set in an interactive environment for exploratory analysis.

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  • It forms a feedback loop that uses Protein C and Protein S to slow down the coagulation cascade.

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  • The bank installs new cash machines every year that do not issue a charge to anyone who uses them.

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  • He could probably live with other cats and is used to a cat flap and uses his letter tray.

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  • Pale catechu has properties and uses similar to those of black catechu derived from Acacia catechu Willd., fam.

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  • Journalists and cultural commentators like to give names to social trends or groups, which they often categorize by characteristic language uses.

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  • A report of the UK Farm Animal Welfare Council Report (FAWC) is rightly cautious over the potential uses of cloning in animals.

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  • The camera further uses an imaging CCD with over 1,000,000 pixels giving a high image resolution.

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  • The UN also uses the term to refer to forceful actions to prevent cease-fire violations or to reinstate a failed cease-fire violations or to reinstate a failed cease-fire.

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  • The residue option uses residue centroids calculated from the currently selected atoms for the calculation.

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  • Tambour is a French word meaning ' drum ' The tambour method uses a hooked needle to make a continuous chain stitch.

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  • The skydiver uses the pilot chute to initiate the opening sequence.

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  • The chip uses two block ciphers that are loosely modeled on DES.

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  • RaphaYad uses hands-on and hands-off techniques to work with the body's electromagnetic circuitry to access the body's connective pathways and neurological systems.

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  • The mixer shower uses cold water from the hot water tank and cold water from the cold water cistern in the loft.

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  • Another variation uses coagulant to form a sludge blanket part way up the tanks.

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  • It's interesting to compare the combination of DVB-H using the HE AAC codec with the DAB system which uses the MP2 codec.

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  • If the child is under 12 or the offender uses coercion, maximum penalty is 12 years.

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  • The main icon in the EMS design is the service icon which uses cogs to representing a service.

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  • Dawkins uses the example of Roman Catholicism; a gang of mutually compatible memes that is stable enough to deserve a name.

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  • To the left below is an image formed by crossed polars that uses two lambda/4 compensators.

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  • However, a system that uses segment concatenation does not necessarily need such a synthesizer.

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  • It uses ordinary objects in a way that doesn't seem conceivable.

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  • The computer uses * to avoid confusion with the letter x.

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  • Linux provides up to 64 virtual consoles, although the Rescue floppy only uses a few of them.

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  • Quarks Most uses of the resource manager involve defining names, classes, and representation types as string constants.

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  • Any Catholic who uses contraceptives in defiance of the Church are told they are being evil.

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  • The result seems to be a rather conventional disciplinary hierarchy in which history provides the context which English uses to inform its literary analysis.

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  • Talk to Me uses a purely conversational method, Tell Me More includes also grammar, written exercises, pronunciation and more.

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  • However, most volume equipment uses pin conveyors, where the board is supported by pins on a moving conveyor chain.

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  • The company's existing 140,000 tons plant uses Unipol technology and makes homopolymers, random copolymers and impact copolymers.

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  • At bar 67 Clementi uses the octave quavers, derived from the first subject, but in two-part counterpoint, often in contrary motion.

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  • The RS 50 uses a liquid cooled single cylinder two stroke, with reed intake and balancing countershaft.

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  • In Mordor, Sam pretty much uses the couplet as a cross to repel a vampire, or in this case a spider.

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  • And uses almost ALL CPU to actually log in.

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  • It uses the Li type con rod with a stepped crankpin of 20mm and wasn't hardened.

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  • Kerberos is a network security protocol from MIT that uses private key cryptography to provide strong security between nodes.

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  • The Terminator uses his exceptional intelligence and strength to find Sarah, but is there any way to stop the seemingly indestructible cyborg?

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  • The spooling daemon uses the appropriate filters to print the data accordingly.

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  • To ensure smooth transmission of power while maintaining the desired direct power delivery feeling, the rear wheel uses iron rubber dampers.

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  • Taking genre fiction for a ride, Slow Death uses obscenity, black humor and repetition for the sake of ironic deconstruction.

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  • The commander uses HSS personnel only on perimeter defense of their assigned medical facility.

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  • The conservation of objects is a technically demanding job, which uses a range of scientific techniques.

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  • They are descriptions containing demonstratives whose uses refer to whatever pattern is instantiated by the demonstrated token.

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  • The samples were dated using dendrochronology, which uses the pattern of growth rings to age timber.

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  • The RNHRD uses the Hologic Acclaim bone densitometer, which allows bone density to be assessed in a few minutes.

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  • The future uses of the adjacent Co-operative department store will be included in the design study.

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  • In such cases the boundary condition on the fluid uses the Lagrangian derivative.

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  • Each binding allocates or uses up one client process socket descriptor; each bound domain costs one socket descriptor.

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  • Everybody else walks, takes a dhow or uses donkey taxis.

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  • Like the first stage the 2nd stage scuba regulator uses a diaphragm or piston to open a valve.

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  • The example uses the dielectric constant of water to model the solvent.

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  • The UM uses a full compressible equation set, no turbulence closure (numerical diffusion only) and a hybrid terrain following co-ordinate system.

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  • Here Luke uses the dissension to introduce seven prominent men.

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  • Genomixer the Future Physical funded project made serious progress and uses stanza DNA data fused into online generating artworks and soundscapes.

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  • There is a display made by Canon that uses nano-composites, but they are metallic particles and not quantum dots.

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  • As the journal uses double-blind refereeing, the author's name or affiliation must not appear on the typescript.

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  • However, a new mark ll version has been announced that uses a sharper coated doublet.

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  • Feedback Modify Exercise 1 so that it uses instanceof to check the type before performing the downcast.

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  • For Faust, he uses three different prototype dulcimers, including a microtonal dulcimer of his own design.

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  • Widely used for food coloring, medicinal, culinary, herbal dyestuffs and cosmetic uses.

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  • She uses " blood " and " CFD "; then " computational fluid dynamics " instead of " CFD " .

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  • We offer foam & silicone earplugs for all uses.

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  • Michael uses slip-decorated earthenware to investigate the relationships between proportion, volume and formal arrangement.

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  • Plants for the Future A resource center for rare and unusual plants, particularly those which have edible, medicinal or other uses.

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  • One well-known remedy, which uses black elderberry as a main ingredient, is the cough remedy Sambucol.

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  • Low temperature cells The proton exchange membrane (a.k.a. polymer electrolyte membrane) fuel cell uses a polymeric electrolyte.

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  • The new service which uses the ABI PRISM 3100, a fluorescence-based DNA analysis system incorporating capillary electrophoresis with 16 capillaries operating in parallel.

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  • Your smooth bottom electric kettle uses vitreous enamel in the manufacture of the heating element.

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  • This technique uses a fibreoptic endoscope to position the tube with only a minor incision on the tummy.

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  • It uses the entrails, in particular the intestines of human sacrifices.

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  • The date command uses TZ to determine the correct time zone information [see LANG on environ (5)] .

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  • Both compounds are inhibitors of the HCV protease enzyme, which the virus uses to replicate itself.

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  • The gig was organized by a promoter who uses the epithet " Up For It " .

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  • However, it offers scope for a variety of uses including equestrian.

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  • One of the earliest uses of biological weapons occurred in the 6th century BC when the Assyrians poisoned enemy wells with rye ergot.

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  • Uses For the active immunization of sows, gilts, boars and growing pigs as an aid in the control of swine erysipelas.

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  • Faulkner uses Owen's iconic poetry to flesh out the bones of three bodies exhumed from the earth of the erstwhile trenches.

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  • The value default uses the default expiry period for your server.

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  • The practice of 'trick or treat ' uses extortion and blackmail to prevent vandalism and is condemned as criminal the rest of the year.

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  • The 18-hole, 6442 yard, par 71 course uses the natural contours to create undulating fairways.

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  • It uses a limited number of well-known fairy tales, such as Cinderella, Mother Goose and Jack and the Beanstalk.

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  • Alan also uses a kind of nettle soup that he applies through the year as a foliar feed.

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  • Knowledge of the amount of drilling mud filtrate in your water has a number of uses.

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  • It uses the first floor above its own premises and extends over the adjoining travel agent's shop in Upper Brook Street as well.

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  • All cabs are licensed by the police and have taxi meters fitted - make sure your driver uses it.

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  • The closure system uses an inner zipper with an outer Velcro flap to provide a secure fit.

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  • The more you use flashcards the more uses you'll find for them!

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  • Jane uses flattery to persuade Victor to speak to Ian for her.

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  • Helen mixes up her own paper clay for large pieces and sometimes uses porcelain paper flax for smaller work.

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  • This report by Irene Smith reviews recent information on land uses for coal fly ash.

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  • This mechanism then uses the rapidly spinning flywheel via the gears to rotate the final drive axle slowly.

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  • Beside teddy hears, Susanna uses pigs. crocodiles, squirrels, rabbits and other creatures to portray human foibles.

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  • The ASAP uses a revolving toothed wheel to grip the rope and appears virtually foolproof to use.

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  • It uses a formal logic to express issues about agent design, giving the impression that the subject is an analytic one.

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  • Additives in the form of specially formulated powders can be stirred into the epoxy for special uses.

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  • When He uses the word ' fornication ' He always uses it in a narrow sense.

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  • Galson Sciences has also produced an extended development of PASS that uses an Internet-based front-end accessing a remote database across a network.

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  • Ben uses the dirt from exhaust fumes to produce stunning wildlife pictures.

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  • In an MPI registration, the FDC selects a ground location as the orienting point and uses impact fuzes in the registration.

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  • It uses multiple gamma rays focused on the tumor.

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  • Such uses might include gasworks, heavy industry, hospitals and landfill sites.

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  • The patches incorporate a special technology which uses a water-based gel giving instant cooling relief that lasts for hours.

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  • Siberian ginseng belongs to a different botanical family than Korean and American ginseng, but the properties and uses of all three are similar.

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  • The service uses information gleaned from news sources over the previous week.

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  • The viking glider uses a winch to get off of the ground.

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  • For persons allergic to wheat gluten, it provides a gluten-free food with uses similar to gains.

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  • Uses considered the gourmand 's oil, it is widely used in haute cuisine.

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  • Arrabal uses grainy filtered footage during these sequences and gives them several different colors.

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  • The City Harvest Church uses a grandma full-size console, while the Grace Assembly Church a grandMA micro.

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  • Our top of the range stainless steel coffee mill uses hardened, tempered conical burr grinders with over twenty settings.

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  • He produces a large colored handkerchief which he uses to mop his brow.

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  • The first movement is in sonata allegro form and uses traditional harmonic progressions.

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  • It uses the Biofit back system with an ergonomic comfort shoulder harness and hip belt.

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  • The Paddy Train at the Museum uses a rope haulage system, which is driven by a haulage engine.

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  • Gobino uses only the finest hazelnuts from the current year's harvest.

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  • The slag heaps or pit mounds of closed mines have been put to many new uses.

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  • To other uses, asserted by some to belong to these objects, he paid little heed.

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  • The winch hauling the rock uses the northern hemisphere 's largest electric motor - 7000 hp.

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  • By default, ilmid uses some heuristics to select a local IP address.

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  • Projector thus uses sequence homology directly at DNA level and takes the conservation of gene structures between related genes explicitly into account.

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  • For example, a middle class housewife whose husband uses the car during the day would probably need to be included 7.12.

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  • I really enjoy the humor the author uses to lighten up the mood of the book.

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  • Toyota's Rav 4 prototype uses a metal hydride to carry hydrogen in solid form.

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  • Stingray Stingray uses a hydroplane, similar to an airplane's wing but in water, to collect energy from the tide.

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