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and jet
If a person synthesizes ’ a jet plane landing ’ sound, this is achieved mostly by altering the shape of the mouth to filter the white noise into pink noise by removing the higher frequencies.
EDM is often included in the non-traditional ’ or non-conventional ’ group of machining methods together with processes such as electrochemical machining ( ECM ), water jet cutting ( WJ, AWJ ), laser cutting and opposite to the conventional ’ group ( turning, milling, grinding, drilling and any other process whose material removal mechanism is essentially based on mechanical forces ).
The flower has long been associated with human manner, as one man cleverly stated: “ Nature sports as much with the colours of this little flower as she does with the features of the human countenance .” The pansy ’ s particular connection to human thought and emotion is mirrored in one Dr. Evan ’ s poems, where he captures the whimsical, yet deep emotional roots of the pansy ’ s symbolism: “ Pied Pansy ,-once a vestal fair / In Cerestrain ,-now droops-/ Stained by the bolt of love her purple breast ,/ And freaked with jet ’ her party-colored vest ”.
; beta: the ratio of the jet speed to the speed of light, sometimes called relativistic beta ’

and industry
Now the most commonly understood meaning of the term ballad, sentimental ballads, sometimes called " tear-jerkers " or " drawing-room ballads " owing to their popularity with the middle classes, had their origins in the early Tin Pan Alley ’ music industry of the later 19th century.
Burnt Kimmeridgian shale at Early Roman Silchester, south-east England, and the Roman Poole-Purbeck complex-agglomerated geomaterials industry ’, Oxford Journal of Archaeology 26 ( 2 ): 167-191.
There are 2 main standards of tablet tooling used in pharmaceutical industry: American standard TSM ’ and European standard EU ’.
There was a structural change in the economy from industry to services, which, along with the arrival of trans-Tasman retail chains and an increasingly cosmopolitan hospitality industry, led to a new café culture ’ enjoyed by more affluent New Zealanders.
The reporter in the Statistical Account noted that in Wigtown, as in almost all the other towns in Galloway, there was a want of industry ; however, something of a manufacturing spirit has arisen in this part of the county ’.
While men have a place in the industry as overseers, it is still primarily considered to be women ’ s work ’.
The Court found that the existence of a burden on out-of-state plastic industry was not clearly excessive ’ in comparison to the state ’ s interest in promoting conservation.
He claimed, “ the best sites for earth art ’ are sites that have been disrupted by industry, reckless urbanization, or nature ’ s own devastation .” While in earlier 18th-century formal characterizations of the pastoral and the sublime, something like a “ gash in the ground ” if encountered by a “ leveling improver ”, as described by Price, would have been smoothed over and the whole composition returned to a more aesthetically pleasing contour For Smithson, however, it was not necessary that the deformation become a visual aspect of a landscape ; by his anti-formalist logic, more important was the temporal scar worked over by natural or human intervention.
As the guitarist of global conquerors, Kajagoogoo – one of the few British bands ever to have cracked ’ the United States – his vast insight and knowledge of the music industry endures as an invaluable source of inspiration and motivation for Lu.
Pontypridd was in the second half of the 19th century a hive of industry, and was once nicknamed the Wild West ’.
Environmental scanning can be defined as the study and interpretation of the political, economic, social and technological events and trends which influence a business, an industry or even a total market ’.
In the meantime the economic situation in Italy had also changed and with ambitious plans for diversification undermined by the difficulties being experienced by Italian industry in general, Zanussi slipped towards serious financial crisis in the late 70s and the first half of the 1980s.
The industry forces ’ paradigm was established most firmly by Michael Porter, ( 1980 ) in his seminal book Competitive Strategy ’, the ideas of which still form the basis of strategy analysis in many consulting firms and investment companies.
Richard Rumelt ( 1991 ) was amongst the first to challenge this presumption of the power of industry forces ’, and it has since become well-understood that business factors are more important drivers of performance than are industry factors – in essence, this means you can do well in difficult industries, and struggle in industries where others do well.
The increasing interest in how some businesses in an industry perform better than others led to the emergence of the resource based view ’ ( RBV ) of strategy ( Wernerfelt, 1984 ; Barney, 1991 ; Grant, 1991 ), which seeks to discover the firm-specific sources of superior performance – an interest that has increasingly come to dominate research.
Although it has no dedicated art gallery, fine pieces of sculpture can be found in the town ’ s environs, including the Sock Man ’, a bronze statue celebrating Loughborough ’ s association with the hosiery industry.
London, unsurprisingly, was the most common location mentioned in English folk songs, including London is a Fine Town ’, and the London Prentice ’ and it was the centre of the broadside publishing industry.
Utilizing extensive archival research, and broad consultation, including 27 original interviews with key industry players involved with the AFI since the 1950s ( including Dr George Miller, Phillip Adams and Barry Jones ), the book makes a major contribution to Australian screen history through the testimony of those who were there, observers and historians, who offer readers an understanding of Australian film history from a never before told AFI insiders ’ perspective.
" There is absolutely no connection between the loan and a letter that I wrote to PM ’ s steering committee Charles Walker as chairman on sugar industry reforms that Qarase released to the media as his proof ’ that I had received a commission from the loan ," he added.

and allied
Lord Lovat, the Father ’ of the Forestry Commission, had extensive landholdings in Scotland, and it was in the Highlands that he and other Scottish landowners such as Sir John Stirling-Maxwell conceived the scheme of land settlement allied to forestry.
As David McMahan stated,allied Buddhism with scientific rationalism in implicit criticism of orthodox Christianity, but went well beyond the tenets of conventional science in extrapolating from the Romantic-and Transcendentalist-influenced occult sciences ’ of the nineteenth century .”
The history of the Society was closely allied for many of its earlier years with colonial ’ exploration in Africa, the Indian subcontinent, the polar regions, and central Asia especially.
* Shuswap Indian Band ( Kyaknuqⱡiʔit or Kisamni in Ktunaxa, are culturally Upper Kootenay, a Secwepemc group which called themselves Tsqwatstens-kucw ne Casliken-‘ People between two mountain ranges ', this group of the Shuswap Indian Band, known as Kinbasket Shuswap Band ’, moved no later than the 18th Century in the Upper Columbia River Valley where they were allied to the Ktuanxa and Stoney, through intermarriages with Ktunaxa they became part of the tribe.
Isma il also allied himself with the Banu Jalaf of Barbitanya, marrying Sayyida, daughter of Abd Allah ibn Jalaf.
* In 20th-century history, art history, linguistics, and allied fields: Now largely out of favor, it consisted of " lands including Burma, Java, Cambodia, Bali, and the former Champa and Funan polities of present-day Vietnam ," in which pre-Islamic Indian culture left an " imprint in the form of monuments, inscriptions and other traces of the historic Indianising ’ process.
Bees, wasps, ants & allied insects of the British Isles ’, Edward Step ( 1932 ) says the Smaller Horntail ( Sirex noctilio ) is only about half the size of the Greater Horntail, with pale brown legs and the rest metallic blue-black.

and trades
Re-erected at the Museum it stands as a monument to Mary Macarthur and her campaign to establish a national minimum wage in the sweated trades ’ where people worked long hours for poverty wages typically in appalling conditions.
During this period Mark Young, then with the Electrical Trades Union ( and also on the trades union side of the NJC ) had acted as an honest broker ’ between the two sides.
Even as the demand for some services is declining – for those offered by cobblers, for example, there are newer trades that are springing up – car and tractor mechanics, for instance, based on apprenticeship and on the job training ’ systems.
A self-proclaimed jack of all trades ’, Williamson would also fill in as team mascot on occasion, and could be spotted joining the Yell Team ’ from time to time.

and Roman
The Roman historian Tacitus states that Agrippina had an impressive record as wife and mother ’.
Julia Agrippina, most commonly referred to as Agrippina Minor or Agrippina the Younger, and after 50 known as Julia Augusta Agrippina ( Minor Latin for the younger ’, Classical Latin: ;, 7 November 15 or 6 November 16 – 19 / 23 March 59 ) was a Roman Empress and one of the more prominent women in the Julio-Claudian dynasty.
You declaim bitterly against the luxury of priests, the ambition of bishops, the tyranny of the Roman Pontiff, and the babbling of the sophists ; against our prayers, fasts, and Masses ; and you are not content to retrench the abuses that may be in these things, but must needs abolish them entirely ... Look around on this Evangelical ’ generation, and observe whether amongst them less indulgence is given to luxury, lust, or avarice, than amongst those whom you so detest.
Pottery and Britain ’ s foreign trade in the Later Roman period ’, in Peacock, D. P. S.
Britain and the Roman Empire: the evidence for regional and long distance trade ’, in Jones, R. F. J.
Coasting Britannia: Roman trade and traffic around the shores of Britain ’, in Gosden, C. Hamerow, H. de Jersey, P. and Lock, G.
Roman amphoras in Britain ’, Internet Archaeology 1.
The economy of Roman Britain ’, in Todd, M.
Economic Long Waves ’ in the Roman Period?
" British Imperialist strategy often but not always used the concept of terra nullius ( Latin expression which stems from Roman law meaning empty land ’).
However, some historians consider Trajan's Column to be inaccurate as a historical source due to its inaccurate and stylized portrayal of Roman armor: "... it is probably safest to interpret the Column reliefs as impressions ’, rather than accurate representations.
There are, however, important unresolved doctrinal differences separating Roman Catholicism and Methodism, which include " the nature and validity of the ministry of those who preside at the Eucharist, the precise meaning of the Eucharist as the sacramental memorial ’ of Christ ’ s saving death and resurrection, the particular way in which Christ is present in Holy Communion, and the link between eucharistic communion and ecclesial communion.
For instance, in Germany, theological faculties at state universities are typically tied to particular denominations, Protestant or Roman Catholic, and those faculties will offer denominationally bound ( konfessionsgebunden ) degrees, and have denominationally bound public posts amongst their faculty ; as well as contributing to the development and growth of Christian knowledge ’ they provide the academic training for the future clergy and teachers of religious instruction at German schools .’
Some modern historians have dubbed him the Emperor of the North ’ because of his position as one of the magnates of medieval Europe and as a reflection of the Holy Roman Empire to the south.
The name " chickpea " traces back through the French to, Latin for chickpea ’ ( from which the Roman cognomen Cicero was taken ).
As John Gillies has argued “ the orientalism ’ of Cleopatra ’ s court — with its luxury, decadence, splendour, sensuality, appetite, effeminacy and eunuchs — seems a systematic inversion of the legendary Roman values of temperance, manliness, courage ”.
As Patrick Wormald explained, “ One of the common misconceptions is that there was a Roman Church ’ to which the Celtic ’ was nationally opposed .” Celtic-speaking areas were part of Latin Christendom as a whole at a time in which there was significant regional variation of liturgy and structure with a general collective veneration of the Bishop of Rome that was no less intense in Celtic areas.
So the name can also be analysed as * Ab-Andinus Andinus of the River ,’ Andinus being a theonym attested elsewhere in the ancient Roman Empire.
Latin-n-in cani-n-us canine ' from Latin cani-s " dog ," Latin Roma-n-us Roman ’ from Latin Roma Rome ;’ Modern English wood-en from wood and ash-en from ash ).

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