Corrected Sentence Examples

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  • When she called it his money, he always corrected her and said it was theirs.

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  • During the closing years of exile he was on intimate terms with the historian Polydore Vergil, and one of his last acts was to arrange to give Polydore a corrected version of Major's account of Scottish affairs.

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  • He corrected one other movement and slowed their pace until it resembled that of the youths being trained a short distance away.

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  • This drawback can be corrected to a slight extent by furnishing the hydraulic crane with more than one cylinder, and thus compounding it, but the arrangement does not give the same economical range of load "as in an electric crane.

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  • Incorrigible offenders on these matters were " left " to the secular power, to be corrected with due " animadversion."

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  • The corrections of s e are important, as they are based (according to a note by that scribe, at the end of Esther) on an early copy which had been corrected by, Pamphilus, the disciple of Origen, friend of Eusebius and founder of a library at Caesarea.

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  • When set, the eldest demonstrated a simple strike and block, then corrected her form as she followed his example.

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  • Suns, she corrected herself with a small smile.

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  • The text has been corrected by two scribes, one (the S copOw,r) contemporary with the original writer, the other belonging to the 10th or 11th century.

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  • When they reached their destination, Alex pulled her aside and gently corrected her.

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  • This corrected pull is then divided by the weight of the vehicles hauled, in which must be included the weight of the dynamometer car, and the quotient gives the resistance per ton of load hauled at a certain uniform speed on a straight and level road.

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  • Moreover, the authorities on whom he relied have had to be corrected since in many points of detail in the light of later archaeological research.

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  • It is needless to say that in many points his statements and conclusions must now be corrected.

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  • The Greek text of the Physiologus exists only in late MSS., and has to be corrected from the translations.

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  • So far as Western Christendom is concerned the corrected calendar is now universally accepted, and Easter is kept on the same day, but it was not until 1752 that the Gregorian reformation of the calendar was adopted in Great Britain and Ireland.

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  • This treatment of history can be at once corrected by the books of Samuel, but it is only from a deeper study of the internal evidence that these, too, appear to give expression to doubtful and conflicting views.

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  • Some of the criticism of their works, necessary and useful as it has been, will probably be corrected later on by that breadth of view and sense of proportion which has enabled us to appreciate justly the achievements of lesser men in more remote times.

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  • Heysham added to Hutchins's Cumberland a list of birds of that county, whilst in the same year began Thomas Lord's valueless Entire New System of Ornithology, the text of which was written or corrected by Dr Dupree, and in 1794 Donovan began a History of British Birds which was only finished in 1819 - the earlier portion being reissued about the same time.

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  • The synod of Reims in 1148 procured papal sanction for four propositions opposed to certain of Gilbert's tenets, and his works were condemned until they should be corrected in accordance with the principles of the church.

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  • If Gauden was the author, he may have incorporated papers, &c., by Charles, who may have corrected the work and thus been joint-author.

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  • These corrected longitudes were not yet available for the maps produced by Nicolas Sanson of Abbeville, since 1627.

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  • His last work was a corrected edition of the Welsh Bible issued in small pica by the Bible Society.

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  • The strikers were beaten, but certain abuses were corrected.

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  • His Sunday sermons were taken down in shorthand, corrected by him on Monday, and sold by his publishers, Messrs Passmore & Alabaster, literally by tons.

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  • Spurgeon's lectures, aphorisms, talks, and "Saplings for Sermons" were similarly stenographed, corrected and circulated.

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  • With this arrangement it is possible to find the actual value of the magnetizing force, corrected for the effects of joints and other sources of error.

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  • They are corrected to cover all boundary changes to 1906.

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  • See Misrepresentations in Campbell's "Lives of Lyndhurst and Brougham" corrected by St Leonards (London, 1869).

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  • The last, considered the best, was corrected and re-edited by Albert Molnar at Hanau in 1608.7 Heltai published also (1571) a translation, improved from that by Blasius Veres (1565), of the Tripartitum of VerbOczy, and Chronika (1575) adapted from the Decades of Bonfini.

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  • Blemishes in the stock, defects of mind or body, though they may be to some extent corrected in the individual by training, cannot be got rid of from the stock by any such process.

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  • The family of Retz had military traditions, but it had also much church influence, and, despite the very unclerical leanings of the future cardinal, which were not corrected by the teachings of his tutor St Vincent de Paul, the intentions of his family never varied respecting him.

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  • Measures inaccurately taken, or wrongly read off, could seldom, if ever, be corrected, and these persistent errors defeated all chance of successful search.

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  • Joseph Skoda (1805-1881) extended, and in some respects corrected, the art of auscultation as left by Laennec. Karl Rokitansky (1804-1878), by his colossal labours, placed the science of morbid anatomy on a permanent basis, and enriched it by numerous discoveries of detail.

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  • According to this account the poet was born in 95 B.C.; he became mad in consequence of the administration of a love-philtre; and after composing several books in his lucid intervals, which were subsequently corrected by Cicero, he died by his own hand in the forty-fourth year of his age.

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  • At first glasses may be given of such a strength as to relieve the troublesome symptoms; and the strength may be gradually increased till the total hypermetropia is corrected.

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  • If only one eye is used, its anomaly should be alone corrected; where both are used and nearly of equal strength, correction of each often gives satisfactory results.

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  • Airy, the astronomer, corrected his own astigmatism by means of a cylindrical lens.

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  • He explained, corrected or commented till the clock struck nine; then, with the little finger of the right hand brushing from his coat and waistcoat the shower of superfluous snuff which had fallen on them, he pocketed his snuff-box, and resuming his hat, he as silently as when he came in made his exit by the door which I rushed to open for him."

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  • Osiander, besides a number of controversial writings, published a corrected edition of the Vulgate, with notes, in 1522, and a Harmony of the Gospels - the first work of its kind - in 1537.

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  • These volumes contain in addition to the four treatises already mentioned, Miscellaneous Reflections, now first printed, and the Inquiry concerning Virtue or Merit, described, as "formerly printed from an imperfect copy, now corrected and published intire," and as "printed first in the year 1699."

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  • The copy, carefully corrected in his own handwriting, is preserved in the British Museum.

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  • Only the first volume was corrected by the author, the other two being compiled from his manuscript by Juan Tineo.

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  • Warburg in 1875 on the viscosity of gases; its effects would be corrected for, in general, by a slight effective addition to the thickness of the gaseous layer.

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  • He is by some credited with a work entitled Ns 7repioSos ("Travels round the Earth"), in two books, one on Europe, the other on Asia, in which were described the countries and inhabitants of the known world, the account of Egypt being especially comprehensive; the descriptive matter was accompanied by a map, based upon Anaximander's map of the earth, which he corrected and enlarged.

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  • Kant himself corrected the mistake, at the same time highly commending the work.

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  • Best known of his French amies were Mme Helvetius, widow of the philosopher, and the young Mme Brillon, who corrected her " Papa's " French and tried to bring him safely into the Roman Catholic Church.

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  • They were originally published by Dean Stanley, and there is a revised and corrected edition.

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  • The temperature of the air traversed and its humidity were observed, and the result was finally corrected to the velocity in dry air at o C. by means of equation (ro).

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  • At the open end, as a first approximation to be corrected later, there are no pressure changes, for any tendency to excess can be relieved by immediate expansion into the outer air, and any tendency to defect can be filled up by an inrush from the outer air.

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  • Even the longer pipe may be effectively shorter than the corrected shorter pipe when sounding alone.

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  • He introduced the first bill for giving small tracts of government land free to actual settlers, and published an exposure of abuses in the allowance of mileage to members, which corrected the evil, but brought him much personal obloquy.

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  • His Saturday Review articles corrected many errors and raised the level of historical knowledge among the educated classes, but as a reviewer he was apt to forget that a book may have blemishes and yet be praiseworthy.

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  • Lambert Playfair's Handbook for Travellers in Algeria (Murray's Handbooks), corrected to 1902, is a capital guide to the country, as is also Algerie et Tunisie (Paris, 1906), in the GuidesJoanne Series; the Bibliography of Algeria (London, 1888), and the Supplement to the Bibliography of Algeria (London, 1898), by Sir Lambert Playfair, contain thousands of entries and many notes.

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  • Except by the obviously absurd assumption of the infallibility of copyists for the centuries before c. 300 B.C., we cannot escape the conclusion that errors lurk even where no variants now exist, and that such errors can be corrected, if at all, only by conjectural emendation.

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  • This is a fairly strong case, but it falls short of demonstration because it cannot be shown that the MS. corrected by Pamphilus was still at Caesarea when it was used by x, and because it is not certain either that the chapter divisions in Acts were added by the original scribes, or that x and B were at that time in their original home, or that the chapter divisions were necessarily only to be found at Caesarea.

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  • In the 1 1th century a similar task was undertaken by Lanfranc, archbishop of Canterbury (1069-1089); in the 12th century by Stephen Harding (1109), third abbot of Citeaux, and by Cardinal Nicolaus Maniacoria (1150), whose corrected Bible is preserved in the public library at Dijon.

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  • In 1 599 he published Certaine errors in Navigation detected and corrected, and he was the author of other works; to him also is chiefly due the invention of the method known as Mercator's sailing.

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  • It contains of course many errors, which were gradually discovered and corrected in the course of the next two hundred and fifty years.

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  • Edwards personally reprimanded Whitefield for presuming to say of any one that he was unconverted, and in his Thoughts Concerning the Present Revival of Religion devoted much space to "showing what things are to be corrected, or avoided, in promoting this work."

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  • A second edition in folio, " newly oversene and corrected," was printed by Nicolson, with English type, in 1537; and also in the same year, a third edition in quarto.

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  • According to the title-page the New Testament was " translated faithfvlly into English ovt of the authentical Latin, according to the best corrected copies of the same, diligently conferred vvith the Greeke and other editions in diuers languages..

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  • He also reduced the solar parallax to 14" (less than a quarter of Kepler's estimate), corrected the sun's semi-diameter to 15' 45", recommended decimal notation, and was the first to make tidal observations.

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  • The solecism in the Preface to the Adonais, " My known repugnance to the narrow principles of taste on which several of his earlier compositions were modelled prove at least that I am an impartial judge," would probably have been corrected by the poet if his attention had been called to it; but the two first ones, with others, cannot be thus regarded.

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  • Assured that his explanation was true, Bradley corrected his observations for aberration, but he found that there still remained a residuum which was evidently not a parallax, for it did not exhibit an annual cycle.

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  • He is therefore a follower of Schopenhauer as corrected by Hartmann.

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  • The Thomism, therefore, of our day is wrong, from a metaphysical point of view, so far as it elevates Aristotelianism, as seriously modified but not fundamentally corrected by Aquinas, into an authoritative orthodoxy in metaphysics.

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  • Following the first chart of lines of equal variation compiled by Edmund Halley in 1700, charts of similar type have been published from time to time embodying recent observations and corrected for the secular change, thus providing seamen with values of the variation accurate to about 30' of arc. Possessing these data, it is easy to ascertain by observation the effects of the iron in a ship in disturbing the compass, and it will be found for the most part in every vessel that the needle is deflected from the magnetic meridian by a horizontal angle called the deviation of the compass; in some directions of the ship's head adding to the known variation of the place, in other directions subtracting from it.

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  • Thus the part of B caused by the permanent magnetism of hard iron must be corrected by permanent magnets horizontally placed in a fore and aft direction; the other part caused by vertical soft iron by means of bars of vertical soft iron, called Flinders bars, before or abaft the compass.

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  • C is compensated by permanent magnets athwartships and horizontal; D by masses of soft iron on both sides of the compass, and generally in the form of cast-iron spheres, with their centres in the same horizontal plane as the needles; E is usually too small to require correction; A is fortunately rarely of any value, as it cannot be corrected.

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  • This congregation was very much occupied, being empowered to deal with all disciplinary matters concerning both the secular and regular clergy, whether in the form of consultations or of contentious suits; it had further the exclusive right to regulate the discipline of the religious orders and congregations bound by the simple vows, the statutes of which it examined, corrected and approved; finally it judged disputes and controversies between the secular and regular clergy.

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  • Many of his conclusions have been corrected and extended by later criticism; but he indicated more decisively than any of his predecessors the fruitful principle that each art is subject to definite conditions, and that it can accomplish great results only by limiting itself to its special function.

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  • He was a passionate Ciceronian, and perhaps his chief contributions to scholarship are the corrected editions of Cicero's letters and orations, his own epistles in a Ciceronian style, and his Latin version of Demosthenes.

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  • This was nothing less than the complete revision of the planetary theories, followed by a laborious comparison of results with the most authentic observations, and the construction of tables representing the movements thus corrected.

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  • Ang3trom's value for iron, when corrected for obvious numerical errors, and for the probable variation of c, becomes Iron, k =0.164 (1-0.0013 0), but this is very doubtful as c was not measured.

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  • From the remains of fortifications there he argues that the Hyksos were uncivilized desert people, skilled in the use of the bow, and must thus have destroyed by their archery the Egyptian armies trained to fight hand-tohand; further;, that their hordes were centered in Syria, but were driven thence by a superior force in the East to take refuge in the islands and became a sea-power--whence the strange description "Hellenic" in Manetho, which most editors have corrected to CtXAoi, "others."

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  • This and other anomalies will doubtless be corrected in future revisions of the allotment, although the German parties, foreseeing that any revision must work out to their disadvantage, stipulated that a two-thirds majority should be necessary for any alteration of the law.

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  • Sir Isaac corrected in the second edition of his Principia an error pointed out by Abauzit, and, when sending him the Commercium Epistolicum, said, "You are well worthy to judge between Leibnitz and me."

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  • All the errors of detail in Bacher's work have been corrected by Dr Rieu in his Catalogue of the Persian MSS.

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  • By applying the pragmatic test on the other hand, it is possible to describe how truths are developed and errors corrected, and how in general old truths are adjusted to new situations.

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  • He also published a Treatise on Annuities (1725), which has passed through several revised and corrected editions.

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  • Montalvo alleges that the first three books were arranged and corrected by him from "the ancient originals," and a reference in the prologue to the siege of Granada points to the conclusion that the Spanish recast was made shortly after 1492; it is possible, however, that the prologue alone was written after 1492, and that the text itself is older.

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  • The following account of the earlier period follows the main outlines of the traditional facts, corrected as far as possible by the inscriptional record; and further details will be found in the separate biographical, racial and linguistic articles, and those on the geographical areas into which India is administratively divided.

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  • Such heresies were now corrected; and the Buddhism of southern Asia practically dates from Asoka's council.

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  • James Gregory, in his Optica Promota (1663), discusses the forms of images and objects produced by lenses and mirrors, and shows that when the surfaces of the lenses or mirrors are portions of spheres the images are curves concave towards the objective, but if the curves of the surfaces are conic sections the spherical aberration is corrected.

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  • After devoting some time to the inquiry he found that by combining lenses formed of different kinds of glass the effect of the unequal refrangibility of light was corrected, and in 1733 he succeeded in constructing telescopes which exhibited objects free from colour.

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  • The chromatic aberration of the object-glass of one of these telescopes is corrected for photographic rays, and the image formed by it is received on a highly sensitive photographic plate.

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  • The other telescope is corrected for visual rays and its image is formed on the plane of the spider-lines of a filar micrometer.

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  • This unit is taken as being 4.180 joules per gramme-degree-centigrade on the scale of the platinum thermometer, corrected to the absolute scale as explained in the article Thermometry, Which Has Been Shown To Be Practically Equivalent To The Hydrogen Scale.

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  • This Would Indicate That Rowland'S Corrected Values Should, If Anything, Be Lowered.

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  • As these rules were often accepted by his successors, the praetor thus acquired an almost legislatorial power, and his edicts, thus continued, corrected and amplified from year to year, became, under the title of the "perpetual" edicts, one of the most important factors in moulding Roman law.

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  • On the continent of Europe, however, looking at the divergence in direction between the crude marriage-rate and that corrected to an age-basis, it is not improbable that the decline in the former may be attributable to some cause mentioned in connexion with the marriage-rate, and in the figures relating to some 30 years back some traces can be found of a connexion between a high birth-rate and a high proportion of young wives.

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  • A new edition of it appeared in 1843 under the title of Lehrbuch der Zootomie, of which only the vertebrate section was corrected by himself.

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  • This was entrusted to Bacon, who drew up a Declaration of the Practices and Treasons attempted and committed by Robert, late Earl of Essex, his first draft being extensively altered and corrected by the queen and council.

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  • But its shortcomings are to be supplied and its deceptions to be corrected.

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  • This may even be repeated, but when finally corrected the proof is marked " press " and is sent to the printer with the necessary instructions as to printing.

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  • All that at present can be attempted is, to reproduce a single plane in another plane; but even this has not been altogether satisfactorily accomplished, aberrations always occur, and it is improbable that these will ever be entirely corrected.

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  • The absence of this error is termed achromatism, and an optical system so corrected is termed achromatic.

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  • If a collective system be corrected for the axis point for a definite wave-length, then, on account of the greater dispersion in the negative components - the flint glasses; - over-correction will arise for the shorter wavelengths (this being the error of the negative components), and under-correction for the longer wave-lengths (the error of crown glass lenses preponderating in the red).

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  • The period, from the death of Alexander to the Sassanid Ardashir I., is put by the Persian tradition at 266 years; which was afterwards corrected, after Syro-Grecian evidence, to 523 years.

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  • Thebes (anciently 00ac, Thebae, or in poetry sometimes 07' 7 0a, in modern Greek Phiva, or, according to the corrected pronunciation, Thivae), an ancient Greek city in Boeotia, is situated on low hilly ground of gentle slope a little north of the range of Cithaeron, which divides Boeotia from Attica, and on the edge of the Boeotian plain, about 44 m.

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  • In the remaining twenty-four years of his life he at once corrected and enlarged the basis which he had laid in the De emendatione.

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  • Scaliger undoubtedly shows that Scioppius committed more blunders than he corrected, that his book literally bristles with pure lies and baseless calumnies; but he does not succeed in adducing a single proof either of his father's descent from the La Scala family, or of any single event narrated by Julius as happening to himself or any member of this family prior to his arrival at Agen.

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  • In it he corrected the erroneous views of Breislak, who conceived that Rome occupies the site of a volcano, to which he ascribed the volcanic materials that cover the seven hills.

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  • This merely federal plan, reported from a Conference attended by the delegates from Connecticut, New York and Delaware, as well as those from New Jersey (and by Luther Martin of Maryland), consisted of nine resolutions; the first was that " the Articles of Confederation ought to be so revised, corrected and enlarged as to render the federal Constitution adequate to the exigencies of government and the preservation of the Union "; and the actual " plan " was for a single legislative body, in which each state should be represented by one member, and which should elect the supreme court and have power to remove the executive (a Council), to lay taxes and import duties, to control commerce, and even, if necessary, to make requisitions for funds from the states.

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  • Several gross errors which had appeared in the Latin version, and had been since exposed, were corrected in this edition.

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  • These criticisms induced Foxe to produce a second corrected edition, Ecclesiastical History, contayning the Actes and Monuments of things passed in every kynges tyme.

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  • During his third and last voyage, in 1778, Captain James Cook surveyed the eastern portion of the Aleutian archipelago, accurately determined the position of some of the more important islands and corrected many errors of former navigators.

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  • This translation was based upon the Slavonic original, but the text had been verified and corrected, by comparison with a Calvinistic translation, and had been collated with the Greek.

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  • Its information has been corrected and augmented in various later publications, but not materially.

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  • The editor, Marco Antonio de Dominis, has been accused of falsifying the text, but a comparison with a MS. corrected by Sarpi himself shows that the alterations are both unnecessary and unimportant.

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  • After his death his most glaring innovations (the introduction of two doors on a level with the ground, and the extension of the building lengthwise to include the Hijr) were corrected by Hajjaj, under orders from the caliph, but the building retained its more solid structure.

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  • As such, and without receiving any complementary authority, they have been corrected and reedited, like the others, by the Correctores romani.

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  • But then having thought on a tender way of polishing, proper for metall, whereby, as I imagined, the figure also would be corrected to the last; I began to try, what might be effected in this kind, and by degrees so far perfected an Instrument (in the essential parts of it like that I sent to London), by which I could discern Jupiters 4 Concomitants, and shewed them divers times to two others of my acquaintance.

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  • After making a mistake and producing a different result he corrected his work and obtained his former result.

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  • About the middle of July Cotes went to London, in the expectation doubtless to bring down with him to Cambridge the corrected portion of the Principia.

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  • Although Cotes was impatient to begin his work, it was nearly the end of September before the corrected copy was put into his hands.

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  • The final figure, in a case like this, is said to be corrected.

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  • At the close of the work the extra figures are dropped, the last figure which remains being corrected (§ 82 (i)) if necessary.

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  • Intermingled are some stories derived from the Greek mercenaries, especially about their leader Phanes of Halicarnassus, who 1 On the much discussed tablet, which is said to date from his 1 ith year, the writer had at first written "loth year of Cyrus," and then corrected this date into "1st year of Cambyses"; see Strassmaier, Inschriften von Cambyses, No.

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  • It might either fall back on the moral principles commonly accepted, and, affirming their objective validity, endeavour to exhibit them as a coherent and complete set of ultimate ethical truths; or it might take the utility or conduciveness to pleasure, to which Hume had referred for the origin of most sentiments, as an ultimate end and standard by which these sentiments might be judged and corrected.

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  • Hansen, therefore, shows how the radius vector is corrected so as to give that of the true planet.

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  • They need, after a time, to be corrected, not only systematically for precession, but also empirically for proper motion.

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  • Those relating to the moon and planets, corrected by Sir George Airy, 1840-1846, form part of the standard materials for discussing theories of movement in the solar system.

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  • The early observers seem to have been under the impression that the dark regions might be oceans; but this impression must have been corrected as soon as the telescope began to be improved, when the whole visible surface was found to be rough and mountainous.

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  • It was whilst he was still at Strassburg that there appeared at Geneva a translation of the Bible into French, bearing Calvin's name, but in reality only revised and corrected by him from the version of Olivetan.

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  • It was the last of his works, written between 622 and 633, and was corrected by his friend and disciple Braulion.

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  • He thus found the distance between Syene and Alexandria (known to be 5000 stadia) to correspond to - 5 1 - 6 th of a great circle, and so arrived at 250,000 stadia (which he seefns subsequently to have corrected to 252,000) as the circumference of the earth.

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  • A naked short-sighted eye, which would be corrected for distant objects by a spectacle glass of - Io diopters, may approach the object up to about 4 in.

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  • In most cases, and also in corrected systems, the intersection of the principal rays is no longer available for the centre of rotation of the eye, and this kind of observation is impossible.

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  • By introducing a dispersive lens of flint the magnifying glass could be corrected for both chromatic and spherical aberrations.

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  • These anastigmatic lenses, which are manufactured up to X 40, are chromatically and spherically corrected, and for a middle diaphragm the errors of lateral pencils, distortion, astigmatism and coma are eliminated.

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  • Although we now know how the errors of lenses may be corrected, and how the simple microscope may be improved, this instrument remains with relatively feeble magnification, and to obtain stronger magnifications the compound form is necessary.

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  • Suppose that a well corrected objective is employed.

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  • Since glass does not transmit the ultra-violet light, quartz is used, but such lenses can only be spherically corrected and not chromatically.

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  • For this reason the objectives have been called monochromats, as they have only been corrected for light of one wave-length.

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  • According to Abbe, a system can only be regarded as aplanatic if it is spherically corrected for not only one axial point, but when it also fulfils the sine-condition and thus magnifies equally in all zones a surface-element situated vertically on the axis at this point.

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  • By experiment Abbe proved that old, good microscope objectives, which by mere testing had become so corrected that they produced usable images, were not only free from spherical aberrations, but also fulfilled the sine-condition, and were therefore really aplanatic systems.

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  • Selligue had no particular comprehension of the problem, for his achromatic single systems were simply telescope objectives corrected for an infinitely distant point, and were placed so that the same surface was turned towards the object in the microscope objective as in the telescope objective; although contrary to the telescope, the distance of the object in the microscope objective is small in proportion to the distance of the image.

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  • Especially powerful achromatic condensers are really only magnified microscope objectives, with the difference that they are not corrected for the thickness of the cover slip, but for the thickness of the glass on which the object is placed.

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  • It differs from the astronomical latitude only in being corrected for local deviation of the plumb-line.

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  • The Hebrew text is often corrupt but can frequently be corrected with the help of the Septuagint.

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  • Your skills as an Oracle were terrible, but he would've mated with you anyway, he corrected her.

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  • I give them structure, Dusty corrected him.

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  • Your father would've put you in the Guardians long ago, Jule corrected him.

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  • Of the eyes with poor outcome (best corrected acuity 6/60 at 2 months) half were due to pre-existing eye diseases.

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  • At 6 months post-op, 8 eyes had a best corrected visual acuity of 6/6 with complete resolution of symptoms.

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  • Readings were corrected for energy, temperature and stand-off of the electron applicator from the patient surface.

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  • Some people also have a bunion corrected, or an operation for arthritis of the big toe, at the same time.

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  • It is time they were properly dated to the eighth century and the Egyptian chronology corrected to match.

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  • We gained the col; corrected the map, and shot down the long, long valley as clouds gathered.

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  • We stand corrected on this, I have been told that it is covered in Virginia creeper!

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  • Non- corrected refractive errors are also important causes, accounting for another 40% of cases.

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  • Theodore, journeying through all parts, ordained bishops in fitting places, and with their assistance corrected such things as he found faulty.

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  • The larger OUT cell, also in a cosine corrected mount, is used to measure the illuminance from a whole overcast hemisphere.

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  • This makes Z values incomparable across methods, and needed to be corrected for.

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  • With an error corrected link working, we can assume the data is arriving intact.

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  • The stylistic peculiarities of the original have been retained, but obvious misprints corrected.

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  • Usually one uses mu in cm-1 and R in cm. mu in cm-1 and R in cm. mu should be corrected for the packing efficiency which is typically 50% .

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  • Furthermore, when brain volume was corrected for the volume of tubers and subependymal nodules, gray-matter deficits were still apparent.

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  • The ' Copy ' tool action script has been corrected to add missing right parenthesis.

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  • This can, to some extent be corrected using a rasp to remove any extra bone, or with extra cement to fill gaps.

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  • All the existing material is being thoroughly reviewed, and in most cases added to, corrected, and entirely recast.

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  • Once that is done you can run " restrained refinement ", and bad VDW clashes should be corrected fairly reliably.

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  • Unabridged, slightly corrected republication of the original (1965) edition.

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  • We have corrected some spelling, punctuation, grammar.

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  • If detected early, strabismus can be corrected by eye exercises, spectacles or - as a last resort - surgery.

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  • The misinterpretations which he had suffered induced Lotze to publish a small pamphlet of a polemical character (Streitschriften, Leipzig, 1857), in which he corrected two mistakes.

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  • The juridical argument has some force; the present life does not show that harmony of condition and character which our sense of justice leads us to expect; the wicked prosper and the righteous suffer; there is ground for the expectation that in the future life the anomalies of this life will be corrected.

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  • As circumstances allowed, she appears to have taught him reading, writing and arithmetic - acquisitions made with so little of remembered pain that " were not the error corrected by analogy," he says, " I should be tempted to conceive them as innate."

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  • Wenzel by Berzelius through a mistake which was only corrected in 1841 by Germain Henri Hess (1802-1850), professor of chemistry at St Petersburg, and author of "the laws of constant heat-sums and of thermoneutrality" (see Thermochemistry).

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  • At the same time he corrected the error made by Illiger in associating the Phalaropes with these forms, rightly declaring their relationship to Tringa (see Sandpiper), a point of order which other systematists were long in admitting.

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  • He had nothing puritanical in his nature, but he shared in the ill-feeling aroused in the Scottish nobility by the political authority given by Charles to the bishops, and by Hamilton's influence with the king, and also in the general indignation at the scheme of imposing upon Scotland a liturgy which had been drawn up at the instigation of the English court and corrected by Archbishop Laud.

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  • Airy, the astronomer, about 1827, corrected his own astigmatism by means of a cylindrical lens.

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  • The abuses which it was maintained had been corrected by Lutheranism were discussed in articles (1) on Communion in both kinds, (2) on the marriage of clergy, (3) on the Mass, &c. (see Augsburg, Confession Of).

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  • He published at Oxford in 1668 two tracts, on respiration and rickets, and in 1674 these were reprinted, the former in an enlarged and corrected form, with three others "De sal-nitro et spiritu nitro - aereo," "De respiratione foetus in utero et ovo," and "De motu musculari et spiritibus animalibus" as Tractatus quinque medico-physici.

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  • In the same passage he used an incorrect adjective, Phliuntii for Phliasii; he says that he had already corrected his own copy, but the mistake survives in the single palimpsest in which this work has been preserved.

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  • On the other hand, the Decretum actually enjoys a certain public authority which is unique; for centuries it has been the text on which has been founded the instruction in canon law in all the universities; it has been glossed and commented on by the most illustrious canonists; it has become, without being a body of laws, the first part of the Corpus juris canonici, and as such it has been cited, corrected and edited by the popes.

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  • In 1543, Andreas Vesalius published On the Fabric of the Human Body, which corrected errors from antiquity and advanced the medical sciences.

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  • Of course, I stand to be corrected on many of the specifics.

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  • He explained each time what I did not understand in the previous lesson, assigned new work, and took home with him the Greek exercises which I had written during the week on my typewriter, corrected them fully, and returned them to me.

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  • This difficulty and some others may be corrected when she and Miss Sullivan have more time.

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  • She wrote to him formal, monotonous, and dry letters, to which she attached no importance herself, and in the rough copies of which the countess corrected her mistakes in spelling.

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  • But in general I can tell you, Papa, that such a heroic spirit, the truly antique valor of the Russian army, which they--which it" (he corrected himself) "has shown or displayed in the battle of the twenty-sixth-- there are no words worthy to do it justice!

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  • It had by then been revised, and the punctuation corrected.

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  • All data were corrected for spike recovery using spiked reagent blanks.

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  • If you can fix the error by reentering corrected information, you can do so here.

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  • The Off-Axis Guider works best with an illuminated reticle eyepiece so that very small deviations can be identified quickly and can be corrected accurately.

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  • Images are color corrected, but otherwise not retouched in any way.

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  • Despite this, the officers are often unwilling to be corrected, and the councilors rubber-stamp whatever the officers decide.

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  • Inmos have recently admitted a race hazard in the transputer link engine, which means a lengthy period of qualification for corrected parts.

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  • Several minor typos in error messages have been corrected.

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  • A valgus heel can also be corrected with surgery.

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  • Two additional waveform samples shall also be computed by the on-board processor by performing a DFT algorithm on the corrected I/Q signal samples.

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  • Based on the information given, areas that need improvement in their customer service can be addressed and hopefully corrected.

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  • If considering buying, have it corrected before purchasing.

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  • While refurbished items are not technically new, (they're typically returned items that have had the defects corrected,) they still work like new.

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  • Incorrect items should be disputed, incorrect personal information, such as name and employer, must be corrected, and anything that looks suspicious should be reported.

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  • If a discrepancy is found, the report will be corrected.

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  • A corrected copy will also be sent to the individual who filed the dispute form.

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  • Most of these errors are mere processing errors that can be easily corrected, but in cases of stolen identity or other fraud, these errors can take a tremendous amount of time and energy to correct.

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  • In this letter, you'll want to state clearly what the error is and how you would like it to be corrected.

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  • They may wish to receive a notification as soon as a negative mark occurs so that they can have it corrected.

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  • If a problem exists, bring it to the attention of the tile showroom you purchased it from immediately to ensure that it gets corrected in time for you to complete your job.

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  • New technology has identified and corrected previous side effects of these types of products.

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  • The best product for your needs is right for your skin type and works for the problem areas you need corrected.

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  • A boot-fitting mistake can usually be corrected.

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  • Precision is crucial, since mistakes usually can not be corrected.

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  • Adolescents who attend boot camps for troubled teens are either sentenced to attend one by a judge in lieu of jail time or are put there by their parents or guardians, who fear their child's behavior may get worse if it is not corrected.

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  • This is easily corrected by picking up some gel or cushion inserts.

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  • Order your invitations early so if there are any problems with the printing, they can be corrected quickly and not throw you off schedule.

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  • Critics of the method believe that barking should only be corrected with positive-enforcement training.

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  • Taking personal instructions from a teacher gives you the opportunity to have mistakes corrected immediately, and you can have your questions answered right away.

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  • If you see a tab that needs to be corrected, you are also invited to contact Matt and become involved in the maintenance of the site.

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  • Corrected grain leather is made from top grain leather.

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  • It hasn't been buffed, sanded, or corrected in order to remove imperfections.

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  • This second option supplies corrected vision for not only distance or nearness but also for intermediate vision.

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  • When the medication problem is corrected, the symptoms are likely to subside.

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  • This can be corrected with a higher diopter measurement for glasses or the adoption of bifocal or trifocal lenses as needed.

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  • The Method is done in a wraparound style frame and has optically corrected carbonic lenses that provide 100 percent UVA and UVB protection.

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  • A common condition is called presbyopia which affects the person's ability to see objects close up and is easily corrected with reading glasses.

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  • I decided to wait until the major bug fixes were corrected before playing the game.

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  • Fortunately, new patches were created that corrected the majority of the problems and I was able to continue with it.

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  • In 2005, Motorola issued a recall, but then retracted it saying that the issue with the Motorola 815 can be corrected in the Radioshack stores in which they were exclusive.

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  • Twisting or curving of the spine and bowed legs may be corrected to some degree by surgical treatment or the wearing of a special brace.

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  • If the torsion is not corrected quickly, the testis usually loses function.

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  • Some children may experience sleepiness, sweating, and/or nervousness, all of which can be corrected after the test by ingestion of juice or a glucose infusion, as recommended by the pediatrician.

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  • However some types of problems are corrected more readily before all of the permanent teeth have erupted and facial growth is complete.

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  • Even a significant size discrepancy between the upper and lower jaws often can be corrected.

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  • Urine cultures to identify the infecting germs will be repeated frequently until the problem is corrected.

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  • When an atrial septal defect is corrected within the first 20 years of life, there is an excellent chance for the child to live a normal and productive life.

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  • What was once seen as laziness and lack of motivation on the child's part has begun in the early 2000s to be recognized as a medical condition that can be corrected or modified through psychotherapy.

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  • It is also possible that the IV solution may not provide all of the nutrients needed, leading to a deficiency or an imbalance, which would need to be corrected.

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  • Transposition of the great arteries also can be corrected by the Damus-Kaye-Stansel procedure, in which the pulmonary artery is cut in two and connected to the ascending aorta and the farthest section of the right ventricle.

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  • The band can be removed at a later time, and the defect corrected with open-heart surgery.

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  • Errors brought to the attention of the publisher and verified to the satisfaction of the publisher will be corrected in future editions.

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  • As an example of gene therapy for SCID children with ADA deficiency, the child receives periodic infusions of his or her own T cells corrected with a gene for ADA that has been implanted in an activated virus.

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  • Excessive pressure over a nerve can cause irritation or possible damage if not corrected.

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  • If untreated or if treatment fails and is not corrected, conjunctivitis may cause visual impairment by spreading to other parts of the eye, such as the cornea.

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  • The malrotation, stenosis, or membranous bands are corrected surgically so that the duodenum has a normal opening and connects properly to the stomach and jejunum.

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  • Diagnosed early, intestinal obstruction can be corrected with few complications, and a child who does not have other congenital problems usually is able to resume normal development.

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  • Initial failure to thrive caused by physical defects cannot be prevented but can often be corrected before they become a danger to the child.

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  • It is usually easily corrected with supplementation.

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  • Anemia resulting from chronic disease is typically corrected by treating the underlying illness.

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  • If there is no anatomic abnormality of the bone, this is not true clubfoot, and the problem can usually be corrected by applying special braces or casts to straighten the foot.

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  • Clubfoot is corrected by casting or surgery.

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  • Persons with clubfoot that is corrected by surgery may notice some increased stiffness in their affected feet as they age.

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  • A corrected clubfoot is often a shoe size smaller than normal and may be somewhat less flexible.

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  • Structural abnormalities such as cleft lip and cleft palate can be corrected through surgery.

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  • Mild overhydration can generally be corrected by following a doctor's instructions to limit fluid intake.

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  • In people with severe neurologic symptoms, fluid imbalances must be corrected without delay.

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  • Mild water intoxication is usually corrected by drinking less than a quart of water a day for several days.

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  • In most cases, the incarcerated hernias are corrected manually rather than surgically by pushing the incarcerated bowel back up into the abdominal cavity.

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  • Most intestinal obstructions can be corrected with prompt treatment and the affected child will recover without complications.

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  • Diagnosed early, intestinal obstruction can be corrected without complications.

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  • Kidney problems may also be corrected surgically, but there still may be a tendency for high blood pressure and infections.

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  • When symptoms seem to suggest pneumonia, immediate attention allows early treatment so that breathing difficulties can be corrected quickly and drug therapy begun in order to destroy the causative organism.

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  • Unless corrected soon after birth, congenital hip dysplasia can cause a characteristic limp or waddling gait in children.

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  • Corrected scores are sometimes used to evaluate these groups, but their use remains controversial.

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  • Mechanical ventilators may be used for those whose ability to breathe is impaired and intravenous nutrition may be provided until any paralysis is corrected.

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  • If dehydration has been effectively corrected or prevented, few complications can be expected.

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  • If an anatomic reason is found for chronic sinusitis, it may need to be corrected with surgery.

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  • The most satisfactory results are achieved if the condition is corrected as early as possible and before the age of seven.

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  • Strabismus cannot be prevented, but it can be corrected with early intervention.

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  • It is important to remember that although iron deficiency anemia is common in infants and toddlers, it is easily corrected by feeding infants mother's milk or iron-fortified formulas.

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  • Sodium and potassium deficiencies or imbalances can be corrected if diagnosed and treated promptly, but can be life-threatening if untreated.

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  • Anemia and other effects of iron deficiency are not usually life-threatening and can be corrected with supplementation.

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  • Low vision aids such as telescopes assist those whose vision cannot be fully corrected with spectacles and contact lenses alone.

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  • The best corrected vision for most individuals with congenital nystagmus is between 20/40 and 20/70, but correction to 20/20 is possible for some.

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  • Central cord syndrome, however, is less successfully corrected by surgery with only about one third of patients experiencing lasting improvement.

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  • As more individuals with corrected TEFs reach adulthood, there is some evidence that suggests they are more susceptible to esophageal cancers.

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  • The behavior can be corrected if the underlying difficulty is resolved.

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  • Surgery to correct esophageal atresia is usually successful, with survival rates close to 100 percent in otherwise healthy infants after the condition is corrected.

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  • A liver biopsy may also be done after clotting abnormalities are corrected with vitamin K or blood products.

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  • Once a child is diagnosed with myopia, he or she should be examined every six months to a year, and each eye should be corrected to 20/20 at each visit.

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  • Thus, any vision problem should be corrected promptly.

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  • If a child is not corrected fully and continues to have blurred vision, the eye may elongate in response to blur, perpetuating the myopia.

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  • Insulin injections, while helping to normalize glucose production, also increase the risk of hypokalemia and abnormally low levels of glucose in the blood (hypoglycemia), the opposite of the hyperglycemic condition being corrected.

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  • The insulin infusion will be slowed once hyperglycemia has been corrected (blood glucose levels less than 250mg/dL); in children with moderate hyperglycemia, this can often be accomplished within 24 hours.

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  • The prognosis for children with mild to moderate hyperglycemia is good; the condition can usually be corrected within 24 hours.

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  • Small arteriovenous fistulas can be corrected by surgery.

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  • When a negative behavior must be acknowledged and corrected, "time outs" give the child with AD/HD an opportunity to regroup without negative reinforcement.

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  • Vitamin D deficiency can usually be easily corrected if it is noticed early, and if so the symptoms often resolve themselves.

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  • Hypogonadism may be corrected at puberty with hormone replacement.

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  • Spritz with water every other day until the color is corrected.

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  • Any interruption in this cycle creates an imbalance that must be corrected before the chi energy can flow through its transformation cycle.

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  • In some studies, male pattern baldness slowed as these conditions were corrected, though how the two were connected is still being determined.

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  • Subtle changes can be more easily corrected.

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  • This can easily be corrected by either plucking or using a brow gel to reshape the hair's direction.

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  • After an application is filled out, the data must be verified and corrected.

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  • Request that the lender provide you with a corrected statement.

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  • Some are easily corrected with surgery or therapy, while others result in a last impairment for the child.

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  • Some of these conditions can be corrected by simple lifestyle changes, while others may require the intervention of a physician.

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  • Damaged teeth and spaces between teeth can all be corrected by the application of veneers onto the natural teeth.

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  • This can be corrected by holding the microwave off button for few seconds.

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  • This problem can be easily corrected by choosing a coordinating diamond ring wrap or enhancer.

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  • Virgo doesn't always see the beauty in things; rather, he sees the mistakes that need to be corrected.

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  • Correct answers are given a loud cheer, and a wrong answer is simply corrected, providing reinforcement.

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  • She originally had the tattoo inked and either Spears or the artist made an error that she later had corrected as the original text actually had no meaning.

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  • While tattoos don't necessarily have to be permanent, it's inconvenient and expensive to have a misspelling corrected or the tattoo removed completely.

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  • Upon reanalyzing corrected data, results of this study state that a significant relationship does exist between autism diagnosis and blood levels of mercury.

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  • Ask someone else to proofread the document for you, just to be sure that you didn't overlook anything that needs to be corrected or adjusted.

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  • If you run into problems they can be corrected immediately.

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  • This can easily be corrected by performing exercises for the upper back.

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  • Fortunately, this imbalance is easily corrected.

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  • While a faux pas may be graciously ignored (or more likely, politely corrected), it's not to be seen as "acceptable."

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  • These errors can be corrected, but they must be reported first.

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  • As long as an applicant possesses the proper paperwork then getting a new card, replacement card, or corrected card is a rather simple process.

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  • Product failure - An annual tune up can help ensure against product failure because problems can often be spotted and corrected early.

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  • Metrolyrics - Metrolyrics has all of the lyrics to all of Coldplay's songs, and users can manage the database to make sure they are corrected.

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  • Your under eye circles may be corrected by simple lifestyle changes, so consider your daily activities before reaching for expensive eye creams or calling your dermatologist.

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  • Posting privacy policies in clear, simple language and ensuring that any security flaws in social networking sites are corrected promptly should encourage millenials to use those sites more than other sites.

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  • Old football helmets can be sandblasted to remove the paint, then the imperfections are corrected.

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  • As you discover broken links, correct them immediately and re-upload the corrected web page.

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  • She punched slowly a few times until she was certain she'd corrected her punch.

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  • He gives me shit all the time, Dusty corrected him.

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  • Me, she corrected quickly.

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  • Katie, Rhyn corrected him mentally.

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  • Evelyn corrected with another giggle.

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  • Shield sights were introduced for disappearing mountings to admit of continuous laying for line, and a disk engraved for yards of range duly corrected for height, and called an " elevation indicator," replaced the index plate and reader.

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  • He died suddenly at Paris on the 8th of April 1882, a short time after having corrected the proofs of d'Arc, published in the Revue historique.

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  • The exact dates of events in Hebrew history can be determined only when the figures given in the Old Testament can be checked and, if necessary, corrected by the contemporary monuments of Assyria and Babylonia, or (as in the post-exilic period) by the knowledge which we independently possess of the chronology of the Persian kings.

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  • For once, she hadn't corrected his English, only nodded once more and held out her arm for the bracelet.

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