Merged Sentence Examples

merged
  • The car started up, and they merged into traffic.

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  • They were accepted by a population eager for repose, who had merged old class distinctions in the conflicts of preceding centuries.

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  • The duke of Marlborough, in the name of the New Telephone Company, inaugurated a campaign for cheaper telephone services, but the New Telephone Company was subsequently merged in the National Telephone Company.

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  • A pueblo or villa called Branciforte, one of the least important of the Spanish settlements (now a suburb of Santa Cruz), was founded in the vicinity in 1797, and before the American conquest was merged with the settlement that had grown up about the mission.

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  • The Normans in England did not die out; they were merged in the existing nation.

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  • He gathered round him a small circle of his immediate followers known as the Societe des Egaux, soon merged with the rump of the Jacobins, who met at the Pantheon; and in November 1795 he was reported by the police to be openly preaching "insurrection, revolt and the constitution of 1793."

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  • The longer the French remained the more these forms of town life perished, until finally all was merged into one confused, lifeless scene of plunder.

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  • They were actually married now - her identity merged indelibly with his.

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  • Until 1867 Harwich returned two members; it then lost one, and in 1885 it was merged in the county.

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  • During the separation the New Side established the college of New Jersey at Elizabethtown (now Elizabeth) in 1747, and the Log College of the Tennents was merged into it.

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  • The consuls are merged in ancients or priors, chosen from the arts.

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  • It was merged in the German kingdom; and, since for the German princes Germany was of necessity their first care, Italy from this time forward began to be left more and more to herself.

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  • The Normans in Sicily, so far as they did not die out, were merged, not in a Sicilian nation, for that did not exist, but in the common mass of settlers of Latin speech and rite, as distinguished from the older inhabitants, Greek and Saracen.

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  • From 1585 two members were regularly returned; the number was reduced to one in 1867, and in 1885 the representation was merged in that of the county.

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  • Under the Reform Act (1832) the borough became merged in the county.

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  • The peoples within the frontier had been transformed into Romanized provincials; outside, the various tribes had become merged in the common appellation of Frisians.

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  • Marlborough returned two members to parliament until 1867 when the number was reduced to one, and in 1885 the representation was merged in that of the county.

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  • Dunbar used to form one of the Haddington district group of parliamentary burghs, but its constituency was merged in that of the county in 1885.

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  • But literary criticism is merged in admiration of the wit, the humour, the vivacity, the satire of a piece which brings before us the old life of Florence in a succession of brilliant scenes.

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  • The elder branch of his descendants became extinct in the male line in 1482, and was merged through the female line in the house of Bourbon-Vendome.

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  • Thus the medieval and modern crowns may be considered as radiated diadems, and so the diadem and crown have become, as it were, merged in one another.

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  • In the 6th century it was still insignificant as compared with the neighbouring city of Tegea, and submitted more readily to Spartan overlordship. The political history of Mantineia begins soon after the Persian wars, when its five constituent villages, at the suggestion of Argos, were merged into one city, whose military strength forthwith secured it a leading position in the Peloponnesus.

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  • Aberystwyth was a contributory parliamentary borough until 1885, when its representation was merged in that of the county.

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  • If alleged Psycho- P g Logy.ic a priori constituents of knowledge - such rubrics as substance, property, relation - come to be explained psychologically, the formal logic that has perforce to ignore all that belongs to psychology is confined within too narrow a range to be able to maintain its place as an independent discipline, and tends to be merged in psychology.

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  • Tamworth sent two members to parliament from 1562 to 1885, when its representation was merged in that of the county.

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  • Those utilized were the Kaoshan (the "Hindu Kush" pass par excellence), 14,340 ft.; the Chahardar (13,900 ft.), which is a link in one of the amir of Afghanistan's high roads to Turkestan; and the Shibar (9800 ft.), which is merely a diversion into the upper Ghorband of that group of passes between Bamian and the Kabul plains which are represented by the Irak, Hajigak, Unai, &c. About this point it is geographically correct to place the southern extremity of the Hindu Kush, for here commences the Koh-i-Baba system into which the Hindu Kush is merged.

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  • The latter contained only 41 houses with 210 inhabitants in 1897 and has since been merged in the adjoining state.

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  • Some ruins on a hill exist of the old castle of the counts of Louvain whose title was merged in the higher style of the dukes of Brabant.

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  • Henceforward Etruria is finally merged in the Roman state.

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  • In 1811 he left Edinburgh, and after a visit to Sweden went to London, where in 1813 he began to edit the Annals of Philosophy, a monthly scientific journal which in 1827 was merged in the Philosophical Magazine.

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  • The Arrabbiati and the Medicean faction merged political differences in their common hatred to Savonarola.

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  • In 1752 the company had a pathway blazed between the small fortified posts at Will's Creek (Cumberland), Maryland, and at Redstone Creek (Brownsville), Pennsylvania, which it had established in 1750; but it was finally merged in the Walpole Company (an organization in which Benjamin Franklin was interested), which in 1772 had received from the British government a grant of a large tract lying along the southern bank of the Ohio as far west as the mouth of the Scioto river.

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  • Finally in 1390 Philadelphia, which had for some time been an independent Christian city, surrendered to Sultan Bayezid's mixed army of Ottoman Turks and Byzantine Christians, and the Seljuk power in the Hermus valley was merged in the Ottoman empire.

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  • These were grouped into five main geographical divisions (from 443 to 436; afterwards four, Caria being merged in Ionia).

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  • He was colour-blind to commonplace morality, and we are angry with him because he merged the hues of ethics in one grey monotone of politics.

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  • The conflicts between Catholics and Protestants speedily merged into the chronic political rivalries, domestic and foreign, which distracted the European states; and religious considerations played a very important part in diplomacy and war for at least a century and a half, from the diet of Augsburg in 1530 to the English revolution and the league of Augsburg, 1688-89.

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  • At the same time the Elswick Ordnance Company was formed to manufacture the guns under the supervision of Armstrong, who, however, had no financial interest in the concern; it was merged in the Elswick Engineering Works four years later.

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  • He founded a religious community at Birmingham, called Wilfridians, which was ultimately merged in the oratory of St Philip Neri, with John Henry Newman as Superior.

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  • The title of "official principal," together with that of "vicar-general," is in England now merged in that of "chancellor" of a diocese (see Chancellor).

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  • But the new constitution of that year substituted a court of appeals for the court of errors, merged the court of chancery into the supreme court, established in each county a new county court composed of a single judge, and, taking the appointment of judges from the governor, gave the election of them to the people.

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  • It was considered a brilliant political success, but it was not profitable, and in September 1841 was merged in the Weekly Tribune.

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  • When, as sometimes happens, two or three of these craters have merged into one, the lake attains a great size.

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  • Dual Cubes are two cubes merged together.

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  • Still, a good deal of semi-congregationalism probably did exist in obscure circles which preluded the wider Reformation and were merged in it.

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  • In September 1841 Greeley merged his weekly papers, The Log Cabin and The New Yorker, into The Weekly Tribune, which soon attained as wide circulation as its predecessors, and was much more profitable.

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  • Montaigne's widow survived him, and his daughter left posterity which became merged in the noble houses of Segur and Lur-Saluces.

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  • The postal and telegraph systems were also placed under the control of Prussia, and the representation of the Saxon crown at foreign courts was merged in that of the Confederation.

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  • They became virtually merged in the European series, stamped with official recognition over two centuries ago.

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  • In 1430 died Philip, last duke of Brabant as a separate ruler, and the duchy was merged in the possessions of the duke of Burgundy.

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  • In 1381 Leopold granted to the citizens the privilege of having a town council, while in 1462 the bishops resigned all rights of jurisdiction over the town to the Habsburgers, so that its later history is merged in that of Tirol.

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  • The great obstacle in the way of this, the only true solution of the difficulty, was the opposition of the Lithuanian magnates, who feared to lose the absolute dominancy they possessed in the grand-duchy if they were merged in the szlachta of the kingdom.

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  • The Hartford grammar school, founded in 1638, long managed by the town and in 1847 merged with the classical department of the Hartford public high school, is the oldest educational institution in the state.

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  • By 1820 this project was merged into a movement for a Chesapeake and Ohio canal along the same line.

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  • The Kuluglis,descendants of Turks by native women - once a distinct race noted for their energy, bravery and pride - have almost ceased to exist as a separate people, being merged in the Moors.

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  • These two great lines were merged in 1908, with an aggregate capital of $460,000,000 Mexican money, of which the Mexican government holds $230,004,580, or a controlling interest.

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  • The Marcomanni disappeared from history during the 4th century, being probably merged in the Baiouarii, the later Bavarians.

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  • By a statute of 1535 Brecon was made the county town of the new shire of Brecknock, and was granted the right of electing one burgess to represent it in parliament, a right which it retained till it was merged in the county representation in 1885.

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  • The Prairie States.The originally treeless prairies of the upper Mississippi basin began in Indiana and extended westward and north-westward until they merged with the drier region described Leyond as the Great Plains.

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  • Finally in 1885 its representation was merged in that of the county.

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  • Strictly speaking, none of the Lancasters after Thomas had any clear title either by grant or otherwise; such title as they had merged in the crown when Henry IV.

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  • The regular Democratic ticket was elected and the new party was then merged into the Populist party.

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  • Later, when Rome was no longer able to afford protection to the inhabitants of Gaul, the Sequani became merged in the newly formed kingdom of Burgundy.

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  • On account, however, of its opposition to President Jackson's attitude toward nullification, the States Rights party affiliated with thenew Whig party, which represented the national feeling in the South, while the Union party was merged into the Democratic party, which emphasized the sovereignty of the states.

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  • The early history of Hanover is merged in that of the duchy of Brunswick (q.v.), from which the duchy of Brunswick-Liineburg and its offshoots, the duchies of LUneburg-Celle and Luneburg-Calenberg have sprung.

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  • The differences disappear as the inherent identity of structure predominates in an everincreasing degree, and in the final unity Man is merged in God.

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  • Not long ago, in England at all events, metaphysics was merged in psychology.

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  • In return for the excesses of the democracies Rome dissolved the league, which, however, was allowed to revive under Augustus, and merged with the other central Greek federations in the Achaean synod.

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  • The large Aramaic infusion had by this time been merged in the general body of the people.

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  • Most of these elements have now become merged in the general type, but there are still many communities in which the popular language is a corrupt German dialect, largely Rheno-Franconian in its origin, known as " Pennsylvania Dutch."

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  • The anti-Masonic excitement subsided as quickly as it had risen, and under the leadership of Thaddeus Stevens the party soon became merged with the Whigs.

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  • The other commission, formerly charged with the revision of the decrees of provincial councils, was merged in the Congregation itself.

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  • The present infantry barracks were at one time occupied by the university of Wittenberg, founded in 1502, but merged in the university of Halle in 1815.

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  • Restored to independence by the congress of Vienna in 1815, it subsequently became a member of the German Confederation, and in 1867 joined the new North German Confederation, with which it was merged in the new German empire.

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  • In 1880 it was disfranchised for bribery, and in 1885 the borough was merged in the county division of Macclesfield.

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  • After the death of Herod, Archelaus became ethnarch of Samaria, Idumea and Judaea, and when he was deposed Judaea was merged in Syria, being governed by a procurator whose headquarters were in Caesarea.

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  • The general trade of Poland is merged in that of Russia, under which heading it is treated.

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  • Pop. (1903) 14,049; in October 1907 the towns of Daraga (pop. 190 3, 18,695) and Legaspi (pop. 1903, 9206) were merged with Albay, making its total population, on the basis of the 1903 census, 41,950.

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  • Paul's heresy lay principally in his insistence on the genuine humanity of Jesus of Nazareth, in contrast with the rising orthodoxy which merged his human consciousness in the divine Logos.

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  • In them the armies are incorporated in the Prussian army; the railways are generally merged in the Prussian system; indirect taxation, post office, Waldeck and nearly the whole of the judicial arrangements are imperial.

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  • Two days later the Peasants League, or Deutsche Bauernbund, which had been founded in 1885 and included some 44,000 members, chiefly from the smaller proprietors in Pomerania, Posen, Saxony and Thuringia, merged itself in the new league.

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  • The obvious sincerity which underlies this statement, combined with a certain lack of humour which peers through its naivete, points to two of the principal characteristics of Patmore's earlier poetry; characteristics which came to be almost unconsciously merged and harmonized as his style and his intention drew together into unity.

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  • When the Hainaut title became merged in the duchy of Burgundy, Mons was a place of considerable importance on account of its being a stronghold near the French frontier.

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  • Of these Victoria (Methodist) and Trinity (Anglican) are in Toronto, and have become federated with the provincial university, in which they have merged their degree-conferring powers.

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  • Naxos was settled by Sicels; Leontini was again merged in Syracuse.

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  • Westport, a little inland town - platted 1833, a city 1857, merged in Kansas City in 1899 - now a fashionable residence district of Kansas City - was a rival of Independence in the Santa Fe trade which she gained almost in toto in 1844 when the great Missouri flood (the greatest the river has known) destroyed the river landing utilized by Independence.

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  • Already before Alexander pan-hellenic feeling had in various ways overridden the internal divisions of the Greek race, but now, with the vast mingling of Greeks of all sorts in the newlyconquered lands, a generalized Greek culture in which the old local characteristics were merged, came to overspread the world.

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  • A district of Bhattiana was formed in 1837, but in 1858 it was merged in the Sirsa district, which was divided up in 1884.

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  • Yet, after all, the prospects of the burgesses depended mainly on economic conditions; and in this respect there was a decided improvement, due to the increasing importance of money and commerce all over Europe, especially as the steady decline of the Hanse towns immediately benefited the trade of Denmark-Norway; Norway by this time being completely merged in the Danish state, and ruled from Copenhagen.

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  • He continued to represent the borough, and the district into which it was merged by the Reform Act of 1885, until 1900, when his attitude towards the South African War - he was one of the foremost of the so-called "Pro-Boer" party - compelled his retirement.

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  • The county returns one member to parliament, and has done so since 1536; the borough of Brecon, with the town of Llywel, had also a separate representative from the same date till 1885, when it became merged in the county.

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  • With the failure of the last armed attempt to " break the Union," Scottish history is merged in that of Great Britain; it was a British force that routed the Jacobites at Culloden.

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  • He also founded (in 1833) and edited the American Quarterly Observer; in 1836-1841 edited the Biblical Repository (after 1837 called the American Biblical Repository) with which the Observer was merged in 1835; and was editor-in-chief of the Bibliotheca Sacra from 1844 to 1851.

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  • Traditions, oral and written, with widely differing standpoints have been brought together and merged.

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  • This periodical was merged in the U.S. Democratic Review of New York in 5842.

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  • In 1832 Launceston was shorn of one of its members, and in 1885 merged in the county.

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  • North of the main water-parting of Afghanistan the broad synclinal plateau into which the Hindu Kush is merged is traversed by the gorges of the Saighan, Bamian and Kamard tributaries of the Kunduz, and farther to the west by the Band-i-Amir or Balkh river.

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  • It will be seen, then, that the visual and photographic foci are now merged in one, and the image is practically as achromatic as that yielded by a reflector.

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  • In the latter year the representation was reduced to one, and was merged in that of the county in 1868.

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  • If both the bodies are luminous, especially if they do not differ much in brilliancy, the motion of revolution is shown by a periodic doubling of the lines of the spectrum; when one body is moving towards us and the other away their spectral lines are displaced (according to Doppler's principle) in opposite directions, so that all the lines strong enough to appear in both spectra appear double; when the two bodies are in conjunction, and therefore moving transversely, their spectra are merged into one and show nothing unusual.

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  • Hegel, having identified being with thought, merged metaphysics in logic. But he divided logic into objective and subjective, and thus practically confessed that there is one science of the objects and another of the pro cesses of thought.

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  • Starting from the obvious antithesis of thought and that of which it is the thought, it is possible to view the ultimate relation of its term as that of mutual indifference or, secondly, as that of a correspondence such that while they retain their distinct character modification of the one implies modification of the other, or thirdly and lastly, as that of a mergence of one in the other of such a nature that the merged term, whichever it be, is fully accounted for in a complete theory of that in which it is merged.

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  • It was a very small, very disingenuous, inevitably an anomalous, and in the vanity of proclamations and other concomitant incidents rather a ridiculous affair; and fortunately for the dignity of history - and for Fremont - it was quickly merged in a larger question, when Commodore John Drake Sloat (1780-1867) on the 7th of July raised the flag of the United States over Monterey, proclaiming California a part of the United States.

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  • But whereas the Greek families of earlier introduction gradually became merged in their country of adoption, the later immigrants retained their separate nationality and grew to be powerful agents for furthering the spread of Graecism in the principalities.

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  • The individual, like the phenomena of sense, comes out of the infinite and again is merged; hence on the one hand he is never a separate entity at all, while on the other hand he exists in the infinite and must continue to exist.

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  • Hence, during the Spanish tenure, the history of Nicaragua is merged in that of the surrounding region.

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  • In 1837 he was ordained elder and was appointed professor of natural science in Allegheny College, Meadville, in which Madison College had been merged in 1833; and in 1838 he was elected professor and immediately afterwards president of the newly established Indiana Asbury (now De Pauw) University, Greencastle, Indiana, to which he went in 1839; this position he held until 1848.

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  • But though the Brahmans, too, will often acquiesce in the reasonableness of such claims, it is probably only as a matter of policy that they do so, whilst in reality they regard the other two higher castes as having long since disappeared and been merged by miscegenation in the Sudra mass.

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  • Several of his friends were Collegiants, or belonged to the similarly minded community of the Mennonites, in which the Collegiants were afterwards merged.

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  • A new race of politicians was springing up. Since 1719, when the influence of the few great territorial families had been merged in a multitude of needy gentlemen, the first estate had become the nursery and afterwards the stronghold of an opposition at once noble and democratic which found its natural leaders in such men as Count Carl Gyllenborg and Count Carl Gustaf Tessin.

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  • From the 52nd to about the 31st parallel this great mountain system, known locally as the Cordillera de los Andes, apparently consists of a single chain, though in reality it includes short lateral ranges at several points; continuing northward several parallel ranges appear on the Argentine side and one on the Chilean side which are ultimately merged in the great Bolivian plateau.

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  • It is probable that his adherents became merged in the communities of the Lombard Waldenses, who shared their ideas on the corruption of the clergy.

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  • Besides tracing out the lines of Nadirabad, a town Since merged in modern Kandahar, Nadir had taken advantage of the time available and of opportunities presented to enlist a large number of men from the Abdali and Ghilzai tribes.

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  • This grade has since been merged in that of chief constable, of whom there are four exercising powers of disciplinary supervision in the metropolitan districts, and a fifth who is assistant in the branch of criminal investigation.

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  • The conflict was closed by the decision of Innocent III., that the abbacy should be merged in the new see of Bath and Glastonbury, and that Savaric should have a fourth of the property.

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  • It was a moot point whether all souls so survive, as Cleanthes thought, or the souls of the wise and good alone, which was the opinion of Chrysippus; in any case, sooner or later individual souls are merged in the soul of the universe, from which they proceeded.

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  • The circumstances of the time, such as the decay of Greek city-life, the foundation of large territorial states under absolute Greek rulers which followed upon Alexander's conquests, and afterwards the rise of the world-empire of Rome, aided to develop the leading idea of Zeno's There he had anticipated a state without family life, without law courts or coins, without schools or temples, in which all differences of nationality would be merged in the common brotherhood of man.

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  • All the titles just mentioned have been united in the line of the Earl Talbot who successfully claimed the Shrewsbury title as the 18th earl, the earldom of Shrewsbury (1442) being now the oldest existing that is not merged in a higher title.

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  • The boundaries of the city have not been essentially extended since 1860, and though large and important suburbs have crept up and practically merged with it, its administrative area remains unchanged.

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  • Pop. (1903), 11,078; in the same year the town of Consolacion (pop. 5511) was merged with Mandaue.

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  • In 1832 Liskeard was deprived of one of its members and in 1885 it became merged in the county.

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  • The Transylvania seminary was opened here in 1785, but four years later was removed to Lexington, and a Presbyterian theological seminary was founded here in 1853, but was merged with the Louisville theological seminary (known after 1902 as the Presbyterian Theological Seminary of Kentucky) in 1901.

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  • With it, in 1840, was merged the Literary and Theological Review of New York, and in 1872 the American Presbyterian Review of New York, the title becoming Presbyterian Quarterly and Princeton Review in 1872 and Princeton Review in 1.877.

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  • Soon after Alexander's death the Peripatetic school was merged, like all others, in Neoplatonism.

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  • In private life his gaiety, his buoyancy, his high breeding, made even his political opponents forget their differences; and even the warmest altercations on public affairs were merged in his large hospitality and cordial social relations.

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  • By the time of the Norman Conquest the three became merged into the estate of the crown, that is, land annexed to the crown, held by the king as king.

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  • But before leaving the consideration of the area of the county it may be added that all liberties and franchises are now merged in the county and subject to the jurisdiction of the county council.

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  • While in California in 1856, for the restoration of his health, he took an active interest in the organization, at Oakland, of the college of California (chartered in 1855 and merged in the university of California in 1869), the presidency of which he declined.

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  • While the various ethnical elements have been merged in the composite Abyssinian nation, the primitive and more advanced religious ideas have nowhere been fused in a uniform Christian system.

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  • From the date at which the south of Italy and Sicily were subjugated by the Normans the history of Naples ceases to be the history of a republic or a city, and becomes that of a kingdom, sometimes separate, sometimes merged, with the kingdom of Sicily, in that of the Two Sicilies.

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  • But the resistance, aided by Louis and merged as it now was in the cause sustained by Marsilius of Padua and John of Jandun, became daily bolder.

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  • But in process of time this group was merged with freedmen, settled slaves (servi casati) and small freedmen into the numerous class of serfs (servi, rustici, villani) which appears under different names in all western European countries.

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  • The maidenhair tree is one of the most interesting survivals from the past; it represents a type which, in the Palaeozoic era, may have been merged into the extinct class Cordaitales.

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  • Here the dynastic history of the house of York ends, for its claims were henceforth merged in those of the house of Tudor.

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  • The family of Ardrossan is now merged, by marriage, in that of the earl of Eglinton and Winton.

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  • The Silurian genera Eucladia and Euthemon have the rays greatly reduced and merged in the disk, so that the ambulacrals are unseen.

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  • Newman's retirement from the editorship; and in 1862 he merged this periodical in the Home and Foreign Review.

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  • The worship of Callisto being merged in that of the greater divinity, she became the handmaid and companion of Artemis.

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  • Gradually these kingdoms were merged in the Roman empire.

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  • The borough sent two members to parliament in 1295, and so continued to do until the Redistribution of Seats Act of 1885, when the representation was merged in that of the county.

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  • In Sweden the Lapps are gradually abandoning their nomadic habits and becoming merged in the Swedish population.

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  • The Barretts, Condons, Courcies, Savages, Arundels, Carews and others had disappeared or were merged in the Celtic mass.

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  • Out of these developed the rural deaneries, the office of archpriest being ultimately merged in that of rural dean, with which it became synonymous.

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  • The third great division was the slave population, which since 1896 has become merged in the mass of the people.

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  • This festival is now merged in the French national fete of the 14th of July.

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  • But in these provinces they have become merged in the general mass of the people.

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  • The two distinct rainy seasons of the equatorial zone, where the sun is vertical at half-yearly intervals, become gradually merged into one in the direction of the tropics, where the sun is overhead but once.

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  • Subsequently both dioceses were merged in the vast West-Saxon bishopric of Dorchester, the see of which was afterwards transferred to Winchester, and by Bishop Remigius in 1072 to Lincoln.

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  • It is served by the New York Central & Hudson River, the New York, New Haven & Hartford, the West Shore, the Central New England, and the Poughkeepsie & Eastern (merged in the Central New England) railways, and by river steamboat lines on the Hudson.

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  • But in 1739 trade difficulties, which had arisen out of the Asiento in America, led to a great war with England, which became merged in the \Var of the Austrian Succession.

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  • In1861-1866he was instructor of history at Franklin and Marshall College (in which Marshall College had been merged), of which he was president in 1866-1876.

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  • His wife, Helena de Kay, a grand-daughter of Joseph Rodman Drake, assisted, with Saint Gaudens and others, in founding the Society of American Artists, now merged in the National Academy, and the Art Students' League of New York.

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  • The Neoplatonic extravagances which lay hidden in the school from the first came in his writings to a head, and merged in pure phantasy.

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  • He was the first president of the university of Louisiana (now merged in Tulane).

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  • The subsequent history of Brandenburg is merged in that of Prussia (q.v.).

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  • She didn't know if he'd met with the Oracle or not, but his words sounded eerily like Sofi's, who had claimed her destiny merged with Darian's.

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  • She bit back her smile and returned to her myriad of ornaments, carefully laying a tissue paper over a packed box of delicate pieces, merged memories of two families, joined now by a few items of their first Christmas together.

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  • At the lock itself the embankments merged into stone built abutments which connected up with the bridge.

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  • Both these merged groups are involved in still further amalgamations, with more job losses expected.

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  • Added an optional disk cache of merged PDF forms - speeds up the initial display of these forms.

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  • Adopting flexible benefits can avoid the pressure of a merged company having to take all benefits up to the highest common denominator.

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  • In 1995, Ciba merged with another Swiss firm, Sandoz, to form the conglomerate Novartis.

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  • Derbyshire constabulary was set to be merged with four other constabularies under Government plans to create a single East Midlands force.

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  • The debate over a rule book, therefore, is not just about structure, but about democratic control of a merged union.

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  • New Media Age said ITV was now looking to appoint a controller to run the newly merged unit.

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  • The middle layer is likely to be the merged grains consumed by the intergranular corrosion.

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  • The German contingent, already decimated by the Turks, merged with the French, who had fared only slightly better, at Acre.

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  • Fig 2. An outline of the merged beam experiment; D 1 and D 2 are calibrated detectors for photons and ions.

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  • The merged entity will be in a position to take on competition in the domestic market from private players, it is felt.

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  • Categories may be split and merged as breakaway factions emerge.

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  • The Sohei Sudoku is a Gattai-4 puzzle with four merged grids.. .

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  • Hugo ralli a employer merged with of viewers worldwide.

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  • Late in the year the Reserve Mobile Force was merged with the Police to become the Arab legion.

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  • Contents of back issues of At the Edge Why At the Edge merged with 3rd Stone.

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  • But her department faces huge upheavals, with newly merged SHAs and PCTs â and a worldwide search for a new health service boss.

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  • It was her usual effort of soggy chips and even soggier fish that had all sort of merged together into one horrible gooey mess.

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  • These can be easily merged with other compliant elements to produce a highly modular repository of learning material.

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  • Horsens is another new municipality where a town is being merged with a number of smaller rural municipalities.

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  • At the next level, the objective is for architecture independence, in which control and data parallelism are merged.

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  • For merged data files, the spacegroup symmetry is used to generate the whole zone.

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  • Everything that was progressive in pre-war syndicalism merged with communism.

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  • Supplying the actual number of bytes in the longest line to be merged (or some larger value) prevents abnormal termination.

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  • Merged velocity vectors from two Antarctic HF radars describe the flow velocity variation in the boundary region.

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  • He insisted that the individual soul, as part of absolute intellect, is indestructible, and on the death of the body is merged in the eternal unity.

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  • Its fundamental idea consists in that which Vico, in his peculiar terminology, styles "poetical wisdom" (sapienza poetica) and "occult wisdom" (sapienza riposta), and in the historical process by which the one is merged in the other.

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  • A just administration, too, did not compensate for unjust laws or produce contentment; the policy of conversion and colonization was unsuccessful, the descendants of many of Cromwell's soldiers becoming merged in the Roman Catholic Irish, and the union with England, political and commercial, being extinguished at the Restoration.

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  • The ukaz of November 1906 had provided that the various strips of land held by each peasant should be merged into a single holding; the Duma, however, on the advice of the government, left this to the future, as an ideal that could only gradually be realized.

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  • The great powers of the intendant were, however, merged in those of the governorgeneral in 1853; and the captain-general having been given by royal order in 1825 (several times later explicitly confirmed, and not revoked until 1870) the absolute powers (to be assumed at his initiative and discretion) of the governor of a besieged city, and by a royal order of 1834 the power to banish at will persons supposed to be inimical to the public peace; and being by virtue of his office the president and dominator of all the important administrative boards of the government, held the government of the island, and in any emergency the liberty and property of its inhabitants, in his hand.

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  • From that point his career up to 1921 is merged in the general history of Russia (see RUSSIA), where he established himself as president of the Soviet Government.

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  • When the Semitic settlers of the age of Sargon, whom it is now common with some justice to call Akkadians (see Sumer), had become thoroughly merged in the population, there appeared a new immigrant element, the Amurru, whose advance as far as Babylonia is to be traced in the troubled history of the postGudean period, out of the confusion of which there ultimately emerged the Khammurabi dynasty.

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  • Tithe rent charge may also be merged in the land tithable, with the consent of the tithe commissioners and the landowner, by the legal and equitable owners of tithes in fee simple or fee tail, or persons having power to appoint the fee simple in tithes, or owners of glebes, or owners of lands and tithes settled to the same uses.

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  • Their duties became merged in the ordinary work of the bishops and counts, and under the emperor Charles the Bald they took control of associations 1 The history of the practice of elevating the host seems to have arisen out of the custom of holding up the oblations, as mentioned in the Ordo Romanus (see above).

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  • We seem through him to obtain a glimpse of an early post-Homeric age in Ionia, when the immediate disciples and successors of Homer were distinct figures in a trustworthy tradition - when they had not yet merged their individuality in the legendary " Homer " of the Epic Cycle.

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  • It was clear that the ancient strife of Hats and Caps had become merged in a conflict of classes; the situation was still further complicated by the ominous fact that the non-noble majority was also the Russian faction.

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  • It is impossible to give more than approximately accurate statistics of the resultant depopulation of Portugal; but it seems probable that the inhabitants of the kingdom decreased from about 1,800,000 or 2,000,000 in 1500 to The Slave thus discredited; the peasants sold their farms and p emigrated or flocked to the towns; and small holdings were merged into vast estates, unscientifically cultivated by slaves and comparable with the latifundia which caused so many agrarian evils during the last two centuries of the Roman republic. The decadence of agriculture partly explains the prevalence of famine at a time when Portuguese maritime commerce was most prosperous.

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  • The epithet Maleatas, which, as the quantity of the first vowel (a) shows,' cannot mean god of "sheep" or "the apple-tree," is probably a local adjective derived from Malea (perhaps Cape Malea), and may refer to an originally distinct personality, subsequently merged in that of Apollo (see below).

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  • A keen sense of lyrical content is merged with soaring vocals and acoustic guitar.

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  • His first featured a soaring and diving vocal merged with staccato guitar and was played with much gusto.

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  • You can create aggregate feeds (data merged from multiple logs) to assist with timeline analysis across networked computers.

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  • Lil'Bit has been known to sleep with one face while the other remains awake; this is why he is thought to have two separate brains.Lil'Bit was born with four eyes, although two of these eyes have merged together into one.

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  • On June 30, 2005, MBNA merged with Bank of America.

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  • In 2001, Microsoft merged its Home Publishing product with Picture It to create Picture It Publishing.

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  • The advances in textiles merged with technology over the last few decades have allowed quite a few specialty and novelty laces to be created.

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  • In the world of baby and toddler clothing, Carter's ranks right up there with Osh Kosh B'Gosh, who the company has merged with.

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  • Carter's children's clothing merged with Osh Kosh, and together the two brands have a near monopoly on baby and children's clothing name recognition in the US.

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  • In 1977, the college merged with Becker College.

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  • In the following list, Ampelopsis and Cissus are merged in Vitis.

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  • In 1999 they merged with Masco Corporation, and in 2007 they partnered with Home Depot-China.

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  • Yigal Azrouel's innovative gauzy cotton fabrics were layered in disheveled coolness as he merged the season's activewear notion with formal suiting and Eastern cultural inspirations.

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  • As the company expanded, it merged and partnered with other like minded companies until it had literally spread throughout the United States.

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  • In 2001, the Del Webb Corporation merged with the Pulte Group, making it the largest builder of senior communities in the country.

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  • Don't neglect Von Zipper's apparel - now aligned with Billabong, the two have merged to create some of the hottest and most versatile garments in the extreme sporting world.

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  • In 2005 Namco merged with Bandai to create Namco Bandai Holdings Inc., the third largest video games company in Japan.

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  • Sprint recently merged with Nextel, so if you were a fan of Nextel, keep your eye on Sprint.

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  • This spa location recently merged with Sona D.C., fusing together to be one of the most experienced skin care providers in the region.

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  • After decades in operation, the company merged with Cross Country to form Cross Country TravCorps, a leading provider in the travel nursing industry.

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  • The bank merged with JP Morgan Chase & Co. in 2004, and it now carries on business operations as Chase.

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  • Miracle Maternity Boutique has contemporary flair merged with comfortable designs.

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  • In 1965, the Chronicle merged with its greatest competitor-the San Francisco Examiner-and formed an operations-managing agency together.

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  • Fisher Price merged with Mattel in 1993 and is the umbrella over the infant and preschool lines of toys.

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  • In December 2007, Applica merged with the small appliance giant, Salton, Inc., in which Applica became a wholly-owned subsidiary of Salton.

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  • Because Christmas and winter solstice fall around the same time each year, people inevitably merged customs from the two holidays, beginning during Constantine’s rule.

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  • Finally, Jervin Inc. and Fisher and Camuto merged to form the Nine West Group.

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  • Starz Kids and Family was once offered as two separate channels until the network merged them in 2005.

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  • The first NFL tickets went on sale in 1966, when the AFL and NFL merged into one league.

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  • As the stores have emerged into a market where function and fashion have merged, they are now the leading retailer in the athletic marketplace.

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  • The Ice Cream is a hip hop shoe because skateboarding has merged with hip hop music, and you can't go to any city's downtown area or park without spotting someone skateboarding and wearing a pair of Ice Cream's.

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  • When the WB Network merged with the UPN Network to form the CW, the show received cancellation orders.

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  • Though I took some breaks along the way, I was still a devoted fan when I first cautiously merged onto the Information Highway in 1998.

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  • Not very often are comedy and suspense so successfully merged.

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  • Everwood television show producers had hoped that the sudsy serial would be renewed for a fifth season when The WB and UPN merged to form The CW Television Network.

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  • However, with the dawn of the Internet, many soap opera magazines have either merged or stopped publishing up all together.

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  • The series, dubbed a romantic comedy, is a whimsical ''Freaky Friday'' where both mind and intelligence are merged into the body of breakout performer Brooke Elliot.

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  • As secular art merged with the religious art of the Gothic period, more diverse pieces were produced.

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  • In 1930 the firm merged with another Swiss watchmaker, Tissot, and the combined company operated under the name SSIH.

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  • The company continued to grow and in 1983 merged with the watchmaker ASUAG to become ASUAG-SSIH.

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  • In 1930 Omega merged with another Swiss watchmaker, Tissot, and the SSIH company was born.

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  • In the 1980s SSIH merged with yet another Swiss corporation, ASUAG, to create ASUAG-SSIH, which was later taken over and renamed The Swatch Group.

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  • In 1918, William Baume (a descendant of Pierre Baume) and Paul Mercier merged into a partnership, Mercier bringing an artistic flair and superior design quality to the company.

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  • Classic styling deftly merged with high-precision is the defining characteristic of this women's Gucci watch collection.

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  • Today's manufacturers of alarm clock radios have expertly merged the home fashion industry with the personal electronics industry, ensuring a lasting place for clock radios in America's bedrooms.

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  • Aspergers and Retts may be merged into autism in the upcoming Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Health Disorders in its fifth edition.Each of these conditions is a pervasive developmental disorder and each may be called autism.

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  • Among these was Southwestern Bell, which changed its name to SBC Communications, Inc. Eventually SBC merged with the remnants of AT&T in 2005, leaving Bell South the last surviving baby bell.

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  • Eventually, Jaguar and BMC merged in 1966 and the new company also merged with Leyland Motor Corporation only two years later.

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  • When the Blue Cross and Blue Shield organizations finally merged in 1982, they were both quite popular in their own right.

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  • In March of 1902, nine of these clubs merged to form the American Automobile Association (AAA).

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  • Early doo-wop girl groups merged together and allowed singers like Frank Sinatra to come to the forefront of the music scene.

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  • He was the first person voted out after the two tribes merged, finishing the game in seventh place.

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  • Instead, the villains eliminated Courtney Yates, and JT became the first casualty after the two tribes merged.

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  • After the first five tribal councils, the two tribes merged into the Barramundi tribe.

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  • It was partially as a result of this incident that the two tribes were merged into one.

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  • After the contestants have been whittled down, usually when there are between eight and 12 contestants left, the tribes are merged into a single tribe.

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  • Following the series fifth season, UPN and the WB merged, airing five more seasons of Smallville until the series finale on May 13, 2011.

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  • In the prequel series, Caprica, fans learned more about the origins of these massive robotic creatures and finally gained insight as to how humans and technology merged to become a sentient robotic race.

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  • The Supernatural TV series debuted on September 13, 2005 on the WB Network, moving to the CW when the WB merged with UPN.

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  • It merged the Mini-Feed and Wall sections for a more streamlined interface.

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  • Then I looked up the Pinkville newspaper but it was merged into a countywide paper four years ago.

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  • From 1832 to 1885 Kendal sent one member to parliament, but since the last date its representation has been merged in that of the southern division of the county.

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  • Not till 1881, however, were the Croatian-Slavonian march-lands completely merged in the kingdoms to which they naturally belonged.

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  • It again returned, however, to the Lacys in 1287, was granted in parcels, and like their other lands became merged in the duchy of Lancaster.

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  • After the Norman Conquest the thegns appear to have been merged in the class of knights.

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  • His life work began in 1880 when he acquired the Indian Spectator, which he edited for twenty years until it was merged in the Voice of India.

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  • Love grows with the knowledge of its object, he proceeds, and at the highest stage self-love is so merged in love to God that we love ourselves only for God's sake or because God has loved us.

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  • Among many remarkable qualities they have been distinguished from the earliest times by a species of commensalism, or power of living among other nations without becoming either socially merged or politically distinct.

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  • From 1555 to 1867 the town returned two members to parliament, but in the latter year the number was reduced to one, and in 1885 the representation was merged in that of the West Riding.

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  • But in 1237 the Knights of the Sword were merged into the Teutonic Order, and Livonia became a province of the Order, with a master of its own under the grand master's control, just as, two years before, the Order had also absorbed the Knights of Dobrzin.

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  • He thinks that on the union of the kingdoms the witans were merged into one another, while the folkmoot became the shiremoot.

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  • The manor, then called Bellus Locus or Beaulieu on account of its beautiful situation, was afterwards granted to the Mortimers, in whose family it continued until it was merged in the crown on the accession of Edward IV.

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  • Towards the 6th century the legend of the woman with the issue of blood became merged in the legend of Pilate, as is shown in the writings known in the middle ages as Cura sanitatis Tiberii and Vindicta Salvatoris.

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  • The plea of the last named on behalf of Corsica served to enlist the sympathy of Napoleon in his wider speculations, and so helped to bring about that mental transformation which merged Buonaparte the Corsican in Bonaparte the Jacobin and Napoleon the First Consul and Emperor.

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  • This house merged in that of Valois in 1383, by the marriage of Margaret, daughter of Louis, count of Artois, with Philip the Bold, duke of Burgundy.

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  • These were merged in or absorbed by one high court early in the 15th century.

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  • At the Union, while the national functions of the lord high admiral were merged in the English office it was provided by the Act of Union that the Court of Admiralty in Scotland should be continued "for determination of all maritime cases relating to private rights in Scotland competent to the jurisdiction of the Admiralty Court."

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  • The native archaeologists of the present day hold a recognized position in the scientific world; the patriotic sentiment of former times, which prompted their zeal but occasionally warped their judgment, has been merged in devotion to science for its own sake, and the supervision of excavations, as well as the control of the art-collections, is now in highly competent hands.

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  • In 1832 Helston lost one of its members, and in 1885 it lost the other and became merged in the county.

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  • There is the pure Papuan, who has been largely merged in the Kei type.

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  • Ten years later it became one of the wards of Trinidad, under a warden and magistrate; its revenue, expenditure and debt were merged into those of the united colony, and Trinidadian law, with very few exceptions, was made binding in Tobago.

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  • For this he was arraigned before the Conference of 1796 and expelled, and he then founded the Methodist New Connexion (1798, merged since 1906 in the United Methodist Church).

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  • In the 18th century we find the distinction between the three classes named above effaced and all of them merged in the class of serfs, who were the property either of the landed proprietors or of the state.

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  • The reserve fund is increased by the interest it may earn, but when the capital amount of the fund reaches £T2,000,000 the interest earned is merged in the general receipts of the public debt administration.

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  • At the close of the Crimean War a British bank was opened in 1856 at Constantinople under the name of the Ottoman Bank, with a capital of £500,000 fully paid up. In 1863 this was merged in an Anglo-French bank, under a concession from the Turkish government, as a state bank under the name of the Imperial Ottoman Bank, with a capital of £2,700,000, increased in 1865 to £4,050,000 and in 1875 to £10,000,000, one-half of which is paid up. The original concession to the year 1893 was in 1875 extended to 1913, and in 1895 to 1925.

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  • The arrival of the Spaniards at Constance necessitating the formation of a fifth nation, Pierre d'Ailly availed himself of the opportunity to ask either that the English nation might be merged in the German, or that each great nation might be allowed to divide itself into little groups each equivalent to the English nation.

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  • Once at Jerusalem, it seems to have lost its unique value as the token of Yahweh's presence; its importance was apparently merged with that of the Temple which Solomon built.

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  • After holding their own view for some years the four cities accepted the Confession of Augsburg, and were merged in the general body of Lutherans; but Zwingli's position was incorporated in the Helvetic Confession.

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  • The mark then became merged in the duchy of Saxony, and at the partition of 1485 fell to the Albertine line.

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  • In Rio Grande do Sul, where two large lakes have been created by uplifted sand beaches, the coastal plain widens greatly, and is merged in an extensive open, rolling grassy plain, traversed by ridges of low hills (cuchillas), similar to the neighbouring republic of Uruguay.

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  • He is called by the townspeople Jean de Nivelles, a celebrated baron of the 15th century whose title eventually became merged in that of the count de Homes (Horn).

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  • Syracuse was now simply one of the provincial cities of Rome's empire, and its history is henceforward merged in that of Sicily.

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  • The latter became law in 1892, and the former was merged in the Benefices Bill, which passed in 1898, after his death.

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  • Previous to the act of 1903 the County Council had educational powers under the Technical Technical Instructions Acts which enabled it to provide Technical technical education through a special board, merged by the act of 1903 in the education committee.

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  • For judicial purposes Westminster was merged with the county of London in 1889, and the Liberty of the Tower was abolished in 1894.

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  • In the 2nd century the patriarchal element in the organization was merged in the administrative, and the presbyters 1 Diss.

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  • At the same instant the sun came fully out from behind the clouds, and the clear sound of the solitary shot and the brilliance of the bright sunshine merged in a single joyous and spirited impression.

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  • And the fear of death and of the stretchers, and love of the sun and of life, all merged into one feeling of sickening agitation.

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  • The sound of voices, the tramping feet, the horses' hoofs moving in mud, the crackling of wood fires near and afar, merged into one tremulous rumble.

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  • Irresistible drowsiness overpowered him, red rings danced before his eyes, and the impression of those voices and faces and a sense of loneliness merged with the physical pain.

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  • The shouting grew still louder and merged into a general roar that only an army of several thousand men could produce.

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  • Toward morning all these dreams melted and merged into the chaos and darkness of unconciousness and oblivion which in the opinion of Napoleon's doctor, Larrey, was much more likely to end in death than in convalescence.

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  • The earth in the kitchen garden looked wet and black and glistened like poppy seed and at a short distance merged into the dull, moist veil of mist.

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  • All he saw about him merged into a general impression of naked, bleeding human bodies that seemed to fill the whole of the low tent, as a few weeks previously, on that hot August day, such bodies had filled the dirty pond beside the Smolensk road.

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  • Each instrument--now resembling a violin and now a horn, but better and clearer than violin or horn--played its own part, and before it had finished the melody merged with another instrument that began almost the same air, and then with a third and a fourth; and they all blended into one and again became separate and again blended, now into solemn church music, now into something dazzlingly brilliant and triumphant.

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  • Each drop tried to spread out and occupy as much space as possible, but others striving to do the same compressed it, sometimes destroyed it, and sometimes merged with it.

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  • As in every large household, there were at Bald Hills several perfectly distinct worlds which merged into one harmonious whole, though each retained its own peculiarities and made concessions to the others.

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  • The sensation of those terrible whistling sounds and of the corpses around him merged in Rostov's mind into a single feeling of terror and pity for himself.

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  • The newly christened Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Gustefson were finally merged into one apartment and blissfully drifting back to a day to day routine.

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  • Traci joined them, coffee in hand, and they merged into the crowded mall.

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