Appendix Sentence Examples

appendix
  • The dictionary files are specified in the book's appendix.

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  • We rushed him to the hospital when we realized that his appendix had ruptured.

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  • The third edition of the book ended up being a misprint, because it was missing the appendix!

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  • Please refer to appendix iii for a more detailed list of recommended resources.

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  • If the infection is not treated quickly, her appendix will have to be taken out.

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  • Jeffrey Bell, with an appendix by Garrod containing a summary of the latter's own continuation of the same line of research.

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  • They are usually printed as an appendix.

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  • The first of them, Accipitres, comprehending all the birds-of-prey, were separated into 4 " cohorts " in his original work, but these were reduced in his appendix to two - Nyctharpages or owls with 4 families divided into 2 series, and Hemeroharpages containing all the rest, and comprising io families (the last of which is the seriema, Dicholophus) divided into 2 groups as Rapaces and Saprophagi - the latter including the vultures.

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  • An account of the contents of these manuscripts was given by Mark Napier in the appendix to his Memoirs of John Napier, and the manuscripts themselves were edited in their entirety by him in 1839 under the title De Arte Logistica Joannis Naperi Merchistonii Baronis Libri qui supersunt.

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  • To his translation (1530) of a Latin Chronicle and Description of Turkey, by a Transylvanian captive, which had been prefaced by Luther, he added an appendix holding up the Turks as in many respects an example to Christians, and presenting in lieu of the restrictions of Lutheran, Zwinglian and Anabaptist sects, the vision of an invisible spiritual church, universal in its scope.

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  • In 1833 he published anonymously England and America, a work primarily intended to develop his own colonial theory, which is done in the appendix entitled "The Art of Colonization."

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  • It consists of seventy-five Theses, followed by a Confarmatio in six books, and an appendix of letters to Erastus by Bullinger and Gualther, showing that his Theses, written in 1568, had been circulated in manuscript.

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  • Geffcken, Lex Salica (Leipzig, 1898), the text in 65 chapters, with commentary paragraph by paragraph, and appendix of additamenta; and the edition undertaken by Mario Krammer for the Mon.

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  • It may have been written as an appendix to 4 Ezra, as it has no proper introduction.

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  • At the end of the Codex Sinaiticus of the 4th century, as a sort of appendix to the New Testament, there stands an "Epistle of Barnabas."

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  • Here it is followed by the Shepherd of Hernias, while in an 11th-century MS., which contains also the Didache, it is followed by two writings which themselves form an appendix to the New Testament in the Codex Alexandrinus.

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  • The events prior to the exodus are relegated by Ewald to a preliminary chapter of primitive history; and the events of the apostolic and postapostolic age are treated as a kind of appendix.

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  • A further appendix consisted of Anecdotes, Letters and Rescripts of the emperor Hadrian; fables of Aesop; extracts from Hyginus; a history of the Trojan War, abridged from the Iliad; and a legal fragment, Hepi iXethEpci €wv (De manumissionibus).

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  • A posthumous work entitled Contemplatio Philosophica was printed for private circulation in 1793 by his grandson, Sir William Young, Bart., prefaced by a life of the author, and with an appendix containing letters addressed to him by Bolingbroke, Bossuet, &c. Several short papers by him were published in Phil.

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  • It is often depicted with a flowing tail, which appendix attests close observation of nature; for the mino-game, as it is called, represents a tortoise to which, in the course of many scores of years, confcrvae have attached themselves so as to form an appendage of long green locks as the creature swims about.

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  • It has no place in the offices of the Eastern Orthodox Church, but is found, without the words " And the Son " of clause 22, in the appendix of many modern editions.

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  • Henderson (1889; second issue, 1890, being the more accurate); in The Mystery of Mary Stuart, by Andrew Lang (4th edition, 1904), and in Henderson's criticism of that book, in his Mary, Queen of Scots (1905) (Appendix A).

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  • He showed that the gaseous constituents of the air contribute largely to the nourishment of plants, and that the leaves are the organs which elaborate the food; the importance of leaves in nutrition had been previously pointed out by Malpighi in a short account of nutrition which forms an appendix to his anatomical work.

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  • Luther, like his countrymen of to-day, judged the contents of the New Testament by the light of his leading convictions; and in his German translation, which occupies the same place in Germany as the Authorized Version of 1611 does in English-speaking lands, he even placed four of the books (Hebrews, James, Jude, Apocalypse) in an appendix at the end, with prefaces explanatory of this drastic act of criticism.

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  • In 1759 appeared his Theory of Moral Sentiments, embodying the second portion of his university course, to which was added in the 2nd edition an appendix with the title, "Considerations concerning the first Formation of Languages."

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  • The " liber posthumus " was the Constructio (1619), in the preface to which Robert Napier states that he has added an appendix relating to another and more excellent species of logarithms, referred to by the inventor himself in the Rabdologia, and in which the logarithm of unity is o.

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  • Duffield and published in the Report of the U.S. Coast and Geodetic Survey for 1895-1896 as Appendix 12, pp. 395-7 22.

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  • These methods apply, however, specially to Napier's own kind of logarithms, and are different from those actually used by Briggs in the construction of the tables in the Arithmetica Logarithmica, although some of the latter are the same in principle as the processes described in an appendix to the Constructio.

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  • Even when (as in the Shorter Westminster Catechism and the School Catechism) the Creed is simply printed as an appendix, or where (as in the Free Church Catechism) it is not mentioned at all, its substance is dealt with.

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  • The work of the English revisers was regularly submitted to their consideration; their comments were carefully considered and largely adopted, and their divergences from the version ultimately agreed upon were printed in an appendix to the published work.

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  • Lightfoot made use of these new materials in an Appendix (1877); his second edition, on which he had been at work at the time of his death, came out in 1890.

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  • Any extra works should be listed on a separate appendix.

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  • In addition, the appendix is a gold mine of information.

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  • P. Postgate, How to pronounce Latin (Appendix B, on " Recent Progress "), (1907).

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  • So also he might add the appendix to the Sophistical Elenchi, long after he had written that book, and perhaps, to judge from its being a general claim to have discovered the syllogism, when the founder of logic had more or less realized that he had written a number of connected treatises on reasoning.

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  • Engestriim, and was published in 1770 as an appendix to a treatise on mineralogy.

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  • Reprints were made by Hearne (Oxford, 1716), by Lewis (1729, 1731), who added an appendix of documents, and by Singer (1817, 1822) and for the King's Library (1902).

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  • He is remembered also for a curious work entitled The Discovery of a World in the Moon (1638, 3rd ed., with an appendix "The possibility of a passage thither," 1640).

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  • On this false abstraction Sigwart has made an excellent criticism in an appendix at the end of his Logic, where he remarks that we cannot isolate events from the substances of which they are attributes.

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  • A complete list of his works is given as an appendix to Dr Priestley's Funeral Sermon.

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  • It is unnecessary here to rake among the ashes of this prolonged dispute, but it may be noted that Helmholtz, who, in his lecture on "Ice and Glaciers," adopted Thomson's theory, afterwards added in an appendix that he had come to the conclusion that Tyndall had "assigned the essential and principal cause of glacier motion in referring it to fracture and regelation" (1865).

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  • Evelyn (in the appendix to Numismata), Baldus, Bulwer (in his Pathomyotomia), Fuchs, Spontoni, Ghiradelli, 1 For Scriptural allusions to physiognomy see Vecchius, Observationes in div.

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  • After Macpherson's death, Malcolm Laing, in an appendix to his History of Scotland (1800), propounded the extreme view that the so-called Ossianic poems were altogether modern in origin, and that Macpherson's authorities were practically non-existent.

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  • This delay is not explained by any excess of care in preparation, for much of the matter was out of date and the appendix giving the author's latest views is the only portion of special interest.

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  • The weak points in Hume's empiricism are so admirably realized Negative by the author himself that it is only fair to quote his own Negativ of summary in the Appendix to the Treatise.

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  • She seems to be erroneously called 1 The appendix to pt.

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  • The word first appeared in print in Adam of Bremen's Descriptio Insularum Aquilonis, an appendix to his Gesta Hammaburgensis Ecclesiae Pontificum, published by Lindenbrog in 1595.

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  • The nephew also defended his uncle in An Appendix to the Life of Bishop Seth Ward, 1697, 8vo.

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  • Mr Caves report is printed in an appendix.

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  • In 1831 Patrick Matthew, in the appendix to a book on naval timber and arboriculture, laid stress on the extreme fecundity of nature "who has in all the varieties of her offspring a prolific power much beyond (in many cases a thousandfold) what is necessary to fill up the vacancies caused by senile decay.

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  • Man and Superman (published in 1903) was produced there on the 23rd of May 1905, in a necessarily abridged form, with Granville Barker in the part of John Tanner, the author of the "Revolutionists's Handbook and Pocket Companion," printed as an appendix to the play.

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  • An address delivered on the occasion of the laying of the foundation stone was published, with an appendix containing a strong attack on the influence of the Church of England, which gave rise to a long and bitter controversy.

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  • There is added an important Appendix, consisting of the papers from Gergonne's Annales which are referred to in the text above.

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  • Hunt, " Legal Status of California, 1846-1849 "; Reports of the various officers, departments and administrative boards of the state government (Sacramento), and also the Appendix to the Journals of the Senate and Assembly, which contains, especially in the earlier decades of the state's history, many of these state official reports along with valuable legislative reports of varied character.

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  • Another edition, containing the eighteenth book and a fragment of the nineteenth, was published by Ferrerius, who has added an appendix of thirtyfive pages (Paris, 1574).

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  • In 1662 (the year of the Act of Uniformity) he reprinted the Irenicum with an appendix, in which he sought to prove that "the church is a distinct society from the state, and has divers rights and privileges of its own."

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  • Its separation was due to growing consciousness of the Gospels as a unit of sacred records, to which Acts stood as a sort of appendix.

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  • Myres in a series of trials, to settle special 13 See Cobham, An Attempt at a Bibliography of Cyprus (4th ed., Nicosia, 1900), Appendix, " Cesnola Controversy," p. 54.44 The Lawrence-Cesnola Collection (London, 1881); Salaminia, id.

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  • Appendix, p. 87.

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  • Camden replied to Brooke in an appendix to the fifth edition of the Britannia, published in 1600, and his reputation came through the ordeal untarnished.

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  • The short appendix, in which the attempt is made to present the chief points of the argument in geometrical form, is a forerunner of the Ethics, and was probably written somewhat later than the rest of the book.

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  • At the request of his friends he devoted a fortnight to applying the same method to the first or metaphysical part of Descartes's philosophy, and the sketch was published in 1663, with an appendix entitled Cogitata metaphysica, still written from a Cartesian standpoint (defending, for example, the freedom of the will), but containing hints of his own doctrine.

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  • His notices of ancient sculpture and its various styles appeared as an appendix to the Saggio di lingua Etrusca, and arose out of his minute study of the treasures then added to the Florentine collection from the Villa Medici.

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  • A very valuable Report and Appendix (4 vols., 1884) was published, containing, inter alia, information on the constitution and powers of the governing bodies, the mode of admission of members of the companies, the mode of appointment, duties and salaries and other emoluments of the servants of the companies, the property of, or held in trust for, the companies, its value, situation and description.

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  • See also the separate article on William Pitt, and the authorities referred to, especially the Rev. William Hunt's appendix i.

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  • Yet he was a sincerely religious man, as the curious Credo, written at Acre and forming a kind of anticipatory appendix to the history, sufficiently shows.

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  • The same spirit may be traced in the author of the chapters which appear as an appendix to book i.

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  • Evangelista Torricelli, in the first regular dissertation on the cycloid (De dimensione cycloidis, an appendix to his De dimensione parabolae, 1644), states that his friend and tutor Galileo discovered the curve about 1599.

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  • The Vispered, a minor liturgical work in 24 chapters (karde), is alike in form and substance completely dependent on the Yasna, to which it is a liturgical appendix.

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  • His treatise, The Meaning and Use of "Baptizein" Philologically and Historically Investigated (1860), an "appendix to the revised version of the Gospel by Matthew," is a valuable summary of the evidence for Baptist doctrine.

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  • Arafa lay quite near Dhul-Majaz, where, according to Arabian tradition, a great fair was held from the 1st to the 8th of the pilgrimage month; and the ceremonies from which the bajj was derived were originally an appendix to this fair.

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  • Halliwell, but is available in Appendix III.

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  • This collection has been of some service, and appears as an appendix in many editions of the Corpus juris; the chief reason for its failure is that it has no official sanction.

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  • Of these the first is part of an appendix headed " of Ariston the elder " in an old Armenian codex, and taken perhaps from the lost compilations of Papias; as to the other text, it has been doubted by many critics, e.g.

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  • In this writing, and especially in the Appendix, Jacobi came into contact with the critical philosophy, and subjected the Kantian view of knowledge to searching examination.

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  • The best introduction to Jacobi's philosophy is the preface to the second volume of the Works, and Appendix 7 to the Letters on Spinoza's Theory.

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  • Bourke, with appendix, detached papers and notes for speeches, was published in 4 vols., 1844.

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  • The details of this dispute will be found in the original pamphlets, in the [[Athenaeum]] and in the appendix to De Morgan's Formal Logic. Suffice it to say that the independence of De Morgan's discovery was subsequently recognized by Hamilton.

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  • Airy then at length published an account of the circumstances, and Adams's memoir was printed as an appendix to the Nautical Almanac. A keen controversy arose in France and England as to the merits of the two astronomers.

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  • Compare the passage in the appendix from Hanusch, Slavischer Mythus, p. 408.

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  • Of later times there are Droplaug's Sons' Saga (997-1007), written probably about I i io, and preserved in the uncouth style of the original (a brother's revenge for his brother's death is the substance of it; Brandkrossa pattr is an appendix to it), and the tales of Thorstein Hall of Side's Son (c. 1014) and his brother Thidrandi (c. 996), which belong to the cycle of Hall o' Side's Saga, unhappily lost; they are weird tales of bloodshed and magic, with idyllic and pathetic episodes.

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  • This writing, which since the Council of Trent has been relegated by the Church of Rome to the position of an appendix to the Vulgate, was placed by Luther and the translators of the English Bible among the apocryphal books.

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  • The operation of appendicostomy, or bringing the appendix to the surface and using it as the site for the introduction of the irrigating fluid, has been attended with considerable success.

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  • See Grote (History of Greece, chap. 88, appendix), who prefers the arrangement ii.

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  • The objections to Descartes - one of which at least, through Descartes's statement of it in the appendix of objections in the Meditationes has become famous - have no speculative value, and in general are the outcome of the crudest empiricism.

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  • This appendix, containing, as it does, manifest traces of P, proves that even Deuteronomy was not put into its present form until after the exile.

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  • For some of his exploits Dasent's Tales from the Norse (2nd ed., Appendix) may be consulted.

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  • A geographical appendix by Major James Rennell summarizes the information then available about the Niger.

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  • Kingsley's accusation indeed, in so far as it concerned the Roman clergy generally, was not precisely dealt with; only a passing sentence, in an appendix on lying and equivocation, maintained that English Catholic priests are as truthful as English Catholic laymen; but of the author's own personal rectitude no room for doubt was left.

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  • To this appendix, giving the history from 168-146, the last ten books are devoted.

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  • The last authority also mentions 1 See " Appendix," vol.

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  • The History of Arianism was published in English (1728-1729) by William Webster, with an appendix on the English writers in the Socinian and Arian controversies.

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  • Appendix B lists and explains the abbreviations used in this report.

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  • Guidance on each of these items appears below, followed by a short note of copyright requirements and an appendix dealing with recommended abbreviations.

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  • I'm 39 years old and was diagnosed with mucinous adenocarcinoma of the appendix in February 2005.

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  • These cases are usually associated with primary well-differentiated mucinous adenocarcinomas of the appendix.

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  • If you have appendicitis you will usually have to have your appendix removed.

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  • In eight children who presented with symptoms of acute appendicitis, the tumor was located at the tip of the appendix.

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  • See attached appendix Our thoughts are that the conference was very successful.

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  • Survey Results see the appendix for detailed reports of the survey results.

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  • It was agreed the report should include an appendix on the Dutch system for environmental planning.

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  • It also contains an appendix with detailed tables of conjunctions.

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  • The children's analysis in online-only appendix had an asset.

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  • It was there that he died sudenly on November, 1917 following surgery for a ruptured appendix.

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  • I would have appreciated a more technical appendix that explained the killer techniques he picked up.

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  • The text concludes with a useful appendix of nine guideline summaries taken from the NICE website.

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  • This can happen as a result of a burst appendix, childbirth or abdominal surgery.

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  • At the federal health council appendix e of mental health medicaid programs thus.

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  • My husband's appendix was situated a little differently than most- it was pointing upward, away from the colon.

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  • Indeed, an appendix reveals these philosophers to be the " hereditary aristocracy " of the subject.

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  • Also includes an appendix of common questions and answers relating to intermittent auscultation.

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  • Appendix on handling emulsions, e.g. breaking up an emulsion by adding saturated brine.

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  • An appendix of drugs used in equine cardiology is included.

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  • It includes an Appendix which summarizes the conclusions from the Event in June - these are also available separately Here.

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  • Show the pupils the Nicene creed (See Appendix 1 ).

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  • Appendix 1 The cyclone in Orissa, India, 1999 The Orissa cyclone struck in October last year.

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  • The chapter ends with an appendix containing paradigms of nominal declensions in some of the Dravidian languages.

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  • The western Mediterranean population of the striped dolphin is included on Appendix II of the Bonn Convention.

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  • Or appendix endix e even tho the budget for health are hard to.

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  • Those set out in Appendix 1 are examples of more commonly found types, but the list provided should not be regarded as exhaustive.

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  • You will find the details about the lights with high f-numbers in chapter 3.10, and in the appendix.

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  • A full module handbook is contained in Appendix 1.

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  • An appendix reconstructs Knight's library, principally consisting of books concerning heraldry, topography and history.

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  • In some cases the primary tumor in the appendix can be quite inconspicuous in the context of abundant mucinous peritoneal tumor.

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  • Details of this emissions inventory are included in Appendix VI.

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  • A 40 year old lady was transferred from another hospital following laparotomy for suspected perforated appendix.

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  • Appendix B, Fortran Library, is an alphabetic listing, by mnemonic name, of intrinsic functions and subroutines.

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  • The proposed daily charges in Camden and Middlesbrough, given in appendix D, do not look outlandish.

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  • It has been supplemented by 70-odd extra pages of detail in an appendix to the main work, for those requiring more particularity.

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  • I spent two months in a coma following an appendix operation and at the age of thirteen I contracted chronic pleurisy.

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  • In one of these incidents (Appendix 2, number 5 ), other rodenticides were also involved.

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  • See Appendix 6. Possible locations might be at electricity distribution substations.

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  • Appendix 1 provides a summary of the features of a number of current systems.

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  • Appendix Suppliers Try your local large toyshop, the kits are sold under various names.

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  • References and an Appendix (Naturally occurring carotenolds having trivial names) are also provided.

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  • Further details of these irrevocable undertakings are set out in Appendix II to this announcement.

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  • Appendix D. Using Welsh-English Dictionaries Revision 1.2 (by nodine) clarified the wording in places and improved the formatting.

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  • In an appendix of forty-one pages he gives his third method, "local arithmetic," which is performed on a chess-board, and depends, in principle, on the expression of numbers in the scale of radix 2.

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  • In the preface to the appendix containing the local arithmetic he states that, while devoting all his leisure to the invention of these abbreviations of calculation, and to examining by what methods the toil of calculation might be removed, in addition to the logarithms, rabdologia and promptuary, he had hit upon a certain tabular arithmetic, whereby the more troublesome operations of common arithmetic are performed on an abacus or chess-board, and which may be regarded as an amusement A facsimile of this document is given by Mark Napier in his Memoirs of John Napier (1834), p. 248.

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  • The existing seven were first published in a careful but largely mistaken transcript by Buonarotti in 1724, as an appendix to Dempster's De Etruria Regali.'

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  • Bury, Appendix 8 to vol.

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  • Commission (Appendix, pp. 379-397), contains numerous letters from various popes, from the king, a correspondence dealing with the affairs of the university of Oxford, another with the province of Gascony, beside some harangues and letters evidently kept as models to be used on various occasions.

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  • Jeffrey Bell, with an appendix by Garrod containing a summary of the latter's own continuation of the same line of research.'

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  • Gauden's letters on the subject are printed in the appendix to vol.

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  • It cannot, however, be said that the poem itself supports this assertion, 1 Followed by Peake in The Problem of Suffering, pp. 4 f., 151 f., to whose appendix (A) reference may be made for further details of recent criticism.

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  • His statements are sometimes demonstrably inaccurate (see Making of Religion, Appendix C).

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  • Several specimens of the ordination service for deaconesses have been preserved (see Cecilia Robinson, The Ministry of Deaconesses, London, 1878, appendix B, p. 197).

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  • An appendix contends against Whiston that the book of Daniel was forged in the time of Antiochus Epiphanes (see DEisM).

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  • In the preface to this he gives a brief extract of the earlier history, and, as an appendix, a short account of St Olaf's miracles after his death; here, too, he employs critical art, as appears from a comparison with his source, the Latin legend.

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  • Whatsoever impediment be to the contrary, we will set forth that authority to the utmost; for we have received from that see our crown imperial," " which," added More, " till his grace with his own mouth so told 'me ' 1 Ep. 426, Appendix.

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  • He became a close friend of Isidore, succeeded him as head of the school in Athens, and wrote his biography, part of which is preserved in the Bibliotheca of Photius (see appendix to the Didot edition of Diogenes Laertius).

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  • Petri (Petri apostoli apocalypsis per Clementem), the late Syrian apocalypse of Ezra (Bousset, Antichrist, 45 &c.), the Coptic (14th) vision of Daniel (in the appendix to Woide's edition of the Codex Alexandrinus; Oxford, 179 9), the Ethiopian Wisdom of the Sibyl, which is closely related to the Tiburtine Sibyl (see Basset, Apocryphes etlziopiennes, x.); in the last mentioned of these sources long series of Islamic rulers are foretold before the final time of Antichrist.

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  • The only other biblical source ascribed to this period is Ruth, whose present position as an appendix to Judges is not original (see Bible and Ruth).

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  • In general structure they all closely resemble human beings, as in the absence of tails; in their semi-erect position (resting on finger-tips or knuckles); in the shape of vertebral column, sternum and pelvis; in the adaptation of the arms for turning the palm uppermost at will; in the possession of a long vermiform appendix to the short caecum of the intestine; in the size of the cerebral hemispheres and the complexity of their convolutions.

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  • But in many, perhaps most cases of naturalization (see Appendix below) there is no evidence of a gradual adaptation to new conditions which were at first injurious, and this is essential to the idea of acclimatization.

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  • This backfill had inclusions of charcoal flecks and gravel and sherds of medieval pottery (Appendix E) were recovered during excavation.

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  • The check-list reproduced as an Appendix to this document could be useful here.

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  • In one of these incidents (Appendix 2, number 5), other rodenticides were also involved.

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  • A list of subscribing institutions is set out in Appendix 3.

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  • A tabulated list of contents of your EnviroFile, based on Appendix Two or Three.

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  • This was a philosophical treatise on universal science that included a 100-page appendix on geometry, containing his fundamental contributions to analytic geometry.

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  • Appendix D. Using Welsh-English Dictionaries Revision 1.2 (by nodine) Clarified the wording in places and improved the formatting.

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  • For more information, read chapter 8 and appendix D of The Live Food Factor.

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  • Look at your IRA balance from Dec. 31 of last year, divide it by the proper divisor shown in Appendix C of IRS Publication 590 Individual Retirement Arrangements, and withdraw at least that amount by Dec. 31.

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  • Inflammation of the liver, appendix, intestine, or lymph nodes within the abdomen may cause other complications.

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  • The appendix is usually removed to avoid a later diagnosis of appendicitis.

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  • Appendicitis is an inflammation of the appendix, which is the small, finger-shaped pouch attached to the beginning of the large intestine on the lower-right side of the abdomen.

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  • Appendicitis is a medical emergency, and if left untreated, the appendix may rupture and cause a potentially fatal infection.

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  • Although the appendix has no known function, it can become inflamed and diseased.

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  • Appendicitis is usually caused by a blockage of the inside of the appendix, which is called the lumen.

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  • Lymphoid tissue, which is present in mucosal lining of the appendix and intestines to help fight bacterial and viral infections, can swell and lead to obstruction of the appendix.

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  • Blockage of the appendix then causes inflammation, increased pressure, and restricted blood flow, leading to abdominal pain and tenderness in the right lower quadrant of the abdomen.

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  • If the appendix is not removed, bacteria and inflammation within the appendix rapidly expand, the wall of the appendix stretches, and perforation can occur.

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  • Once the appendix is perforated, bacteria-filled fluid is released into the abdominal cavity and peritonitis then develops.

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  • Other possible symptoms are pain on urination, inability to urinate, or frequent urge to urinate if the swollen appendix is near the urinary tract and bladder.

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  • This technique provides images of infected areas and may help physicians decide which children are candidates for surgery to remove the appendix.

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  • Up to 20 percent of appendectomies are performed on infants and children with a normal appendix.

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  • Appendicitis is treated by immediate surgery to remove the appendix, called an appendectomy.

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  • In an open appendectomy, the appendix is removed through a standard abdominal incision.

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  • In laparoscopic appendectomy, surgeons insert a small scope through tiny abdominal incisions to remove the appendix.

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  • In female teen patients, laparascopy has the added benefit of being able to diagnose and treat gynecologic conditions and ectopic pregnancy during the appendectomy if the appendix is found to be normal.

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  • If the appendix is removed before perforation occurs, the hospital stay is usually two to three days.

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  • A child with a perforated appendix and peritonitis must remain in the hospital up to a week.

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  • Perforated and ruptured appendix, as well as peritonitis, occur at higher rates among children.

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  • When the appendix has ruptured or a severe infection has developed, the likelihood for developing complications is higher, and recovery is longer.

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  • Because the appendix is more likely to perforate in children than adults, parents should not hesitate to call the doctor if their child develops symptoms that may indicate appendicitis.

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  • The spleen, appendix, and patches of lymphoid tissue in the intestinal tract are also parts of the immune system.

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  • Language lessons include a review of poetry and the use of repetition, as well as a vocabulary lesson that includes words such as appendix and solemn.

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  • The appendix is the final section of a business plan and is, sometimes, unnecessary.

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  • However, because the audience can change, so too can the appendix's contents.

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  • However, Haab has also provided an appendix that lists her favorite online sources for purchasing jewelry making tools and supplies.

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  • All terms are thoroughly explained and an appendix with website addresses offers a convenient source of additional information.

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  • The existing seven were first published in a careful but largely mistaken transcript by Buonarotti in 1724, as an appendix to Dempster's De Etruria Regali.

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  • Holmes, Ancient Britain (1907), appendix, identifies the Cassiterides with the British Isles.

    1
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  • It comprises seven large volumes and a geographical appendix; but the seventh volume, the history of the sultan Husain (1438-1505), together with a short account of some later events down to 1523, cannot have been written by Mirkhond himself, who died in 1498.

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  • He may have compiled the preface, but the main portion of this volume is probably the work of his grandson, the historian Khwandamir (1475-1534), to whom also a part of the appendix must be ascribed.

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  • As an appendix to the Oligochaeta, and possibly referable to that group, though their systematic position cannot at present be determined with certainty, are to be placed the Bdellodrilidae (Discodrilidae auct.), which are small parasites upon crayfish.

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  • The original works of Rufinus are - (I) De Adulteratione Librorum Origenis - an appendix to his translation of the Apology of Pamphilus, and intended to show that many of the features in Origen's teaching which were then held to be objectionable arise from interpolations and falsifications of the genuine text; (2) De Benedictionibus XII Patriarcharum Libri II - an exposition of Gen.

    1
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  • A list of its birds, with some notes, bibliographical and biological, has been given as an Appendix to Baring-Gould's Iceland, its Scenes and Sagas (8vo, 1862); and Shepherd's North-west Peninsula of Iceland (8vo, 1867) recounts a somewhat profitless expedition made thither expressly for ornithological objects.

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  • As an appendix to the latter appeared his De linearum geometricarum 'proprietatibus generalibus tractatus, a treatise of remarkable elegance.

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  • The appendix de Benedictionibus to the Rituale Romanum contains formulae, often of much simple beauty, for blessing all manner of persons and things, from the congregation as a whole and sick men and women, to railways, ships, blast-furnaces, lime-kilns, articles of food, medicine and medical bandages and all manner of domestic animals.

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  • His chief work, the Six livres de la Republique (Paris, 1576), which passed through several editions in his lifetime, that of 1583 having as an appendix L'A pologie de Rene Herpin (Bodin himself), was the first modern attempt to construct an elaborate system of political science.

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  • Temnocephaloidea (see appendix tO Planarians).

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  • But if we remove them we get a continuous body of Levitical Elohim psalms, or rather two collections, the first Korahitic and the second Asaphic, to which there have been added by way of appendix by a non-Elohistic editor a supplementary group of Korahite psalms and one psalm (certainly late) ascribed to David.

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  • It is only in the appendix to the Elohistic psalm-book that we find Heman and Ethan side by side with Asaph, as in the Chronicles; but this does not necessarily prove that the body of the collection originated when there were only two gilds of singers.

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  • It is possible that these last-mentioned psalms were originally an appendix to the Judaean collection and have been removed from their original place to after the other Levitical psalms.

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  • The Sennacherib prophecies must be taken in connexion with the historical appendix, chaps.

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  • It should be added that the Isaianic origin of the appendix in xix.

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  • We may regard it as a supplement or appendix to the Principe and the Discorsi, since Machiavelli held it for a fundamental axiom that states are powerless unless completely armed in permanence.

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  • To this the original author added as an appendix x.

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  • The penitent and God-fearing Jews of the post-exilic age needed some softening appendix, and this the editor provided.

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  • The facts of the problem would all appear covered by the hypothesis that John the presbyter, the eleven being all dead, wrote the book of Revelation (its more ancient Christian portions) say in 69, and died at Ephesus say in loo; that the author of the Gospel wrote the first draft, here, say in 97; that this book, expanded by him, first circulated within a select Ephesian Christian circle; and that the Ephesian church officials added to it the appendix and published it in 110 -120.

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  • An appendix that gives some account of the "Pigskin Library" which he carried with him for daily reading in the heart of Africa is a surprising exposition of the wide range of his reading.

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  • In this was included a translation into Latin of part of Jodocus Schouten's account of Siam (Appendix de religione Siamensium, ex Descriptione Belgica Iodoci Schoutenii), and chapters on the religions of various peoples.

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  • Sir Isaac Newton introduced several important improvements into the Cambridge edition of 1672; in 1715 Dr Jurin issued another Cambridge edition with a valuable appendix; in 1733 the whole work was translated into English by Dugdale; and in 1736 Dugdale's second edition was revised by Shaw.

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  • Arnold prints, in an appendix, a minor work from Henry's pen, the Epistola ad Walterum de contemptu mundi, which was written in 1135.

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  • In Appendix A, the distinction is made between ' spatially detailed ' and ' spatially aggregate ' forms of transport model.

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  • There is a difference between performing an appendectomy and having your appendix out.

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  • For general reflections on the subject see the appendix to Jowett's edition of the Epistle to the Romans (London, 1855).

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