Forgotten Sentence Examples

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  • Yeah, I'd forgotten about that.

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  • She glanced at the door, realizing she had forgotten to lock it.

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  • I expect he has forgotten me.

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  • Someone must have forgotten something.

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  • In a few minutes they had forgotten about the birds.

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  • She'd forgotten his presence, but he peeled off one glove to display a scarred forearm and hand.

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  • I haven't forgotten that.

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  • The dream was drifting away from conscious memory, into that pit of forgotten remembrances that somewhere dwells in our deepest subconscious.

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  • She had forgotten not to smile and to keep her lips closed together.

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  • Like two bull Elk, they were each so focused on pushing the other back that they had forgotten anyone else existed.

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  • I've never forgotten you, Trinka.

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  • He had forgotten to send her that jewelry.

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  • Perhaps he came yesterday and I have forgotten it.

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  • Next, you'll tell me you've forgotten how to do dishes too.

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  • It's been calm for the past few hundred years, but I don't think any of us have forgotten that five hundred year period where we were at each other's throats.

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  • I imagine he's forgotten half of the information, and the other half is probably outdated.

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  • We've accomplished a lot and we certainly haven't forgotten our promise to you.

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  • Denisov seemed to have forgotten Petya's very existence.

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  • The whole expression of his face told her that he had not forgotten the morning's talk, that his decision remained in force, and only the presence of visitors hindered his speaking of it to her now.

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  • Even Quinn seemed to have forgotten his desire to go public in the tension of our impromptu to act.

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  • The article was a page five filler and hopefully will be forgotten in a couple of days.

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  • Her prior night's transgressions were apparently forgotten as she and Betsy acted as compatible as guppies in a fish bowl.

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  • Perhaps it was a resurgence of his forgotten priestly training but for the first time, Howie was more lucid than I.

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  • I think he's since been sickened with evil and forgotten if you don't exist, neither does he.

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  • It was if Annie bade him turn his thoughts beyond her long forgotten cares to the no less pressing concerns of today.

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  • I had forgotten just how beautiful you are.

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  • Nerves made her movements clumsy while her mind sought some forgotten information about a threat great enough to rouse the Undersecretary and his staff in the middle of the night.

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  • Rhyn turned, surprised.  He'd forgotten Kris's presence.  The Council leader stepped forward.

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  • He was still watching her intently, his meal forgotten.

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  • She had forgotten how delicious those chocolate eyes could be.

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  • She had forgotten how pleasing it was to watch him move.

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  • Another thing she had forgotten.

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  • She'd forgotten Jonny's call.

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  • Much as she enjoyed watching them eat crow for desert, she knew their shame would be forgotten by suppertime.

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  • No one had ever called back about removing it and she had forgotten.

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  • He must've forgotten I went to Hell already.

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  • He'd forgotten, even though Cynthia hadn't.

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  • I'd forgotten all about the bags I put in his trunk.

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  • In that moment the storm was forgotten as she waited breathlessly for his lips to touch hers.

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  • The dance forgotten, they stood transfixed, lost in emotion.

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  • I'll have forgotten who you are.

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  • Black God or not, he'd never forgotten his sister.

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  • He had forgotten what it felt like to just let go and let the magic absorb him.

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  • They will be forgotten, and their books will not be read.

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  • The impression we get of the man is that, whether or not he actually enjoyed the full rights of Roman citizenship, he was a 1 "If it were permitted that immortals should weep for mortals, the divine Camenae would weep for Naevius the poet; for since he hath passed into the treasure-house of death men have forgotten at Rome how to speak in the Latin tongue."

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  • The communication between the Norse settlements in Greenland and the motherland Norway was broken off at the end of the 14th and the beginning of the 15th century, and the Norsemen's knowledge about their distant colony was gradually more or less forgotten.

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  • For more than two hundred years Greenland seems to have been neglected, almost forgotten.

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  • While at New York he wrote a play, The Ocean Waif, or Channel Outlaw, which was acted, and is forgotten.

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  • His deduction is logical; but he has forgotten to prove the assumption, and now confuses sensory operation with sensible object.

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  • It often left them partially paralyzed, in wheelchairs or iron lungs (a term that's now all but forgotten and will likely send younger readers to Wikipedia).

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  • It will soon be forgotten, in these days of stoves, that we used to roast potatoes in the ashes, after the Indian fashion.

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  • Isn't that … what … you … said… She stared at him, surprised he remembered when she'd forgotten.

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  • He'd spent his life relatively alone, crossing between the underworld and human world as needed.  Death had been far from co-dependent, and he'd had free rein.  Until two days ago, when he crossed into the underworld with Katie slung across his shoulder.  He'd forgotten what it was to have someone completely dependent on him.

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  • She had forgotten her cell phone on the dresser again.

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  • After her two weeks in the Black God's chaotic camp, she'd almost forgotten what it was like to be in an organization that took care of its own.

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  • She'd forgotten how hard the adjustment had been from immortal to mortal world.

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  • Darian strode forward, Xander forgotten as he focused on the two women.

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  • She had forgotten he was a barbarian like the others after all he'd done to save her.

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  • There was only one reason why she didn't, and that was because she was embarrassed that she had forgotten the phone in the first place.

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  • Reverting to jeans and T-shirt for working was an obvious change, but the change inside gave her a peace she had forgotten existed.

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  • Peter Bayle is severe on certain historical inaccuracies of Davila, and it is true that Davila must be read with due remembrance of the fact that he was not only a Catholic but the especial protege of Catherine de' Medici, but it is not to be forgotten that Bayle was as strongly Protestant.

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  • It must not be forgotten, too, that a very moderate increase of dimensions may carry the particles beyond the reach of our approximations.

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  • Its existence was well-nigh forgotten by the people of Australia until the occurrence of its biennial meetings, and even then but slight interest was taken in its proceedings.

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  • The cunning and cruelty which marred his character were forgotten, and his services to his church and country remembered.

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  • But when the Panama "scandal" has been forgotten, for centuries to come the traveller in saluting the statue of Ferdinand de Lesseps at the entrance of the Suez Canal will pay homage to one of the most powerful embodiments of the creative genius of the 19th century.

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  • On account of this, it has been suggested that in a forgotten past the Sakai were themselves the fashioners of the stone implements, and certain it is that all tools which have no representatives among the stone kelts are known to the Sakai by obvious corruptions of their Malayan names.

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  • Nor must it be forgotten that this exile was due to the policy which induced the pontiffs, in their detestation of Ghibellinism, to rely successively upon the houses of Anjou and o Valois.

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  • It had further revealed to them that truth, which once grasped can never be forgotten, that, despite differences of climate, character and speech, they were in all essentials a nation.

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  • But the question was soon forgotten in the turmoil caused by the Crimean War.

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  • Replying on the 9th of April 1878 to interpellations by Visconti-Venosta and other deputies on the impending Congress of Berlin, he appeared free from apprehension lest I Italy, isolated, might find herself face to face with a change of the balance of power in the Mediterranean, and declared that in the event of serious complications Italy would be too much sought after rather than too niuch forgotten.

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  • It has even been supposed that amber passed from Sicily to northern Europe in early times - a supposition said to receive some support from the fact that much of the amber dug up in Denmark is red; but it must not be forgotten that reddish amber is found also on the Baltic, though not being fashionable it is used rather for varnish-making than for ornaments.

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  • The abstruse nature of his studies, the mystical character of his writings, and the general indifference of the Romans to such subjects, caused his works to be soon forgotten.

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  • It is sometimes forgotten, when discussing questions of animal nutrition, that all the food materials of all living organisms are prepared originally from inorganic substances in exactly the same way, in exactly the same place, and by the same machinery, which is the chlorophyll apparatus of the vegetable kingdom.

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  • During the rapid development of physical geography many branches of the study of nature, which had been included in the cosmography of the early writers, the physiography of Linnaeus and even the Erdkunde of Ritter, had been as so much advanced by the labours of specialists that their connexion was apt to be forgotten.

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  • Meanwhile Mithradates and the East were forgotten in the crisis of the Social or Italic War, which broke out in 91 and threatened Rome's very existence.

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  • Its extent is so vast that it necessarily contains some peculiar, outlying forms, so to say forgotten, which in their long-continued isolation have specialized themselves.

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  • It is hardly needful to prove that nobility does not imply wealth, though nobility without wealth runs some risk of being forgotten.

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  • Macleay's classification (1825), which rested principally on the characters of the larvae, is almost forgotten nowadays, but it is certain that in any systematic arrangement which claims to be natural the early stages in the life-history must receive due attention.

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  • The arguments of conservative writers involve concessions which, though often overlooked by their readers, are very detrimental to the position they endeavour to support, and the objections they bring against the theory of the introduction of new law-books (under a Josiah or an Ezra) apply with equal force to the promulgation of Mosaic teaching which had been admittedly ignored or forgotten.

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  • Finally, the traditional circulus and titulus seem all but forgotten, the whole front and back surfaces of the mitre being ornamented with embroidered pictures or with arabesque patterns.

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  • This was followed by the outbreak of the dispute between France and Turkey over the guardianship of the holy places at Jerusalem, which, after the original cause of quarrel had been forgotten, developed into the Crimean war.

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  • The impression made by him in parliament is in some danger of being forgotten, because he was not instrumental in carrying any great measure that might serve as an abiding memorial.

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  • It must not, however, be forgotten that Justin is here speaking as the apologist of Christianity to an educated Pagan public, on whose philosophical view of life he had to base his arguments, and from whom he could not expect an intimate comprehension of the religious position of Christians.

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  • But his theological writings are forgotten, and he is chiefly remembered as a scientific investigator who contributed especially to the chemistry of gases.

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  • Nor, indeed, must it be forgotten that the search for new and more direct connexions with the routes of Oriental trade is one of the motives underlying the Crusades themselves, and leading to what may be called the 13th-century discovery of Asia.

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  • While from this point of view the Crusades appear as a failure, it must not be forgotten that elsewhere than in the East Crusades did attain some success.

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  • But he took the score with him to Paris, and, as he himself tells us, " when ill, miserable and despairing, I sat brooding over my fate, my eye fell on the score of my Lohengrin, which I had totally forgotten.

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  • This ceremony, after being almost forgotten, has been revived in modern times.

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  • It must further be supposed that the name and the very existence of this genius were totally forgotten in Christian circles fifty years after he wrote.

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  • Persia (which, it must not be forgotten, may have been an importation from Babylonia and not local art at all), seems to think a northern origin as probable as any other.

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  • At length, however, he became attached to his keepers and appeared to have forgotten his former associate.

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  • The latter was received with great enthusiasm both in England (where it reached its 19th edition) and in America, but recent criticism has lessened its popularity and it is now almost forgotten.

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  • It must not be forgotten that either before or soon after the formation of the Union the Northern States - beginning with Vermont in 1777, and ending with New Jersey in 1804 - either abolished slavery or adopted measures to effect its gradual abolition within their boundaries.

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  • Moreover, they contain many allusions to personal events which, later generations have forgotten.

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  • But the Buddha is now forgotten there, and the bas relief is reverenced only for the figure of the mother, who has been turned into a tutelary deity of the place.

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  • The relics having been removed, the visits of pilgrims naturally ceased, and by degrees the very existence of those wonderful subterranean cemeteries was forgotten.

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  • In the same year the Jewish cemetery on the Via Portuense, known to Bosio but since forgotten, was rediscovered.

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  • Large sums are freely contributed for the establishment and support of good schools, and the cause of national education is seldom forgotten in the legacies of patriotic Anatolian Greeks.

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  • The rival artilleries held each other too thoroughly to be able to spare attention to the infantry, whilst the Prussian cavalry, which had forgotten how to charge in masses of eighty or more squadrons, frittered away their strength in isolated efforts.

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  • It has generally been forgotten that the utter want of march discipline in the French, and not the climatic conditions, was responsible for the appalling disasters which ensued.

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  • For many years the ark remained untouched - apparently forgotten.

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  • It is clear from what has been said above that the liturgical vestments possessed originally no mystic symbolic meaning whatever; it was equally certain that, as their origins were forgotten, they would develop such a symbolic meaning.

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  • Le Couronnement Looys, already mentioned, Le Charroi de Nimes (12th century) in which Guillaume, who had been forgotten in the distribution of fiefs, enumerates his services to the terrified Louis, and Aliscans (r2th century), with the earlier Chanrun, are among the finest of the French epic poems. The figure of Vivien is among the most heroic elaborated by the trouveres, and the giant Rainouart has more than a touch of Rabelaisian humour.

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  • The Summists have as much to say against the existence of God as for it, and the dialecticians, having gone to school to the pagans, have forgotten over Aristotle the way of salvation.

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  • Now, however, the world has well-nigh forgotten the huge quartos.

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  • Moritz Cantor has suggested that at one time there existed two schools, one in sympathy with the Greeks, the other with the Hindus; and that, although the writings of the latter were first studied, they were rapidly discarded for the more perspicuous Grecian methods, so that, among the later Arabian writers, the Indian methods were practically forgotten and their mathematics became essentially Greek in character.

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  • But it contains little that is original, and although the work created a great sensation when it was first published, the effect soon passed away, and the book was practically forgotten.

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  • A name which is apt to be forgotten in the period between Cuvier and Darwin, because its possessor occupied an isolated position in England and was not borne up by any j.

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  • But it must not be forgotten that the problems presented by human communities are extremely complex, and that the absence of any selection of healthy or desirable stock in the breeding of human communities leads to undesirable consequences.

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  • These works, together with the Prodigios del amor divino (1641), are now forgotten, but Nieremberg's version (1656) of the Imitation is still a favourite, and his eloquent treatise, De la hermosura de Dios y su amabilidad (1649), is the last classical manifestation of mysticism in Spanish literature.

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  • Such objects might be imitated in other materials and by successive copying lose their identity, or their first meaning might be otherwise forgotten, and they would ultimately exercise a purely decorative function.

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  • Beira occupies the site of a forgotten Arab settlement.

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  • It should not, however, be forgotten that the empirics'read and industriously commented on the works of Hippocrates.

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  • The Latin medical writers were necessarily unknown to the Arabs; and this was partly the cause that even in Europe Galenic medicine assumed such a preponderance, the methodic school and Celsus being forgotten or neglected.

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  • The elaborate work Pharmaceutice rationalis (1674), based on these materials, had much influence in its time, though it was soon forgotten.

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  • Cullen drew out a classification of great and needless complexity, the chief part of which is now forgotten, but several of his main divisions are still preserved.

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  • Joseph Frank (1774-1841), a German professor at Pavia, afterwards of Vienna, the author of an encyclopaedic work on medicine now forgotten, embraced the Brunonian system, though he afterwards introduced some modifications, and transplanted it to Vienna.

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  • Among the achievements of the medicine of the 19th century the growth of the medical press must not be forgotten.

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  • It is interesting to find that, with all this activity in the present reformed methods of research and verification are not confined to the work of the passing day; in the brilliant achievements of modern research and reconstruction the maxim that "Truth is the daughter of Time" has not been forgotten.

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  • In the general revival of church ceremonial which accompanied and followed the Oxford Movement incense was not forgotten, and its ceremonial use in the pre-Reformation method has been adopted in a few extreme churches since 1850.

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  • He was the son of Thomas Ken of Furnival's Inn, who belonged to an ancient stock, - that of the Kens of Ken Place, in Somersetshire; his mother was a daughter of the now forgotten poet, John Chalkhill, who is called by Walton an "acquaintant and friend of Edmund Spenser."

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  • In his own day he took high rank as a pulpit orator, and even royalty had to beg for a seat amongst his audiences; but his sermons are now forgotten.

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  • The real reference of these stories, however, was forgotten, and it has been reserved to our own generation to rediscover the records of a power and a civilization which once dominated Asia Minor and north Syria and occupied all the continental roads of communication between the East and the West of the ancient world.

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  • After seventy years' subjection to the Medici Florence had forgotten the art of self-government, and felt the need of a strong guiding hand.

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  • Twice she returned to Sweden (1660 and 1667) in the vain hope of recovering the succession, finally settling in Rome, where she died on the 19th of April 1689, poor, neglected and forgotten.

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  • In recollection of its former services, the emperor Claudius remitted the heavy tribute which had been imposed on it; but the last remnant of its independence was taken away by Vespasian, who, in answer to a remonstrance from Apollonius of Tyana, taunted the inhabitants with having "forgotten to be free."

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  • In fact, after some fruitless attempts to save his brother, variously related by his biographers, Joseph became aware that Andre's only chance of safety lay in being forgotten by the authorities, and that ill-advised intervention would only hasten the end.

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  • When the source of the name was forgotten its meaning was not unnaturally misinterpreted, and gained for Gawain the reputation of a facile morality, which was exaggerated by the pious compilers of the later Grail romances into persistent and aggravated wrong-doing; at the same time it is to be noted that Gawain is never like Tristan and Lancelot, the hero of an illicit connexion maintained under circumstances of falsehood and treachery.

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  • These proceedings were never forgotten in Asia Minor, and the report of them spread far and wide.

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  • But it should not be forgotten that to many generations of close scholarship these genealogical lists seemed to convey such knowledge in the most precise terms, and that at so recent a date as, for example, the year in which Queen Victoria came to the throne, it was nothing less than a rank heresy to question the historical accuracy and finality of chronologies which had no other source or foundation.

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  • It would have been a bold, not to say a reckless, dreamer who dared predict that any future researches could restore to us the lost knowledge that had been forgotten for more than two millenniums. Yet the Victorian era was scarcely ushered in before the work of rehabilitation began, which was to lead to the most astounding discoveries and to an altogether unprecedented extension of historical knowledge.

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  • Here, it was said, were inscriptions written in an unknown character and in a language that for at least two thousand years had been absolutely forgotten.

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  • Monarchs whose very names had been forgotten are restored to history, and the records of their deeds inscribed under their very eyes are before us, - contemporary documents such as neither Greece nor Rome could boast, nor any other nation, with the single exception of Egypt, until strictly modern times.

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  • As the forgotten history of Oriental antiquity has been restored to us, it has come to be understood that, politically speaking, the Hebrews were a relatively insignificant people, whose chief importance from the standpoint of material history was derived from the geographical accident that made them a sort of buffer between the greater nations about them.

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  • What gave them a seeming importance in the eyes of posterity was the fact that the true history of the Egyptians, Mesopotamians, Arabians and Hittites had been well-nigh forgotten.

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  • The elector of Trier, who had not forgotten the depredations of Louis' army in the spring, followed the example of the bishop of Wurzburg and gave a free passage at Coblenz.

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  • In the revival of learning, scholarship supplanted scholasticism, and the old ways of medieval thinking were forgotten.

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  • The first is originally the idea of Dollond; its advantages were overlooked by his son, and it seems to have been quite forgotten till resuggested by Struve.

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  • The fact that St Paul founded the church of Ephesus seems to have been forgotten.

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  • After the hard-won victory over Mosailima, Omar, fearing that the sayings of the prophet would be entirely forgotten when those who had listened to them had all been removed by death, induced Abu-Bekr to see to their preservation in a written form.

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  • In the middle ages Phaedrus exercised a considerable influence through the prose versions of his fables which were current, though his own works and even his name were forgotten.

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  • One other fact, not to be forgotten in forming a general estimate of the literary value of their productions, is, that the same writer was frequently or almost always distinguished in several special sciences.

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  • In any attempt to determine the relative importance of Protestant and Catholic countries in promoting modern progress it must not be forgotten that religion is naturally conservative, and that its avowed business has never been to forward scientific research or political reform.

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  • The popular majority kept up the feeling of hostility to the royal authority in recurrent combats in the legislative assembly over the salary to be voted to the governor; though these antagonisms were from time to time forgotten in the wars with the French and Indians.

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  • It was deserted or forgotten not long after the time of Theodosius.

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  • Nor should it be forgotten that the internal classification and the combinations of the above subjects are also matters to be treated upon some uniform plan, if the full value of the statistics is to be extracted from the raw material.

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  • A similar method had been used in Egypt under the Ptolemies (c. 300 B.C.) but had been forgotten.

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  • He was involved in the royalist movement of the 13th Vendemiaire, and condemned to deportation after the 18th Fructidor; but, thanks to powerful influence, he was left " forgotten "in prison till after the 18th Brumaire, when he was set at liberty by Fouche.

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  • He endeavoured to illustrate the subject by a clavecin oculaire, or ocular harpsichord; but the treatise and the illustration were quickly forgotten.

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  • Echoes of it are found in Tertullian and in Minucius Felix, and then it lay forgotten until Origen gave it new life.

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  • The quality of the army, thus composed of picked men (a point which is often forgotten), approximated to that of a professional force; but this policy had the result that, as there was no adequate second-line army, parts of the first-line had to be reserved, instead of being employed at the front.

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  • Some reference has already been made to the fact that in every office which Mr Roosevelt held he constantly dwelt upon the truism, often forgotten or ignored, that no government can accomplish any permanent good unless its administrative and legislative officers are chosen and maintained for merit only.

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  • The tragic interest which distinguishes the annals of Israel from the forgotten history of Moab or Damascus lies wholly in that long contest.

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  • His career as a minister of state, brilliant though it was, would probably have been by this time forgotten but for the record he himself has left of it in his celebrated history.

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  • Henry, meanwhile, had not forgotten Bavaria.

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  • His scientific life was now over, his political life was to begin; in the notoriety of that political life his great scientific and philosophical knowledge was to be forgotten, the high position he had given up denied, and he himself scoffed at as an ignorantcharlatan, who had sold quack medicines about the streets of Paris, and been glad to earn a few sous in the stables of the comte d'Artois.

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  • On its flags were fought out many feuds between rival gilds; Egmont and Horn, and many other gallant men whose names have been forgotten, were executed here under the shadow of its ancient buildings, and in more recent times Dumouriez proclaimed the French Republic where the dukes of Brabant and Burgundy were wont to hold their jousts.

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  • Under the Empire the bishop of Rome had possessed in the Church an authority recognized and protected by the State; respect for Rome and for the successor of Saint Peter was not forgotten by the new territorial churches, but it had altered in character; legal authority had become merely moral authority; its wielder could exhort, warn, advise but could not command.

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  • The succeeding age was an age of unmitigated egoism, growing in which the old ideals were abandoned and the old corruption examples were forgotten.

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  • He was little more than a fluent poetaster, and is now almost forgotten.

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  • After some time, hearing nothing of Queen Iseult, and believing himself forgotten, he weds the duke's daughter, Iseult of the white hand, but weds her only in name, remaining otherwise faithful to Iseult of Ireland.

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  • Vuillier (Paris, 1904), the first edition of which has been translated under the title of The Forgotten Isles(London, 1896) - and Islas Baleares, an illustrated volume of 1423 pages, by P. Pifferrer, in the series "Espana" (Barcelona, 1888).

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  • Sprengel's work, which had been almost forgotten, was taken up again by Charles Darwin, who concluded that no organic being can fertilize itself through an unlimited number of generations; but a cross with other individuals is occasionally - perhaps at very long intervals - indis pensable.

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  • Of the ordinary teaching of Greek in his day, Fleury wittily observed that most boys " learned just enough of that language to have a pretext for saying for the rest of their lives that Greek was a subject easily forgotten."

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  • It was at this moment that Bragg was in the full tide of his temporary success in Tennessee and Kentucky, and, after his great victory of Second Bull Run, Lee naturally invaded Maryland, which, it was assumed, had not forgotten its Southern sympathies.

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  • This only occurred, according to Baur, early in the 2nd century, when the strife was finally allayed and forgotten.

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  • Their God had another name, but it was almost forgotten that He had a different character.

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  • HiS SOn, Robert Treat Paine (1773-1811), who was christened Thomas but in 1801 took the name of his father and of an elder brother who died without issue in 1794,was a poet of some repute, but his verses have long been forgotten.

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  • Their previous docility and their entire submission to the Jesuits left no possible doubt as to the source of the rebellion, and gave the enemies of the Jesuits a handle against them that was not forgotten.

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  • Though the Central American native kings have too little interest for traditions of them to be dwelt on here, they bring into view one important historical point - that the ruined cities of this region are not monuments of a forgotten past, but that at least some of them belong to history, having been inhabited up to the conquest, apparently by the very nations who built them.

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  • The biography by James Baker, A Forgotten Great Englishman (London, 1894), is too partial.

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  • Ammonia should be given by inhalation, and artificial respiration must never be forgotten, as by it the paralysed breathing may be compensated for and the poison excreted.

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  • He Has Made Admirable Use In Many Of His Novels Of The Inexhaustible Stores Of Romantic And Dramatic Material That Lie Buried In Forgotten Pages Of Canadian History.

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  • So can we men, not, as Plato thought, by having in our souls universal principles innate but forgotten, but by acquiring universal principles from sense, which is the origin of knowledge, arrive at judgments which are true, and true because they agree with the things which we know by sense, by inference and by science.

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  • It was compiled between 685 and 751, and was constantly employed until the 11th century, when, owing to the changed circumstances of the Church, it fell into disuse, and was soon forgotten and lost.

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  • The eternal kingship of the House of David, so long forgotten, is seized on as the proof that the Hasmonaeans have no divine right.

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  • On the other hand, as regards military power, it seems sometimes forgotten in the discussion of the question of armaments, that the conditions of the present age differ entirely from those of the time of the Napoleonic wars.

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  • Clarke, include General Metaphysics (1890), by John Rickaby, who effectively criticizes Hegel by precise distinctions, which, though scholastic, did not deserve to be forgotten.

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  • There is no generic term now in popular use either for the languages or for the peoples, for the reason that their common origin has been forgotten.

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  • In Eastern Christendom the papacy was at this period an almost forgotten institution, whose pretensions were always Schism of met by the combined opposition of the imperial East and authority, which was still preponderant in the West.

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  • It must not, however, be forgotten that, in the negotiations at Sutri, Paschal had pride and independence enough to propose to the emperor the only solution of the conflict that was entirely logical and essentially Christian, namely, the renunciation by the Church of its temporal power and the renunciation by the lay lords of all intervention in elections and investitures - in other words, the absolute separation of the priesthood and the state.

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  • Nor must it be forgotten that, in the eyes of contemporaries, the scene at Venice had none of that humiliating character which later historians have attributed to it.

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  • For some time he entertained serious thoughts of reformation; but the matter was first postponed and then forgotten.

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  • The former was probably the older word, and may be traced to 40tvos = " blood-red "; the Canaanite sailors were spoken of as the " red men " on account of their sunburnt skin; then the land from which they came was called after them; and then probably the original connexion between Ioivt and 40tvos was forgotten, and new forms and meanings were invented.

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  • The pursuit thus stigmatized as unlawful is one of great antiquity, and one which in ancient and medieval times had an extensive though now almost forgotten literature.

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  • The spirit of chivalry implies the arbitrary choice of one or two virtues to be practised in such an exaggerated degree as to become vices, while the ordinary laws of right and wrong are forgotten.

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  • Not a single friend, not a single enemy, was forgotten; the slightest service, the slightest wrong, had its place assigned in her faithful and implacable memory for retribution or reward.

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  • Though the springs were never quite forgotten, they did not attain their greatest repute until the close of the 18th century.

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  • His friends there exerted themselves to obtain for him the office of keeper of the royal library, but Frederick had not forgotten Lessing's quarrel with Voltaire, and declined to consider his claims. During the two years which Lessing now spent in the Prussian capital, he was restless and unhappy, yet it was during this period that he published two of his greatest works, Laokoon, oder fiber die Grenzen der Malerei and Poesie (1766) and Minna von Barnhelm (1767).

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  • For it must not be forgotten that some two-thirds of the Belgian people are by origin and language of the same race as the Dutch.

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  • The next important step seems to have been taken in the 4th century when some forgotten Watt devised valves for the bellows.

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  • Furthermore, the fact that the Syriac Sen'ar = Shinar was later used to denote the region about Bagdad (northern Babylonia) does not necessarily prove that Shinar-Shumer meant only northern Babylonia, because, when the term Sen'ar was applied to the Bagdad district the great southern Babylonian civilization had long been forgotten and " Babylonia " really meant only what we now know as northern Babylonia.

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  • Its versatile cries and actions, as seen and heard by those who penetrate the solitude of the northern forests it inhabits, can never be forgotten by one who has had experience of them, any more than the pleasing sight of its rust-coloured tail, which an occasional gleam of sunshine will light up into a brilliancy quite unexpected by those who have only surveyed the bird's otherwise gloomy appearance in the glass-case of a museum.

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  • That which was not written down quickly, in due time, was lost and forgotten for ever."

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  • He was a many-sided man, whose numerous works on many subjects had a great vogue in their day, but are now forgotten.

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  • Between Tell Hum and Minyeh is Tell `Oreimeh, the site of a forgotten Amorite city.

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  • In the middle ages, however, the very site was forgotten.

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  • But it is forgotten that both the plant and the soil enjoy special powers of selective absorption, which remove and fix the better constituents of the water and leave the less valuable.

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  • In that town he printed a translation, little noticed at the time, and long forgotten, of a Latin book about Abyssinia.

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  • Its original objects were almost forgotten and it was continued, mainly to further the ambitions of France, thus being a renewal of the great fight between the houses of Habsburg and of Bourbon, and to secure for Sweden some recompense for the efforts which she had put forward.

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  • Introduced by Andrew Kippis, he began to write in 1785 for the Annual Register and other periodicals, producing also three novels now forgotten.

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  • Many other short and anonymous works proceeded from his ever busy pen, but many are irrecoverable, and all are forgotten.

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  • Gradually the officials, high and low, subjected to an elaborate system of checks, refused to take any responsibility whatever; and the minutest administrative questions were handed up, through all the stages of the bureaucratic hierarchy, to be shelved and forgotten in the imperial cabinet.

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  • Parliamentary discussion, moreover, was sure to bring out those racial differences which it was desirable should be forgotten, and the elections carried into every part of the empire a political agitation which was very harmful when each party represented a different race.

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  • The tender, half-broken tones in which these words were said, the inexpressible pathos of his voice and manner, were never forgotten by those who heard that Wednesday morning speech.

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  • The one solid fact in this connexion is the translation of the Jewish Law into Greek in the 3rd century B.C., implying a Jewish Diaspora at Alexandria, so far Hellenized as to have forgotten the speech of Palestine.

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  • Omar then began to fear that the Koran might be entirely forgotten, and he induced the Caliph Abu Bekr to undertake the collection of all its parts.

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  • The explanation of the fact may partly be that the mechanical and other discoveries of the most ingenious minds among them, when not in constant requisition by later generations, were misunderstood or forgotten, and even in other cases were preserved only as rules of thumb by the craftsmen and experts, who would jealously hide them as secrets of trade.

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  • On his return he was introduced to Pitt, and the episode of the Rolliad, which had not been forgotten, was explained.

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  • He spoke and voted for exclusion in the House of Lords, and used language not likely to be forgotten by James when an opportunity should come for resenting it.

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  • The interests of Europe were forgotten.

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  • From the first he made it clear that he would rule England as the head of a united nation, and that past differences were to be forgotten.

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  • It would not be difficult to show that the reaction in the i 8th century against literary and class affectation - however editorial and bookish it was in the choice of subjects and forms - was in reality a re-expression of the old themes in the old ways, which had never been forgotten, even when Middle Scots, Jacobean and early 18th-century verse-fashions were strongest.

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  • If the work begun by Allan Ramsay, continued by Fergusson and completed by Burns, were matter for separate treatment, it would be necessary to show not only that the editorial zeal which turned these writers to the forgotten vernacular and to " popular " themes was inspired by the general conditions of reaction against the artificiality of the century; but that it was because these poets were Scots, and in Scotland, that they chose this line of return to nature and naturalness, and did honour, partly by protest, to the slighted efforts of the " vulgar " muse.

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  • A certain amount of blood is of course indispensable for hounds, but it should never be forgotten that a fox cub of seven or eight months old, though tolerably cunning, is not so very strong; the huntsman should not therefore, be over-eager in bringing to hand every cub he can find.

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  • They had not forgotten them; but the grave was concealed under a mound of earth and stones - a profanation probably dating from the siege of the city and Titus's attack on the second wall.

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  • And even the old ideal of life, the salvation of the Arahat to be won in this world and in this world only, by selfculture and self-mastery, is forgotten, or mentioned only to be condemned.

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  • In the heat of the new struggle Saisset was forgotten.

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  • Pytheas's notice of the depth of the Bay of Biscay, of the length of the projection of Brittany, of Ushant under the name of Uxisama, and of three promontories of Britain, two of which seem to correspond to Land's End (Beler'ion), and North Foreland (Kantion), must not be forgotten.

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  • In his disgust at the crude conceptions of the enthusiasts, who had hoped that the war of liberation might end in a realm of internal liberty, Hegel had forgotten his own youthful vows recorded in verse to HBlderlin, " never, never to live in peace with the ordinance which regulates feeling and opinion."

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  • At the same time the connexion of Apollo with the dolphin must not be forgotten.

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  • His holiness had probably forgotten the fact when he addressed Luther some months later as "his dear son."

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  • The Old Testament preserves traces of forgotten history and legend, of strange Oriental mythology, and the remains of a semi-heathenish past.

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  • These two examples of the wider use of the adjective and noun seem to testify to the forgotten predominance of the Philistines in the land of Canaan.

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  • The elaborate building operations of Justinian (527-565) must not be forgotten.

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  • It subsequently became closed and forgotten, houses covering its entrance.

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  • By other methods of treatment, known to the ancient Egyptians, Greeks and others, but now forgotten, it could be hardened and formed into knife and razor edges of the utmost keenness.

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  • The difficulty of smelting the ore was probably one reason for this, as well as the now forgotten skill which enabled bronze to be tempered to a steel-like edge.

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  • It is Lord Dalhousie's misfortune that these benefits are too often forgotten in the vivid recollections of the Mutiny, which avenged his policy of annexation.

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  • Multan had previously fallen; and the Afghan horse under Dost Mahommed, who had forgotten their hereditary antipathy to the Sikhs in their greater hatred of the British name, were chased back with ignominy to their native hills.

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  • Finally it must not be forgotten that the host of writers who were in reaction against Hegelianism tended to take refuge in some formula of correlation, as a half-way ho-use between that and formalism or psychologism or both, without reference to, and often perhaps without cdnsciousness of, the way in which historically it had taken shape to meet the problem held to have been left unresolved by Kant.

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  • The indefensible indecency and overstrained sentimentality are on the surface; but after a time every repellent defect is forgotten in the enjoyment of the exquisite literary art.

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  • There is an obvious development from the serpent qua reptile to the deity or the devil, and that the original theriomorphic form is not at once forgotten can be seen in Zeus Meilichios, Aesculapius Amynos, in the Cretan snake-goddesses, or in the Buddhist topes illustrated by Fergusson.

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  • Especially were the Messianic hopes forgotten or transferred to a transcendent sphere beyond death.

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  • Especially is this true as its Greek terminology was translated into Latin, and from Latin came into modern languages - the original meaning being obscured or disguised, and the original issues forgotten.

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  • The most obvious account of the matter is that Arctinus was never so far forgotten that his poems became the subject of dispute.

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  • It is plain, in short, that the later poetical vocabulary was separated from that of prose mainly by the forms which the influence of Homer had saved from being forgotten.

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  • Devoid of criticism, devoid of sound learning, devoid of a firm hold on the realities of life, these heresies passed away without solid results and were forgotten.

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  • It seems to be forgotten in the general accounts of this matter, not only that Bacon's letters bear out what he said, but that the earl's excuses were false.

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  • Several years passed before he gained another step. Meantime, though circumstances had thrown him too much into active life, he had not forgotten his cherished project of reorganizing natural science.

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  • To formulate and show grounds for these laws is to construct a philosophy of induction, and it must not be forgotten that the first step towards the accomplishment of the task was made by Bacon when he introduced and gave prominence to the powerful logical instrument of exclusion or elimination.

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  • Nor was the mercantile marine forgotten.

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  • Finally, it should never be forgotten that the worst enemies of declining forms have been collectors who have not given these species the chance of recovering themselves.

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  • Under the peaceful influences of British rule, he has completely lost his ancient warlike instincts, and forgotten his predatory habits.

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  • Ongentheow appears to have been entirely forgotten in Norse tradition and his place is taken by a certain Egill.

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  • Its existence was presently forgotten, and the name of Wexionius had dropped out of the history of literature, when Hanselli recovered a copy and reprinted its contents in 1863.

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  • Her social influence was not as great as it might have been, owing to her holding no recognized position at court, but it was always exercised on the side of decency and morality, and it must not be forgotten that from her former life she was intimate with the literary people of the day.

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  • Comely (1892, also in Cursus scripturae sacrae, 1907) are the most satisfactory modern editors, from the Roman Catholic church, but it should not be forgotten that the 16th century produced the Literalis expositio of Cajetan (Rome, 1529) and the similar work of Pierre Barahona (Salamanca, 1590), no less than the epoch-making edition of Luther (Latin, 1519, &c.; German, 1525 f.; English, 1575 f.).

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  • During that time they were really dangerous to the great Church; for in fact they maintained certain genuine Christian ideas, which the Catholic Church had forgotten.

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  • Thomas Hammerken was forgotten; Thomas a Kempis has become known to the whole Christian world.

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  • In the post-exilic period the historical meaning of the passage was forgotten, and a new significance was given to it in accordance with the gradually developing eschatological doctrine.

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  • There are few things in literary history more remarkable than this friendship. The gifted Dorothy Wordsworth described Coleridge as "thin and pale, the lower part of the face not good, wide mouth, thick lips, not very good teeth, longish, loose, half-curling, rough, black hair," - but all was forgotten in the magic charm of his utterance.

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  • Still better is Saint-Simon's portrait of Fenelon as he appeared about the time of his appointment to Cambrai - tall, thin, well-built, exceedingly pale, with a great nose, eyes from which fire and genius poured in torrents, a face curious and unlike any other, yet so striking and attractive that, once seen, it could not be forgotten.

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  • Zeus being firmly seated on his throne as the result of the slaying of the dragon by Orestes, the theological significance of the myth is forgotten, and the identifications Zeus-Agamemnon and GaiaClytaemnestra are abandoned.

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  • But it should not be forgotten that for more than four centuries the tide ran all the other way.

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  • In regard to colour and design the Taj ranks first in the world for purely decorative workmanship; while the perfect symmetry of its exterior once seen can never be forgotten, nor the aerial grace of its domes, rising like marble bubbles into the azure sky.

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  • Nor must the labour expended by Varro in the study of literary history be forgotten.

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  • This experiment met with little more success than his former attempts, and in 1869 he returned to Paris, where he lived in retirement, needy and forgotten, till his death in 1893.

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  • In certain cases the Hebrew may have been forgotten, or, where the tree was of late introduction, been non-existent.

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  • Yet while the seed they sowed was taking deep root in France and in Germany, the English deists, the most notable men of their time, were soon forgotten, or at least ceased to be a prominent factor in the intellectual life of the century.

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  • In England, though the deists were forgotten, their spirit was not wholly dead.

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  • It must not be forgotten, however, that our authorities were all members of the aristocratic party.

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  • Neither must it be forgotten that in the previous war in 1745 an unhappy young lieutenant, Baker Phillips by name, whose captain had brought his ship into action unprepared, and who, when his superior was killed, surrendered the ship when she could no longer be defended, was shot by sentence of a courtmartial.

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  • Municipal organization, never quite forgotten, naturally revived under new forms, and with its "consuls" at the head of the citizens, with its "arts" and "crafts" and "gilds," grew up secure under the shadow of the church.

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  • The first writer who again drew attention to the then almost forgotten Bohemian language was Joseph Dobrovsky (1753-1829).

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  • The age and circumstances of the writer must not be forgotten in reading it.

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  • After providing "copy" for the newspapers for a few days, however, the whole thing was forgotten.

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  • The discovery (by Professor Helbig in 1886) of two sets of actual apparatus near Perugia and various representations on vases help to elucidate the somewhat obscure accounts of the method of playing the game contained in the scholia and certain ancient authors who, it must not be forgotten, wrote at a time when the game itself had become obsolete, and cannot therefore be looked to for a trustworthy description of it.

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  • In the second place they are sealed to all but those who know how to read them, and so they lie forgotten for centuries while oral tradition flourishes, - being within the reach of every man.

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  • It is this which makes his rhetoric worth while, "an everlasting possession, not a prize competition which is heard and forgotten."

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  • As already stated, however, it ought never to be forgotten that even the lightest insect, bird or bat is vastly heavier than the air, and that no fixed relation exists between the weight of body and expanse of wing in any of the orders.

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  • Rather Simon Magus and his sorceries would have been forgotten had not his reputation been reinforced in the popular mind by that of his successor.

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  • Had the Australians or New Zealanders, for instance, ever possessed the potter's art, they could hardly have forgotten it.

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  • Ratramnus's views failed to find acceptance; their author was soon forgotten, and, when the book was condemned at the synod of Vercelli in 1050, it was described as having been written by Johannes Scotus Erigena at the command of Charlemagne.

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  • Their expulsion from Arabia, followed by the conquest of Egypt by the Mahommedans in the middle of the 7th century, changed this state of affairs, and the continued advances of the followers of the Prophet at length cut them off from almost every means of communication with the civilized world; so that, as Gibbon says, "encompassed by the enemies of their religion, the Ethiopians slept for near a thousand years, forgetful of the world by whom they were forgotten."

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  • It is probable that from the first he had not forgotten his great task of the Sforza monument, with its attendant researches in equine movement and anatomy, and in the science and art of bronze casting on a great scale.

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  • He died in a lunatic asylum forgotten by all, and even his writings have, save in one early edition, not been published without unwarranted alterations by the editor Sion.

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  • But it lacks both accuracy of fact and charm of style, and is to-day deservedly quite forgotten.

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  • We have quoted the informal tribute of Racine; but it should not be forgotten that Racine, in discharge of his duty as respondent at the Academical reception of Thomas Corneille, pronounced upon the memory of Pierre perhaps the noblest and most just tribute of eulogy that ever issued from the lips of a rival.

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  • It was probably forgotten at the time (though Lord Kimberley afterwards publicly stated it) that one of the chief reasons why the Gladstone government had granted the retrocession of the Transvaal after Majuba, was the fear that the Cape Colonial Dutch would join their kinsmen if the war continued.

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  • The Scleractiniae may best be divided into groups of families which appear to be most closely related to one another, but it should not be forgotten that there is great reason to believe that many if not most of the extinct corals must have differed from modern Actiniidea in mesenterial characters, and may have only possessed Edwardsian mesenteries, or even have possessed only four mesenteries, in this respect showing close affinities to the Stauromedusae.

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  • The proportion of persons in whom number-forms exist has been variously estimated; but there is reason to believe that the forms arise at a very early stage of childhood, and that they did at some time exist in many individuals who have afterwards forgotten them.

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  • Mention may here be made of an old Italian deity Furina (or Furrina), whose worship fell early into disuse, and who was almost forgotten in the time of Varro.

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  • Civilized Europe had been caught at a moment when it was completely destitute of a war-navy; the Franks had never been maritime in their tastes, the English seemed to have forgotten their ancient seafaring habits.

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  • Within twenty years of his accession the disasters and calamities which had preceded his triumph had been forgotten, and the national life was running quietly in its old channels.

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  • The old Saxon customs were not forgotten, though they might in many cases be twisted to fit new surroundings.

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  • But though he had forced or cajoled every leading man in England and Normandy to take his oath to serve her, he must have been conscious that there was a large chance that such pledges would be forgotten at his death..

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  • His life of ostentatious austerity, and the courage with which he met his death, had caused all his faults to be forgotten.

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  • It was conveniently forgotten that Ireland had never been in the Roman empire, and so had not even been Constantines to give away.

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  • This was felt to be a humiliating transaction by many of Johns subjects, though to others the joy at reconciliation with the Church caused all else to be forgotten.

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  • The old Anglo-Norman houses had forgotten the tradition of their origin, and now formed but a small section of the aristocracy; the newer families, sprung from the officials of the first two Henries, had always been English in spirit.

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  • He had never forgotten the services of the legates Pandulf and Gualo to himself and his father, and was always ready to lend his aid to the political schemes of the popes, even when it was difficult to see that any English interests were involved in them.

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  • But it must not be forgotten that there was also a tinge of purely political discontent about the rising; the insurgents everywhere proclaimed their intention to destroy traitors, of whom the most generally condemned were the chancellor, Archbishop Sudbury, and the treasurer, Sir Robert Hailes, the two persons most responsible For the levy of the poll-tax.

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  • But Duke Richard had forgotten to reckon with the fierce and unscrupulous energy of Queen Margaret, when she was at bay in defence of her sons rights.

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  • Those who cared for religion or morality Moralaad had forgotten that man is an imaginative and emotional religious being.

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  • The events of the Abyssinian war, however, were forgotten in the great political revolution which had swept the Conservatives from officeand placed Gladstone in power.

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  • But these significant actions were almost forgotten in the presence of a new crisis; for in 1876 misgovernment in Turkey had produced its natural results, and the European provinces of the Porte were in a state Of armed insurrection.

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  • But the rejoicings of 1887 were forgotten amid the more striking demonstrations ten years later.

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  • Direct influence from the Greek Fathers upon the West is vanishing as the Greek language is forgotten.

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  • The description of the coat is forgotten.

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  • The epic, begun in great hope and confidence, was ended in less, though its author was to the last unwilling that it should be forgotten.

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  • Nor were the " principles of revealed religion " forgotten.

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  • Locke is apt to be forgotten now, because in his own generation he so well discharged the intellectual mission of initiating criticism of human knowledge, and of diffusing the spirit of free inquiry and universal toleration which has since profoundly affected the civilized world.

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  • And though such antinomianism has always been sternly repudiated by the moral consciousness of Christendom, it has never been forgotten that " inwardness," rightness of heart or spirit, is the preeminent characteristic of Christian goodness.

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  • The Norse version of the famous Barlaam and Josaphat, made for Prince Haakon (c. 1240), must not be forgotten.

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  • An aetiological myth is one which is regarded as having been invented ex post facto to explain some fact, name or coincidence, the true account or origin of which has been forgotten.

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  • This courageous offer, made at a time when the situation in France was so menacing, was never forgotten by the Allies, though declined for the moment on purely military grounds.

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  • They perhaps identified themselves too closely with their Tongan friends, whose dissolute, lawless, tyrannical conduct led to much mischief; but it should not be forgotten that their position was difficult, and it was mainly through their efforts that many terrible heathen practices were stamped out.

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  • The panic-stricken severity of minorities is proverbial, but it is not to be forgotten that the Irish Protestants had been turned out of house and home twice within fifty years.

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  • Already in 1858 the discovery of the Phoenix conspiracy had shown that the policy of John Mitchel (1815-1875) and his associates was not forgotten.

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  • It had not been forgotten that this question wrecked the Liberal party in 1874.

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  • In estimating the religious value of Deuteronomy it should never be forgotten that upon this passage the greatest eulogy ever pronounced on any scripture was pronounced by Christ himself, when he said "on these words hang all the law and the prophets," and it is also well to remember that when tempted in the wilderness he repelled each suggestion of the Tempter by a quotation from Deuteronomy.

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  • His name is identical with the Teutonic word for thunder, and even in Sweden the association of Thor with the thunder seems not to have been forgotten.

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  • It ought not to be forgotten 1 Hahn, Tsuni-Goam, the Supreme Being of the Khoi-Khoi, p. 113.

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  • The attempt to disengage the history of times forgotten and unknown, by means of analysis of roots and words in Aryan languages, has been unsuccessful, or has at best produced disputable results.

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  • The royal line seemed to have been forgotten for six years, but in 742 Pippin brought a lit son of Chilperic II.

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  • Paris at once rose in revolta Paris of swarming and unpoliced streets, that had been making French history ever since the reign of Henry IV., and that had not forgotten the barricades of the League.

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  • In the course of the, 4th century the country was in a state of anarchy; petty lordships sprang into existence, the interests of the common weal were forgotten or disregarded, and the people began to be split up into factions, and these were continually carrying on petty warfare with one another.

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  • Thus, while far-reaching but hasty generalizations have had their day and been forgotten, his work has proved permanent, because he made sure of its foundations.

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  • But though five firms applied without delay for licences to work under his patents, success did not at once attend his efforts; indeed, of ter several ironmasters had put the process to practical trial and failed to get good results, it was in danger of being thrust aside and entirely forgotten.

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  • He remained in office, however, little more than a year, too short a period to effect reforms. The Sudan was costing Egypt more money than its revenue yielded, though it must not be forgotten that large sums found their way illicitly into the hands of the pashas.

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  • On the other hand, it must not be forgotten that they contributed in no small degree to the commercial progress of their own states.

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  • It should not be forgotten, however, that an Arctic flora is mainly distinguishable from a temperate one by its poverty and dwarfed vegetation, its deciduous leaves and small fruits, rather than by the occurrence of any characteristic genera or families.

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  • When the hunters sat down to feast, it was found that the wine had been forgotten.

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  • Under the rule of the earliest margraves, it was the official side of their position that was prominent, and it was not forgotten that they were technically only the representatives of the emperor.

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  • Her mind had been so focused on Giddon's business that she had forgotten her own.

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  • How could he know of the birthday she had forgotten?

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  • I added, "More likely it developed from some long forgotten memory in Howie's subconscious; a book he read, a movie he saw."

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  • I'd temporarily forgotten she knew our whereabouts in Keene from my neglect in using an unsecured phone.

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  • Their bond was stronger than ever, and Jule's body bristled with magic that felt both foreign and familiar, like a memory long ago forgotten.

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  • He made a rhyme out of the process, though he'd forgotten it again this morning.

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  • He'd almost forgotten that the word for Oracle in his native tongue also meant soul-reader, the dual nature of a woman whose talent allowed her to see a person's soul and future with a simple touch.

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  • It wasn't a new sight—he'd spent far too many years as a police officer not to have seen it, uncounted but never forgotten times.

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  • Dean offered his thanks but was waved away as the threesome continued to pore over the book, reminiscing over days long past and names forgotten.

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  • She had forgotten Toby…again.

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  • He seemed to have forgotten about her, and Katie stood unsteadily, hoping he.d brought them to the Sanctuary—and safety.

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  • Isn't that … what … you … said… She stared at him, surprised he remembered when she'd forgotten.

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  • But all his disappointments, if not forgotten, at least were put on hold when he qualified for a Varsity letter and the right to wear the maroon sweater of the Parkside Bulldogs.

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  • All pedestrian concerns were put aside and col­lectively forgotten while the group concentrated on the created adventures of the mythical three.

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  • As sore and tired as his body felt, all aches and pains were forgotten with what was not a complete revelation, but a scenario that suddenly seemed plau­sible.

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  • The sad fact is that the American hostages in Iraq were forgotten casualties of war.

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  • The old aphorism ' travel broadens the mind ' has been wholly forgotten.

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  • Atlas mountains visible through our balcony window, all memories of London stress forgotten.

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  • You shall not be forgotten, ma bonne Meess.

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  • Have the cricket reporters in Australia forgotten Gregory and Macdonald bowling ferocious bouncers in Armstrong's Australian team of 1921?

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  • Amadeus - The Director's Cut After a failed suicide attempt, the aged and forgotten composer Salieri must see the confessor.

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  • At the risk of sounding controversial it should not be forgotten that much of the damage is caused by ever larger agricultural machinery.

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  • Quite simply, he appears to have forgotten how to hold a proper conversation with anyone.

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  • One morning three fluffy young cygnets appeared on the pond with their proud parents, but the remaining egg was not forgotten.

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  • Consultant, Wall to Wall Television not forgotten series, 2005.

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  • Obaid's plight and that of other hostages and abductees from Lebanon remains largely forgotten or unheard of.

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  • Constance Moore Vera Vague SONGS I've never forgotten The Lady With A Mop Oh Henry What Makes You Beautiful, Beautiful?

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  • And after finding I 'd forgotten my shirt, I went back and knocked.

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  • We have sumptuous garnitures for our Life, but have forgotten to live in the middle of them.

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  • Sorry to see you go George but you will never be forgotten.

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  • Rest in peace George You will never be forgotten by all Irishmen and fans around the world.

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  • Delayed gratification is almost a forgotten concept, except where women are concerned.

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  • The Northern Echo has launched a campaign to remember a forgotten hero of the Second World War.

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  • We Need More Funding Things often forgotten or unconsidered when we think of NHS funding homeopathy.

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  • It should not be forgotten either that European children continued to die in large numbers from the very same diseases that were killing indigenes.

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  • During commercial breaks, he flipped through his cd jukebox with a remote control, searching for a song whose name he had forgotten.

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  • Our supposed elected officials have forgotten themselves as public servants and have become paid corporate lackeys, by and large.

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  • As often as not the films so lauded are likely to be quite forgotten in a year or so.

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  • These allowed him space to hold forth about his favorite topics - the Kray twins, forgotten pulp masterpieces, pit-bull terriers.

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  • Its amazing story involves legendary teams and footballing minnows, classic finals and forgotten friendlies, and celebrated players and unsung heroes.

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  • Many anonymous letters are just one-time occurrences and are immediately thrown away and hopefully forgotten.

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  • It is only painstaking research in recent years that has restored to us this forgotten focus of rural English Catholicism.

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  • Integrated self-service password reset decreases help desk costs even further by allowing users to reset forgotten passwords securely.

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  • Use the " forgotten password " link on the main login screen.

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  • If you forget your username and/or password, click on " Forgotten Username or Password?

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  • Request a password reminder [previous] If any user has forgotten their password, they can request a password reminder.

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  • Yet today this deeply troubled past has been forgotten as if it never happened.

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  • Finally, you just may have really forgotten to define some predicate.

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  • These are they which took the infallible preventive of seasickness in New York harbor and then disappeared and were forgotten.

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  • No charity shop bin, second hand record store or music fair is missed in their relentless pursuit of gems of forgotten music.

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  • Ten dollars richer, Hazelton High's star quarterback had forgotten the matter of his bartered soul entirely.

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  • If you are wondering how to incorporate a deceased relative within your speech, check out our Gone But Not Forgotten article.

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  • I've forgotten my login details Click here to receive a reminder of your login details.

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  • The Green is also a salutary reminder of many of the good things about the old East End, which should not be forgotten.

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  • If you have an account and you have forgotten your details you can request an email reminder.

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  • However, my comments about the impenetrable rift had not been forgotten.

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  • A good riposte will be appreciated by the House, who will have forgotten what the original question was.

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  • In the gently rolling hills of south west Suffolk, tiny villages sleep the sleep of the quietly forgotten.

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  • Sitting among 13 other frantic scribblers, a long forgotten memory began to unfold.

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  • His somewhat senile mind was striving for forgotten memories.

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  • She looked at the bacon and eggs and then snarled at him " You've forgotten the toast.

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  • I'd forgotten to water them for the past 2 weeks, but they got a sprinkling last night.

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  • We need to borrow a stepladder from the plow - lesson number X forgotten again.

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  • I think we should ask the female MPs in parliament today if they have forgotten the suffragettes.

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  • Basically, Forgotten Worlds is ' blessed ' with the most unusual control system I've seen in ages.

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  • Deliver us from Satan's temptation to think You have forgotten us.

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  • For thousands of years historical sources have told of a forgotten time capsule of ancient wisdom located in a massive labyrinth.

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  • Therefore, cried Tommy stroked his woes were forgotten.

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  • The forgotten truth is that both myths celebrate the triumph of Good over Evil and promise an eschatological salvation.

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  • February 2004 Apart from the occasional twinge, I had almost forgotten about my frozen shoulder.

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  • The organizers have not forgotten the " inner man " as " only well-fed people will feel themselves at home " .

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  • Green charity, Environ, is teaching city children the forgotten arts of traditional woodcrafts on 25th November at a local woodland.

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  • One Friday morning, the third tree was startled when her beam was yanked from the forgotten woodpile.

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  • This unmethodical method produces in her longer and more ambitious novels, in Consuelo for instance and its continuation, a tangled wilderness, the clue to which is lost or forgotten; but in her novelettes, when there is no change of scenery and the characters are few and simple, it results in the perfection of artistic writing, " an art that nature makes."

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  • And, above all, it should not be forgotten, in justice to Shaftesbury's memory, that "during his long political career, in an age of general corruption, he was ever incorrupt, and never grasped either money or land."

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  • The antagonism between the "black" and the "white marquess" (the latter being the nickname given to Carmarthen in allusion to his sickly appearance), which had been forgotten in their common hatred to the French policy and to Rome, revived in all its bitterness.

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  • But the pregnant suggestions of these writers remained practically unnoticed and forgotten, until the theory was independently devised and promulgated by Charles Robert Darwin and Alfred Russell Wallace in 1858, and the effect of its publication was immediate and profound.

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  • All that he had done for her in the days of the Consulate was remembered; his subsequent proceedings - his tyranny, his shocking waste of human life, his deliberate persistence in war when France and Europe called for a reasonable and lasting peace - all this was forgotten; and the great warrior, who died of cancer on the 5th of May 1821, was thereafter enshrouded in mists of legend through which his form loomed as that of a Prometheus condemned to a lingering agony for his devotion to the cause of humanity.

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  • It is said that Thomas distinguished himself by the ability with which he executed his commission; in any case it gave him a claim on the gratitude of the Angevin party which was not forgotten.

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  • It is often forgotten that "extreme" ritual is no longer an "innovation" in the English Church; it has become the norm in a large number of parishes, and whole generations of Church people have grown up to whom it is the only familiar type of Christian worship. To attempt to "enforce the law" (whatever the law may be) would, therefore, seriously wound the consciences of a large number of people who are quite unconscious of having broken it.

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  • To the deafness was added blindness, but his memory and his fine manners only left him with life; his last words (" Give Dayrolles a chair ") prove that he had neither forgotten his friend nor the way to receive him.

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  • The basis of medicine through the middle ages had been literary and dogmatic, and it was literary and dogmatic still; but the medical literature now brought to light - including as it did the more important works of Hippocrates and Galen, many of them hitherto unknown, and in addition the forgotten element of Latin medicine, especially the work of Celsus - was in itself far superior to the second-hand compilations and incorrect versions which had formerly been accepted as standards.

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  • Meantime the substance of true religion - justice, charity and a humble walk with God - is forgotten, fraud and deceit reign in all classes, the works of the house of Ahab are observed (worship of foreign gods).

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  • The succeeding age was an age of unmitigated egoism, Growing in which the old ideals were abandoned and the old Corruption examples were forgotten.

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  • The priestly apparatus of the post-exilic age retains several traces of old mythological symbolism and earlier cult, the meaning of which had not altogether been forgotten.

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  • In the Apocrypha eschatology has a relatively small place; but there is enough to show that the hope of Israel was never forgotten, and that the imagery of the prophets was accepted with a literalness not contemplated by the prophets themselves.

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  • It must not be forgotten in this connexion that restriction of the rights of the belligerent necessarily entails extension of the duties of the neutral.

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  • Thereupon the Newtonian analysis which preceded this synthesis, became forgotten; until at last Mill in his Logic, neglecting the Principia, had the temerity to distort Newton's discovery, which was really a pure example of analytic deduction, into a mere hypothetical deduction; as if the author of the saying " Hypotheses non lingo" started from the hypothesis of a centripetal force to the sun, and thence deductively explained the facts of planetary motion, which reciprocally verified the hypothesis.

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  • They proclaim either a new revelation, or the return to an ancient truth which has been forgotten or distorted.

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  • Though it has at times denied this spirit, been guilty of crimes, persecutions, wars and greed - still the Church has never quite forgotten him who went about doing good, nor freed itself from the contagion of his example.

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  • The feast, which on that occasion lasted for eight (or seven) days, was also celebrated by private individuals; the citizens kept open house, quarrels were forgotten, debtors and prisoners were released, and everything done to banish sorrow.

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  • In this way, although the ancient ballads are not forgotten, new words are also fitted to the plaintive folk-tunes (fados) which every farm-hand knows and sings, accompanied sometimes by a rude clarinet or bagpipes, but more frequently by the so-called Portuguese guitar - an instrument which resembles a mandolin rather than the guitars of Italy and Spain.

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  • In five generations the viking settlers of Normandy had not only completely forgotten their old Scandinavian tongue, but had come to look upon those who spoke the kindred English idiom not only as aliens but as inferiors.

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  • At length Fox, in seconding a motion for confining the debate to its proper subject, burst into the fatal question beyond the subject, taxing Burke with inconsistency, and taunting him with having forgotten that ever-admirable saying of his own about the insurgent colonists, that he did not know how to draw an indictment against a whole nation.

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  • This class has been named the Prototracheata or Onychophora (see Arthropoda), and may be most appropriately placed in the system in the neighbourhood of the Myriapoda, though it must not be forgotten that it differs from the Myriapoda more than the Myriapoda differ from other Arthropoda, and that in some respects it presents features which recall the segmented worms (Annelida).

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  • As soon as it was read to the school, he rubbed it off the slate, and it was forgotten.

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  • In a composition which I wrote about the old cities of Greece and Italy, I borrowed my glowing descriptions, with variations, from sources I have forgotten.

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  • He said he was the little boy in the poem, and that the girl's name was Sally, and more which I have forgotten.

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  • I supply a word here and there, sometimes a sentence, and suggest something which she has omitted or forgotten.

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  • The best works of art are the expression of man's struggle to free himself from this condition, but the effect of our art is merely to make this low state comfortable and that higher state to be forgotten.

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  • His companion's prayer is forgotten.

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  • Yes, I knew it long ago but had forgotten.

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  • You must remember, Catiche, that it was all done casually in a moment of anger, of illness, and was afterwards forgotten.

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  • All I know is that his real will is in his writing table, and this is a paper he has forgotten....

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  • Dear me, can I have forgotten?

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  • His own strategic plan, which obviously could not now be carried out, was forgotten.

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  • Yes, I had forgotten...

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  • Princess Mary noticed this and glanced gratefully at him with that radiant look which caused the plainness of her face to be forgotten.

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  • Ten dollars richer, Hazelton High 's star quarterback had forgotten the matter of his bartered soul entirely.

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  • In 1995 she provided the voice of Annie the rag doll in the animated series The Forgotten Toys.

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  • I 've forgotten my login details Click here to receive a reminder of your login details.

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  • This is a rather forgotten venue, but on its day is capable of producing decent roach bags.

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  • My host taught me a good scots word to describe it, which I have now forgotten.

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  • She looked at the bacon and eggs and then snarled at him You 've forgotten the toast.

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  • I 've forgotten how to do anything else and I was meant to do a songwriter night the other night.

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  • I 'd forgotten to water them for the past 2 weeks, but they got a sprinkling last night.

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  • The perfect glass of Hooky beer should be much more than a swift swallow which is soon forgotten.

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  • It 's a Speedo swimwear shop these days and The Blitz are all but forgotten.

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  • Basically, Forgotten Worlds is ' blessed ' with the most unusual control system I 've seen in ages.

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  • Deliver us from Satan 's temptation to think You have forgotten us.

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  • There is not a good thought of thine forgotten.

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  • Therefore, cried tommy stroked his woes were forgotten.

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  • Her investigations involve secrets, scandals and supernatural happenings; forgotten tragedies and buried crimes.

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  • Then again, was it so trifling a skirmish to such mighty warriors as to have been forgotten already?

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  • Forgotten for more than 1,600 years, the once-thriving trade center of Pompeii has been successfully uncovered by archeologists.

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  • The concept of small business and its undergirding of the future of our economy including the information industry is being forgotten with such policies.

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  • Computer Associates - forgotten user ID 's 30/03/2005, IDG.com System administrators know it, and so do the hackers.

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  • So, i have waffled again and have forgotten what my question was lol have to stop the caffine !

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  • The organizers have not forgotten the " inner man " as " Only well-fed people will feel themselves at home ".

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  • Ice and snow are often forgotten, but very substantial, parts of of the hydrosphere.

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  • Andrew graciously offered to let me borrow his computer, even after I had forgotten to return his books.

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  • A gift basket filled with candles, lotions, scented soaps, and even herbal tea will make the mother not feel forgotten in all of the baby attention.

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  • If he goes to sleep quite easily but awakens later in the night, he has forgotten how to settle himself back to sleep.

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  • It's easy to forget something when you leave on a trip, but when it comes to traveling with an infant a forgotten favorite toy or blanket can turn your travels into chaos.

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  • It is often the most practical items that are forgotten when it comes to gifts.

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  • Unlike buying a property in your own country, buying a property abroad can incur additional costs such as larger removal fees, translator costs, money transfer charges, greater solicitor fees to name a few 'hidden' costs that get forgotten.

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  • Purchasing a star name is an affordable option for a gift that will not be forgotten.

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  • If you just need something to help coordinate various members of your household so nothing is forgotten and everyone is cared for, then something like the Jenda electronic family calendar would be great.

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  • However, it's common for a high school to purchase extra copies of the yearbook to have on-hand for their archives, as well as for students who may have forgotten to buy one by the deadline.

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  • Forgotten what your fur-baby looked like years ago?

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  • This may reduce the number of forgotten payments, late payments or over the limit charges.

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  • Adding Tuscan kitchen décor to your home, invites feelings of warmth as you paint a visual picture of an era time has not forgotten.

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  • Why not search your attic for forgotten treasures that not only are sentimental and personal but will compliment your cottage style?

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  • While so many of us spend hours at the gym or in front of the mirror primping, cleansing and enhancing our appearance, lip care tends to be completely forgotten.

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  • Clinique also participates in the Estee Lauder Gone But Not Forgotten program.

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  • If you've forgotten your password, you can reset it by clicking the link under the Login button.

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  • Sayings about laughter, memories, and people who will never be forgotten suit several family occasions and special relatives.

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  • Organization is supposed to make life easier by eliminating those last-minute panics over forgotten obligations or chaotic household.

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  • Maybe you've lost track of others in your class or you've forgotten the name of your club president.

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  • I take my place in your forgotten right field.

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  • When you are signing a yearbook, inside jokes can also be a funny way to remember your high school years, though over time they may be forgotten.

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  • A magnet is small and simple, yet because it can be affixed to any metallic surface - a filing cabinet, refrigerator, metal shelves, etc. - it is less likely to be lost or forgotten as the wedding date approaches.

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  • Whichever Jack and Sally or Nightmare Before Christmas wedding cake topper or cake design you choose, it's sure to be unique part of your wedding reception that's not quickly forgotten.

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  • Longer speeches - no matter how well written - have much greater risks of interruptions or of being forgotten, and wedding guests may grow restless if the vows take a very long time.

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  • This is one way to present vows that will not be forgotten by those in attendance.

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  • When planning a holiday wedding, even a modest one, it is a good idea to keep a wedding planning checklist handy so nothing is forgotten during this hectic but exciting time.

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  • Today's top stars can be forgotten overnight.

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  • Kirsten is working on two other productions, All Forgotten and another movie which is untitled.

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  • Once they happen, everyone will talk about them for a few days, and for the most part, they're forgotten -- until he or she says something stupid again.

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  • In case you missed it or in case you have already forgotten, Corey Haim starred in the recent A & E series The Two Corey's along side other 80s Tiger Beat poster boy, Corey Feldman.

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  • Yes, forgotten action hero Steven Seagal has gotten the green light on his own reality show.

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  • It seems that raising a family has suited the young couple very well as you rarely, if ever, see either of them out without their daughter and those old bad habits of Nicole's seem to be a thing of the long forgotten past.

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  • They might get a small mention or two in the media, but then curiosity fades and the actions are long forgotten.

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  • Most of you may have already forgotten just who he is.

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  • Their heydays may be past, but these women will never be forgotten.

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  • A fedora, trilby, or porkpie hat will give your son a touch of sophistication that other parents will likely have forgotten.

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  • The typical children's birthday event is no longer defined as an occasion for fancy dress - such attention to proper attire marks a forgotten era.

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  • Since you are at sea for extended periods of time and your accessibility to convenient stores is limited, it's not easy to run out and pick up something you've forgotten.

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  • While most major cruise lines offer personal items in their sundries shops, you will likely be forced to pay double what the forgotten item is worth.

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  • Spuds still has fans today and will never be forgotten.

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  • This is another great dog that is gone but not forgotten.

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  • This also keeps the routine of giving the pill regulated so that it isn't forgotten accidentally.

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  • I clearly had forgotten just how much work having a puppy is and I am, of course, already enrolled into our puppy class.

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  • I have been training my own dogs for many years, but my discussion with Shelby reminded me of a few basics I had forgotten and even taught me a few things I hadn't thought of.

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  • It is one of the best of all woods to burn, and if we ever go back to the best of all ways of firing for a dwelling-house in the country-a wood fire, it should not be forgotten.

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