Regeneration Sentence Examples

regeneration
  • By the introduction of fresh toxin the process is repeated and the regeneration of side-chains is increased.

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  • The more the hope of being able to regain these middle classes of society disappeared, the more decidedly did the Curia perceive that it must seek the support and the regeneration of its power in the steadily growing democracy, and endeavour through the medium of universal suffrage to secure the influence which this new alliance was able to offer.

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  • I seemed to know at once that the process of regeneration had already taken place in him, and I rushed to meet him.

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  • Dizziness made him lose his regeneration powers.

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  • Skin-grafting and regeneration of bone are among not the least remarkable applications of pathological principles to the combat with disease in recent times; and in this connexion may also be mentioned the daring acts of surgery for the relief of tumours of the brain, rendered practicable by improved methods of localization.

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  • The low social morality of all classes, even when morality was present at all, necessitated the regeneration of the nation against its will, and the process could therefore only be a violent one.

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  • The only two points on which he departed from the orthodox Lutheran faith of his day were the requirement of regeneration as the sine qua non of the true theologian, and the expectation of the conversion of the Jews and the fall of Papacy as the prelude of the triumph of the church.

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  • In Isaiah's days the answer had been affirmative; there appeared to be at least a potentiality of national regeneration in the holy seed when once it should be cleansed from the chaff by a work of judgment.

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  • For special treatment towards the regeneration of an infected race, the most robust worms were to be selected, and the moths issuing from the cocoons were to be coupled in numbered cells, where the female was to be confined till she deposited her eggs.

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  • A slow death may be defended indeed on moral grounds if regeneration has been compassed, ' but it is only another form of capital punishment.

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  • This includes fencing and felling conifers to make way for the natural regeneration and new planting of native species.

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  • Had he not seen the possibility of, and passionately desired, the regeneration of the sinful human race, and his own progress to the highest degree of perfection?

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  • Baptismal cross - has eight points symbolizing regeneration.

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  • However, if you are not careful, you can tear the taproot, which simply causes regeneration of the weed.

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  • New modes were introduced like no shield fighting and enemy health regeneration.

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  • The Convention of Tauroggen became the starting-point of Prussia's regeneration.

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  • In the well-known "Gorham case" 1 he came into 1 George Cornelius Gorham (1787-1857) was refused institution by Bishop Phillpotts because of his Calvinistic views on baptismal regeneration.

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  • These to the number of twenty-five the synod subscribed, and adopted a supplementary statement, reaffirming the Augustinian doctrines of corruption, human inability, prevenient grace and baptismal regeneration.

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  • At the consecration of the baptismal water the burning Paschal Candle is dipped into the font " so that the power of the Holy Ghost may descend into it and make it an effective instrument of regeneration."

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  • Ultimately the regeneration becomes an over-regeneration and free side-chains produced in excess are set free and appear in the blood as antitoxin molecules.

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  • In 1783 he was crowned by the academy of Nancy for his Eloge de la poesie, and in 1788 by that of Metz for an Essai sur la regeneration physique et morale des Juifs.

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  • In the New Testament the properly theological sense of spiritual regeneration is found, though the word itself occurs only twice; and it is used by the church fathers, e.g.

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  • Man is made partaker of reconciliation in spiritual regeneration, which he attains to, being led and kept by the Holy Ghost.

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  • The most important evidence in favour of their appendicular nature is afforded by the phenomena of regeneration.

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  • It is open to question, however, how far the evidence from such " heteromorphic regeneration " can be regarded as conclusive on the points of homology.

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  • He believed in the regeneration of Turkey.

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  • His position at the time was not unpopular throughout New England, and it is needless to say that his doctrine that the Lord's Supper is not a cause of regeneration and that communicants should be professing Christians has since (very largely through the efforts of his pupil Joseph Bellamy) become a standard of New England Congre gationalism.

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  • Timothy Dwight (1752-1847) urged the use of the means of grace, thought Hopkins and Emmons pantheistic, and boldly disagreed with their theory of " exercises," reckoning virtue and sin as the result of moral choice or disposition, a position that was also upheld by Asa Burton (1752-1836), who thought that on regeneration the disposition of man got a new relish or " taste."

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  • Hence loss does not go on without regeneration, and we are apparently at a stage when there is an approximate balance between them.

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  • It is in fact an impossibility that loss should go on without regeneration, for if any part of the sun's body loses heat, it will be unable to support the pressure of neighbouring parts upon it; it will therefore be compressed, in a general sense towards the sun's centre, the velocities of its molecules will rise, and its temperature will again tend upwards.

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  • Having personal acquaintance with the success of the rule of President Porfirio Diaz in Mexico, General Reyes determined to set about the regeneration of Colombia by similar methods.

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  • In the West, however, the sacrament has been saved from becoming merely magical by the rite of confirmation or of reception of the Spirit being separated from the baptism of regeneration and reserved for an adult age.

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  • The idea of regeneration seldom occurs in the New Testament, and perhaps not at all in connexion with baptism; for in the conversation with Nicodemus, John ill.

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  • But here again it is not clear that the writer has in view water baptism or any rite at all as the means and occasion of regeneration.

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  • Pending this regeneration of society St Just advised the rule of a dictator.

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  • Reproduction by budding does not occur, although spontaneous fragmentation of the body, followed by complete regeneration of each of the pieces, is known to take place.

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  • Regeneration of the tentacular end of the animal is of frequent occurrence.

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  • This imputed righteousness, however, is not disjoined from real personal righteousness, for regeneration and sanctification come to the believer from Christ no less than justification; the two blessings are not to be confounded, but neither are they to be disjoined.

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  • According to Comte the only practical method of social regeneration is gradually to inculcate the true social feeling which subordinates itself to the welfare of others.

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  • But divine love, united to humanity in Christ, will work the final regeneration.

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  • Dizziness made him lean onto the table, and he loosed his regeneration powers.

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  • It is a job that would put her at the heart of the regeneration agenda, providing a good opportunity for networking.

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  • As well as tiny exfoliating beads, it also contains vitamins A and E to encourage faster cell regeneration.

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  • The Regeneration Framework provides the 30-year blueprint for dynamic and sustainable change in the landscape and fortunes of Corby.

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  • Prolific ash regeneration is found on very calcareous soils that are often very steep.

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  • In denying the depravity of the human heart, liberalism also ruled out the need for our spiritual regeneration.

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  • Come along for an hour or two and really make a difference by helping to remove encroaching dogwood and blackthorn regeneration.

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  • If the goal is to regenerate east London, the money would be better spent on just that - regeneration.

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  • Work starts on Edge Lane project 19 April 2006 £ 350m regeneration project will transform key eastern gateway to Liverpool.

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  • If there is not a substantial move to public transport we will have gridlock and the whole regeneration will not work,' he says.

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  • The event was supervised by the environmental regeneration charity groundwork on behalf of the East London Business Alliance.

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  • Scrub regeneration includes hazel, elder, hawthorn and sallow.

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  • Where these circumstances apply, existing owners will normally refuse to sell whilst hoping for circumstances to change, thereby inhibiting timely regeneration.

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  • The Council recognize the need to improve and to ensure core services are maintained and enhanced, while delivering successful, high quality regeneration.

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  • The development of Derby Urban Regeneration Company had been a key priority, which would soon be launched.

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  • Nevertheless, the researchers conclude that formal ' top down ' regeneration programs alone will not successfully regenerate these communities.

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  • It is widely believed that this development has provided the confidence boost needed to kick-start further regeneration in the immediate area.

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  • It is hoped that this investment will stimulate economic regeneration within the immediate area.

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  • Up and coming areas to buy flats and houses in Lambeth Brixton has undergone some regeneration.

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  • The agencies ' key purpose is to promote economic regeneration by the setting up of small firms.

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  • Luther and Calvin both clearly affirmed baptismal regeneration on a number of occasions.

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  • Group Members understand the importance of the emergent housing agenda, particularly in relation to sustainable community regeneration within diverse neighborhoods.

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  • Under the banner of the MCTI we have a marvelous opportunity for rural regeneration.

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  • Further details have been revealed about Peel Holding's proposed new waterside regeneration scheme in Warrington.

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  • The IP City Center project involves the conversion of a former warehouse at a site near the Ipswich waterfront regeneration area.

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  • English Partnershipsâ support for brownfield regeneration is of course not limited to the National Coalfields Program.

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  • The paper is about community involvement in neighborhood regeneration programs.

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  • Four million pound boost for Salfordâs economy 26 July 2006 Multi-million regeneration investment to create city park.

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  • We raise funds for waterway regeneration, conservation, recreation, community, arts, education, access and activity projects.

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  • Catalyst Corby is the only Urban Regeneration Company to have a borough-wide remit.

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  • Contact Dr. Alan Blackburn Driving models of forest gap regeneration dynamics using remote sensing.

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  • Bradford Center Regeneration is hosting a VIP Marquee in the square, now sold-out, celebrating the city's changing landscape.

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  • Forming partnerships Community regeneration organizations are not stand-alone organizations.

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  • Large areas have been burnt by uncontrolled forest fires and uneven regeneration of the forest renders the park particularly susceptible to any disturbance.

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  • As Newcastle stirred from its economic slumber with piecemeal regeneration, Gateshead sank into an even deeper torpor.

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  • Muro, once a hive of artisans, now forms part of the regeneration program to revive the old traditions.

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  • The Projects During the expedition you will work on a local Garden Regeneration project alongside the local Bedouin tribes within a mountain area.

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  • At a stroke urban regeneration in England was seriously undermined.

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  • For example, a parish vicar in Bradford has enabled a major regeneration scheme to provide neighborhood facilities.

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  • But her political ardour was short-lived; she cared little about forms of government, and, when the days of June dashed to the ground her hopes of social regeneration, she quitted once for all the field of politics and returned to her quiet country ways and her true vocation as an interpreter of nature, a spiritualizer of the commonest sights of earth and the homeliest household affections.

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  • Ivan meditated the regeneration of Muscovy, and the only men who could assist him in his task were men who could look steadily forward to the future because they had no past to look back upon, men who would unflinchingly obey their sovereign because they owed their whole political significance to him alone.

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  • Redemption, justification, regeneration, adoption, forgiveness, reconciliation all mean the same thing - the restoration of the broken family relationship. All depends on the Mediation of Christ, who maintained the filial relationship even to His death, and communicates it to the brotherhood of believers.

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  • He upheld the papacy in principle, regarded Austria as the great enemy of Italian regeneration, and believed that the means of expelling her were only to be found in Piedmont.

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  • Attention must also be called to the treatise Ad Donatum, (De gratia dei), in which the new life after regeneration with its moral effects is set forth in a pure and clear light, as contrasted with the night of heathendom and its moral degradation, which were known to the author from personal experience.

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  • The hope of the regeneration of his dynasty, and, at a later period, of its restoration to the throne - the Messianic expectation - must have worked powerfully in the same direction.

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  • It is a remarkable and newly-ascertained fact that in regeneration (in Potamilla) the thorax is not replaced by the growth of uninjured thoracic segments; but that the anterior segments of the abdomen take on the same characters, the setae dropping out and being replaced in accordance with the plan of the setae in the thorax of uninjured worms. Among the Oligochaeta the sexually mature worm is distinguished from the immature worm by the clitellum and by the development of genital setae.

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  • In 1799, on the invasion of the Russians and the overthrow of the Cisalpine republic, Dandolo retired to Paris, where, in the same year, he published his treatise Les Hommes nouveaux, ou moyen d'operer une regeneration nouvelle.

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  • They are A Demonstration of the Gross and Fundamental Errors of a late Book called "A Plain Account, &c., of the Lord's Supper" (1737); The Grounds and Reasons of the Christian Regeneration (1739); An Appeal to all that Doubt and Disbelieve the Truths of Revelation (1740); An Earnest and Serious Answer to Dr Trapp's Sermon on being Righteous Overmuch (1740); The Spirit of Prayer (1749, 1752); The Way to Divine Knowledge (1752); The Spirit of Love (1752, 1754); A Short but Sufficient Confutation of Dr Warburton's Projected Defence (as he calls it) of Christianity in his "Divine Legation of Moses" (1757); A Series of Letters (1760); a Dialogue between a Methodist and a Churchman (1760); and An Humble, Earnest and Affectionate Address to the Clergy (1761).

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  • In many of their homilies Christ's baptism is also regarded as his regeneration by water and spirit, and this view almost transcends the modest adoptionism of the Thonraki as revealed in the Key of Truth.

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  • Skin-grafting and regeneration of bone are among not the least remarkable applications of pathological principles to the combat with disease in recent times; and in this connexion may also be mentioned the daring acts of surgery for the relief of tumours of the brain, rendered practicable by improved methods of localization, as well as operations upon the serous cavities for diseased conditions within them or in their vicinity.

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  • The chief aim of penal legislation should indeed be either to keep gaols empty or to use them only where distinct reduction in the number of offenders, whether by regeneration or by continuous withdrawal from noxious activity, can be obtained.

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  • Hence the exoteric theory of manifestations of the Supreme Spirit; and that not only the manifestations implied in the triad of gods representing the cardinal processes of mundane existence - creation, preservation, and destruction or regeneration - but even such as would tend to supply a rational explanation for superstitious imaginings of every kind.

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  • And accordingly the "descents" or incarnations of the deity have for their object, not so much the spiritual regeneration of man as the deliverance of the world from some material calamity threatening to overwhelm it.

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  • As the chief objection of the "Separates" to the churches of the standing order was their refusal to insist on personal regeneration as a term of membership, many of them were led to feel that they were inconsistent in requiring regenerate membership and yet administering baptism to unconscious infants.

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  • Phosphorus pentachloride converts it into picryl chloride, C 6 H 2 C1(NO 2) 3, which is a true acid chloride, being decomposed by water with the regeneration of picric acid and the formation of hydrochloric acid; with ammonia it yields picramide, C 6 H 2 NH 2 (NO 2) 3.

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  • In the Roman order of baptism the priest prays that "the font may receive the grace of the only begotten Son from the holy Spirit, and that the latter may impregnate with hidden admixture of His light this water prepared for the regeneration of mankind, to the end that man through a sanctification conceived from the immaculate womb of the divine font, may emerge a heavenly offspring reborn as a new creature."

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  • It is strongly supported by Ehrlich, who, in his so-called " side-chain " (Seitenkette) theory, explains antitoxin production as an instance of regeneration after loss.

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  • Samuel Hopkins laid even greater stress than Edwards on the theorem that virtue consists in disinterested benevolence; but he went counter to Edwards in holding that unconditional resignation to God's decrees, or more concretely, willingness to be damned for the glory of God, was the test of true regeneration; for Edwards, though often quoted as holding this doctrine, protested against it in the strongest terms. Hopkins, moreover, denied Edwards's identity theory of original sin, saying that our sin was a result of Adam's and not identical with it; and he went much further than Edwards in his objection to " means of grace," claiming that the unregenerate were more and more guilty for continual rejection of the gospel if they were outwardly righteous and availed themselves of the means of grace.

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  • While all are elected to salvation, only the regenerate may receive baptism, and those who sin after regeneration sin against the Holy Ghost, and cannot be saved.

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  • Urban regeneration brings congestion by the lorry load A 44 ton refrigerated lorry is blocking the road ahead.

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  • The prince 's regeneration trust The Prince 's Regeneration Trust helps to regenerate heritage buildings such as Stanley Mills in Perthshire to provide accommodation.

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  • Urban regeneration was at the heart of the project from the beginning.

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  • Engaging the community In top-down regeneration initiatives, how lead agencies made their initial approach to communities often proved important.

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  • In addition, 19 sites in Basildon were sold on behalf of the national regeneration agency, English Partnerships.

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  • Acting for a Regional Development Agency on a major regeneration scheme.

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  • Further details have been revealed about Peel Holding 's proposed new waterside regeneration scheme in Warrington.

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  • Regeneration or regenerative medicine is the term some would prefer over cloning.

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  • The Regeneration Department offers a single point of contact for businesses seeking to establish, expand or relocate in the area.

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  • In response to this the Ord River Regeneration Reserve was established to limit stock numbers and revegetate bare land.

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  • The Corporate Plan reflects broader national and regional priorities in respect of Dartford 's key role in the regeneration of the Thames Gateway.

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  • We ended the century working on six major regeneration schemes of run-down housing estates acquired from London councils.

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  • Excellent selectivity and sensitivity, and a smooth regeneration control are appreciated features of this receiver.

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  • The event will also explore the remarkable similarities between housing regeneration in the cities of Glasgow and Chicago.

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  • Bradford Center Regeneration is hosting a VIP Marquee in the square, now sold-out, celebrating the city 's changing landscape.

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  • The Town Centers Management team became part of the Regeneration Implementation Division in November 2003 in order to maximize these synergies.

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  • Stripping the topsoil for heather regeneration was not a viable option.

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  • This is not a series of regeneration plans but one shared plan that will transform the fortunes of Corby and its surrounding environs.

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  • They set about trying to transmute iron into gold to fund their regeneration of Europe.

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  • Go to Single Regeneration Budget Street Warden Scheme Provide highly visible uniformed patrols in town and village centers, public areas and neighborhoods.

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  • Royal William Yard - regeneration of the former naval victualling yard in Plymouth designed by Sir John Rennie in the 1830s.

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  • The site is very close to the £ 100 million waterfront regeneration site.

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  • Its major brief involves the promotion of partnerships which will extend the success of waterway regeneration.

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  • It features the antioxidant known as milk thistle, which supports the production and regeneration of liver cells.

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  • Mai Men Dong, which is also referred to as ophiopogon, is thought to help stimulate the regeneration of the pancreatic cells which are responsible for the manufacture of insulin in the body.

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  • The regeneration of these cells may help to reverse adult-onset diabetes.

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  • From 1958 to 2008, he led his organization in teaching spiritual regeneration and enlightenment to his disciples.

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  • You can put points you earn into Health, Mana Regeneration or Attack Strength.

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  • Spiderman is much more agile, relying on his webshooters and spider senses, whereas Venom possesses a lot more strength along with the ability to leap over buildings and suck enemies in for health regeneration.

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  • But in the last decades of the twentieth century there were dramatic advances in spinal cord regeneration research.

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  • The term osteochondroses refers to a group of diseases of children and adolescents in which localized tissue death (necrosis) occurs, usually followed by full regeneration of healthy bone tissue.

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  • They will create a "regeneration zone" of plants and rocks, including marsh marigolds, water lilies, water primrose, cattails and rushes.

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  • Adequate fluid intake promotes cell regeneration.

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  • Your hands and feet have the most direct contact with the external environment, lending a higher peeling and regeneration rate than anywhere else on your body.

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  • Among the vast amounts of mythology associated with the ankh are regeneration, eternal life, conception, strength and health.

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  • Ancient Egypt's hieroglyphic ankh originally symbolized regeneration before it absorbed the more Christian association of eternal life.

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  • Because the ink is embedded so deeply, your skin's natural cell regeneration never touches the ink.

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  • Rejuvenation and regeneration of cells enables the body and mind to operate at their highest level.

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  • Taking in plenty of fluids will also help with digestion and aid in cell regeneration.

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  • Acai has essential amino acids and minerals that contribute to muscle regeneration.

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  • For four million years, the ship and all of the Transformers, Autobots and Decepticons, were rendered dormant until a volcano activated the ships regeneration powers.

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  • Regeneration has allowed a whopping eleven actors to portray the Time Lord known only as "The Doctor" on and off for nearly fifty years.

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  • Serum Intense boosts the skin's natural powers of regeneration for immediate results.

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  • All his life long he had been working incessantly with a single object - the regeneration of Russia.

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  • Yet it must be admitted that the idea of a spiritual regeneration accompanied the crusading movement of 1188.

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  • An ardent Liberal, he took an active part in party struggles under the Restoration, while throwing himself with equal vigour into the great work of historical regeneration which was going on at that period.

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  • His services in the regeneration of the Turkish power can hardly be over-estimated; all agree in recognizing his great qualities and the charm of his character; even Timur is said to have admired him so much as to offer him his daughter in marriage.

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  • His system declared that holiness and sin are free voluntary exercises; that men act freely under the divine agency; that the slightest transgression deserves eternal punishment; that it is through God's mere grace that the penitent believer is pardoned and justified; that, in spite of total depravity, sinners ought to repent; and that regeneration is active, not passive, with the believer.

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  • In the summer of 1864 a sermon which he preached and printed on Baptismal Regeneration (a doctrine which he strenuously repudiated, maintaining that immersion was only an outward and visible sign of the inward conversion) led to a difference with the bulk of the Evangelical party, both Nonconformist and Anglican.

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  • The first two, marking respectively the progress of the " Regeneration of the Native Literature " (1772-1807) and the " Revival of the Language " (1807-1830), were introductory to and preparatory for the third or " Academy," period, which began about 1830.

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  • Count Claudius Mercy (1666-1734), who was appointed governor of Temesvar in 1720, took numerous measures for the regeneration of the Banat.

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  • This statement is quite consistent with the continuous production of new segments at the neck of the scolex, for such a process is analogous to the development of the segments in a Chaetopod, which is a perfectly distinct phenomenon from the regeneration of new segments to supply the place of a head or tail-end or some other portion that has been lesioned.

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  • The replacement of detached mature proglottides at the distal end of the Cestode-body by others is not regeneration, for the replacing set has already developed, and in certain cases they can complete their development quite independently after being detached from the parent.

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  • This is the key to the regeneration of social existence, as it is the key to that unity of individual life which makes all our energies converge freely and without wasteful friction towards a common end.

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  • C. Gorham to the benefice of Brampford Speke in spite of the latter's acknowledged disbelief in the doctrine of baptismal regeneration, brought to a crisis the position within the Church of England of those who believed in that Church as a legitimate part of the infallible Ecclesia docens.

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  • He sat in the Erfurt parliament of 1850, and was attached to the Gotha party, which hoped for the regeneration of Germany through the ascendancy of Prussia.

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  • Leo XIII., while favouring them somewhat, never gave them his full confidence; and by his adhesion to the Thomist philosophy and theology, and his active work for the regeneration and progress of the older orders, he made another suppression possible by destroying much of their prestige.

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  • He was a father to the poor and sick, in the highest sense of the word; and he left behind him an enduring monument in his amendment and regeneration, first of the religious orders, then of the clergy.

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  • We see how deep the early Adoptianism had struck its roots, when a primate of the 12th century could still appeal to the baptismal regeneration of Jesus.

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  • On the one hand the famous Gorham judgment was the outcome of his refusal to institute to the living of Brampford Speke a clergyman George Cornelius Gorham (1787-1857), who had openly disavowed his belief in baptismal regeneration; on the other he denounced the equally famous Tract XC. in his episcopal charge of 1843.

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  • Sir Reginald Wingate, the sirdar of the Egyptian army (in which post he succeeded Lord Kitchener at the close of 1899) was named governor-general, and in the work of regeneration of the country, the officials, British, Egyptian and Sudanese, had the cordial co-operation of the majority of the inhabitants.

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  • Even the results of mutilation involve an intrinsic factor, for they range, according to the organ and organism affected, from complete regeneration to the most imperfect healing.

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  • Palmerston, however, did not share Canning's belief in the possible regeneration of Turkey; he held that an isolated intervention of Great Britain would mortally offend not only Russia but France, and that Mehemet Ali, disappointed of his ambitions, would find in France a support that would make him doubly dangerous.1 In the autumn Sultan Mahmud, as a last independent effort, despatched against Ibrahim the army which, under Reshid Pasha, had been engaged in pacifying Albania.

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  • More convincing evidence of the absence of true regeneration, however, is the argument from malformation and the phenomenon known as " pseudo-scolex.

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  • He was greatly assisted by Lord Cockburn, then Mr Henry Cockburn, and a volume of correspondence published by Kennedy in 1874 forms a curious and interesting record of the consultations of the two friends on measures which they regarded as requisite for the political regeneration of their native country.

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  • It came about that in the minds of many Germans the whole national regeneration was regarded as a liberation from British influence.

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  • I... desire regeneration, Pierre uttered with difficulty.

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  • He argued that a single worthless life stood in the way of the regeneration of Russia, and he therefore deliberately removed it.

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