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', and forms
Other forms of agate include Lake Superior agate, carnelian agate ( exhibiting reddish hues ), Botswana agate, blue lace agate, plume agates, moss agate, tube agate ( with visible flow channels or pinhole-sized ' tubes '), fortification agate ( which exhibit little or no banding structure ), fire agate ( which has internal flash or ' fire ', the result of a layer of clear agate over a layer of hydrothermally-deposited hematite ), Mexican crazy-lace agate, which often exhibits a brightly colored, complexly banded pattern ( also called Rodeo Agate and Rosetta Stone depending on who owned the mine at the time ).
The masculine forms for German articles, e. g., ' the ', ' a / an ', ' my ', etc., change in the accusative case: they always end in-en.
Note that unlike Hypatia he did not study ' mathematics, philosophy and astronomy ', thus he and his followers came into conflict with the ancient University of Alexandria which pursued all forms of knowledge including science and human anatomy, politics and history according to the model inaugurated by Alexander the Great, the founder of Alexandria.
For example, ancient Hindu religious texts list clairvoyance amongst other forms of ' clear ' experiencing, as siddhis, or ' perfections ', skills that are yielded through appropriate meditation and personal discipline.
Alfred Korzybski criticized the use of the verb " to be ", and stated that, " Any proposition containing the word ' is ' its other forms ' are ,' ' be ', etc.
The tradition of diglossia, the simultaneous existence of vernacular and archaizing written forms of Greek, was renewed in the modern era in the form of a polarization between two competing varieties: Dimotiki, the vernacular form of Modern Greek proper, and Katharevousa, meaning ' purified ', an imitation of classical Greek, which was developed in the early 19th century and used for literary, juridic, administrative and scientific purposes in the newly formed modern Greek state.
" By the eighteenth century these unorthodox religious and philosophical concerns were well defined as ' occult ', inasmuch as they lay on the outermost fringe of accepted forms of knowledge and discourse ," They were, however, preserved by antiquarians and mystics.
The President is normally referred to as ' President ' or ' Uachtarán ', rather than ' Mr / Madam President ' or similar forms.
The plays were performed by a combination of professionals and amateurs and were written in highly elaborate stanza forms ; they were often marked by the extravagance of the sets and ' special effects ', but could also be stark and intimate.
' An ' and ' a ' are modern forms of the Old English ' an ', which in Anglian dialects was the number ' one ' ( compare ' on ', in Saxon dialects ) and survived into Modern Scots as the number ' ane '.
Even more curiously, we often find both * þ and * d as reflexes of PIE * t in different forms of one and the same root, e. g. * werþanan ' to turn ', preterite singular * warþ ' he turned ', but preterite plural and past participle * wurd-( plus appropriate inflections ).
The later, secular literature of ancient Egypt includes the ' wisdom texts ', forms of philosophical instruction.
For example, the British Army generally adopted a white leather strap with a large acorn knot made out of gold wire for infantry officers at the end of the 19th century ; such acorn forms of tassels were said to be ' boxed ', which was the way of securing the fringe of the tassel along its bottom line such that the strands could not separate and become entangled or lost.
* a Dux et praeses provinciae Mauritaniae et Caesariensis, i. e., a Roman governor of the rank of Vir spectabilis, who also holds the high military command of ' duke ', as the superior of eight border garrison commanders, each styled Praepositus limitis, named ( genitive forms ) Columnatensis, Vidensis, Praepositus limitis inferioris ( i. e., lower border ), Fortensis, Muticitani, Audiensis, Caputcellensis and Augustensis.
The '- gee ', '- helion ' and '- astron ' and '- galacticon ' forms are frequently used in the astronomical literature, while the other listed forms are occasionally used, although '- saturnium ' has very rarely been used in the last 50 years.
The uniform takes many forms internationally but is characterized by the ' S ' insignia for ' Salvation ' and carries the meaning ' Saved to Serve ', or ' Saved to Save '.
One of her names, Hara ( mentioned in Narada-pancaratra 5. 5. 59 ), in vocative Hare, forms a part of the Hare Krishna ' Maha-Mantra ', one of the most popular Vedic mantras, especially among certain sects of Gaudiya Vaishnavas ( some other sects among Gaudiya Vaishnavas explain that the word " Hare " in the mantra is the vocative form of " Hari ", which is also a name of God ).
For example, Latin volo, velle, volui, and other such forms from the Proto-Indo-European root * wel (' to will ') were represented by words derived from * gher (' to desire '): Oscan herest (' he shall want, he shall desire ', English cognate ' yearn ') as opposed to Latin vult ( id .).
Together with eighteen other municipalities it forms the ' Knooppunt Arnhem-Nijmegen ' ( English: ' Arnhem-Nijmegen conurbation '), or simply ' KAN ', which is a regional collaboration.

', and address
However Michael Wilcock, formally of Trinity College, Bristol, argues that Elijah's letter: ' does address a very ' northern ' situation in the southern kingdom ', and thus is authentic.
The General Assembly cannot make binding resolutions, only ' recommendations ', but through its adoption of the " Uniting for Peace " resolution ( A / RES / 377 A ), of 3 November 1950, the Assembly declared that it has the power to authorize the use of force, under the terms of the UN Charter, in cases of breaches of the peace or acts of aggression, provided that the Security Council, owing to the negative vote of a permanent member, fails to act to address the situation.
However, if a user on any 2 or more processors examines the file address that record type ' FRED ', ordinal ' 5 ' resolves to, they will note a different physical address is used.
However a resolution of the Bar Council of India calls upon lawyers not to address the judges as ' lord ' or ' lady ', questioning the association with nobility within a constitutional democracy.
Since his manners and tastes were different than the other characters ', his creators hoped to address social issues by using his differences as a metaphor for racial and ethnic differences.
The village was home to seven public houses, including ' The Talbot ', ' The Bulls Head ', ' The Royal Oak ', ' The Bridge House ', ' The White Hart ', ' The Blacksmiths Arms ' and ' The Lord Shrewsbury ' ( formerly The Wild Duck, renamed The Lord Shrewsbury ; ' Lord ' is an acceptable form of oral address for an Earl ).
Some examples are forms of address ( such as " Hey guys " or " Dear Sirs ") and masculine nouns and pronouns ( such as ' mankind ', ' man ' or ' he ') to refer to both men and women.
The National Union of Rail, Maritime and Transport Workers ( RMT union ) held a conference in January 2006 to address what it calls ' the crisis in working class representation ', in which Socialist Party councillor and Campaign for a New Workers ' Party chair Dave Nellist was invited to speak.
When a program was running in ' problem state ', using a privileged instruction or an invalid memory address would cause the hardware to raise an exception condition.
Upon de-merger from the DHSS the Department of Health was commonly abbreviated in internal Governmental correspondence to ' DoH ', which was also used in staff email address endings (@ doh. gsi. gov. uk ).
When Palmerston upped the ante by receiving at his house, instead of Kossuth, a delegation of Trade Unionists from Islington and Finsbury, and listened sympathetically as they read an address that praised Kossuth and declared the Emperors of Austria and Russia ' despots, tyrants and odious assassins ', it was noted as a mark of indifference to Royal displeasure.
For the first decade of its existence, there were many separate interpretations of what LD should be, with people fundamentally differing on what a case should read like, how debaters should advance arguments and address their opponents ', and what criteria should be used to judge a round.
Made in July 1912, from his address, ‘ Selsey ’, 63 Stanhope Road, Streatham, his estate is left to ' a dear friend ', Mabel Hedgecoe.
Thus an example could be to ' jump indirect on the r1 register ', which would mean that the next instruction to be executed would be at the address whose value is in register r1.
In some cases even a paper address book can be classified as a ' relevant filing system ', for example diaries used to support commercial activities such as a salesperson's diary.
The word " Ardās " is derived from Persian word ' Arazdashat ', meaning a request, supplication, prayer, petition or an address to a superior authority.
* Require name and address where they have reason to believe a person has committed a road traffic offence, a ' relevant offence ', a licencing offence, an act of anti-social behaviour or is in possession of a controlled drug
Part of the fort is also under ' UK vending ', whose address is Fort Bridgewood.
The Qur ’ anic Concept of Justice, Polylog, forum for Intercultural Philosophizing ', No. 3 ( June 2001 ): Website address:

', and always
In Harper's book ( The Passions Of Great Fortune ), his comment on the song ends ".. there must always be some hope that the children of ' Bloody Sunday ', on both sides, can grow into some wisdom ".
I do not add ' within the limits of the law ', because law is often but the tyrant's will, and always so when it violates the rights of the individual.
He noted, ' Captains ... to be successful must possess, in a marked degree, initiative, resource, determination, and no fear of accepting responsibility ', and particularly regarding wartime conditions '... as a rule instructions will be of a very general character so as to avoid interfering with the judgement and initiative of captains ... The admiral will rely on captains to use all the information at their disposal to grasp the situation quickly and anticipate his wishes, using their own discretion as to how to act in unforeseen circumstances ..' The approach outlined by Beatty contradicted the views of many within the navy, who felt that ships should always be closely controlled by their commanding admiral, and harked back to reforms attempted by Admiral George Tryon.
The Gaelic triangular, wire-strung harp has always been known by the feminine term cruit but by 1204 was certainly known by the masculine term ' clàr ' ( board ) and, by the 14th century, by the feminine form of ' clàr ', i. e., ' clàirseach / clàrsach '.
Ribbentrop quickly learned that Hitler always favoured the most radical solution to any problem, and accordingly tended his advice in that direction as a Ribbentrop aide recalled: When Hitler said ' Grey ', Ribbentrop said ' Black, black, black '.
Also, there is always a delay, called the ' propagation delay ', from a change in input of a gate to the corresponding change in its output.
When he decries Bentham's application of the ' yard measure ' of now to ' the past, present and future ', he decries the implication that society, and people, have always been, and will always be, as they are now ; that is, he criticizes essentialism.
Haiti Carnival always starts in January, known as ' Pre-Kanaval ', and the main carnival activities begin in February each year.
Though in general the witan were recognized as the king's closest advisors and policy-makers, various witan also operated in other capacities ; there are mentions of þeodwitan, ' people's witan ', Angolcynnes witan, ' England's witan ', and an Anglo-Saxon Archbishop of York, Wulfstan II, wrote that " it is incumbent on bishops, that venerable witan always travel with them, and dwell with them, at least of the priesthood ; and that they may consult with them .. and who may be their counsellors at every time.
At any sampled timeframe, the " truth value " of the brake temperature will almost always be in some degree part of two membership functions: i. e.: ' 0. 6 nominal and 0. 4 warm ', or ' 0. 7 nominal and 0. 3 cool ', and so on.
By tradition usually wear a cloak called ' kirtle ', men always wear a white kirtle ; women, a gray one.
For example, space-time cannot empirically be split into ' space ' + ' time ', a conscious organism ( including humans ) cannot be split into ' body ' + ' mind ', etc., therefore, people should never speak of ' space ' and ' time ' or ' mind ' and ' body ' in isolation, but always use the terms space-time or mind-body ( or other organism-as-a-whole terms ).
General semantics resolves the issue in favor of determinism of a special kind called ' infinite-valued ' determinism which always allows for the possibility that relevant ' causal ' factors may be ' left out ' at any given date, resulting in, if the issue is not understood at that date, ' indeterminism ', which simply indicates that our ability to predict events has broken down, not that the world is ' indeterministic '.
* " Of course, there will always be those who look only at technique, who ask ' how ', while others of a more curious nature will ask ' why '.
He called his approach towards Judaism ' Positive-Historical ', which meant that one should accept Jewish law and tradition as normative, yet one must be open to changing and developing the law in the same historical fashion that Judaism has always historically developed.
Across the eight states and territories within Australia, there is a mix of requirements for landscape architects to be ' Registered ', however it is not always a statutory requirement to be registered with AILA to practice use the term " Landscape Architect ".
In contrast to his predecessor Allan Border, who acquired the nickname ' Captain Grumpy ', Taylor won plaudits for his always cheerful and positive demeanour.

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