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paraphrased and from
The most well known version is that written by Gerald Gardner, and includes material paraphrased works by Aleister Crowley, primarily from Liber ALThe Book of the Law ( particularly from Ch 1, spoken by Nuit, the Star Goddess ), and from his Liber XV: the Gnostic Mass as well as Liber LXV ( Liber Cordis Cincti Serpente, or the Book of the Heart Girt with the Serpent ), thus linking modern Wicca irrevocably to the cosmology and revelations of Thelema.
The second paragraph is largely derived and paraphrased from the words that Aradia, the messianic daughter of Diana, speaks to her followers in Charles Godfrey Leland's 1899 book Aradia, or the Gospel of the Witches, London: David Nutt ; various reprints.
A paraphrased extract from Howard Carter's diary of 26 November 1922 is used as the plaintext for Part 3 of the encrypted Kryptos sculpture at the CIA Headquarters in Langley, Virginia.
The standard has three different levels for interchange, here paraphrased from section 10:
Authors frequently copied and paraphrased passages without acknowledgement, especially from the classics. The latest research suggests that he may in fact have used bibliomancy for this — randomly selecting a book of history or prophecy and taking his cue from whatever page it happened to fall open at.
Latin versions of both had recently been published in Lyon, and extracts from both are paraphrased ( in the second case almost literally ) in his first two verses, the first of which is appended to this article.
Trudeau paraphrased the term from Martin O ' Malley's editorial piece in the The Globe and Mail on December 12, 1967.
" A similar sentence, likely paraphrased from Gregory, appears in a work published by Christian Wolff in 1724.
The standard approach to ontological commitment has been that, once a theory has been regimented and / or " paraphrased " into an agreed " canonical " version, which may indeed be in formal logical notation rather than the original language of the theory, ontological commitments can be read off straightforwardly from the presence of certain ontologically committing expressions ( e. g. bound variables of existential quantification ).
" ( paraphrased from the book ) may be an allusion to his use of the palantír.
In 1945, Layden remarked that the AAFC, still a year from its first game, should “ first get a ball, then make a schedule, and then play a game .” This insult, often paraphrased as " Tell them to get a ball first ," would be long remembered.
* In the System Of A Down song " Deer Dance ", about police brutality against peaceful protest, Zinn is paraphrased in the line " We can't afford to be neutral on a moving train " and in their song " AD. D " from their album Steal This Album!
The statement made by " Mayor Tilman " to the FBI agents is paraphrased from a quote by U. S. Senator James Eastland, who reportedly said that when the three civil rights workers ( Mickey Schwerner, James Chaney, and Andrew Goodman ) went missing in Mississippi on June 21, 1964, " the incident is a hoax and there is no Ku Klux Klan in the state ; the three have gone to Chicago ", and that it was staged by the three young men to call attention to their cause.
The inscription reads " Hier steh ich an den Marken meiner Tage " ( Here I stand at the marches of my days ), a paraphrased line from the sonnet Abschied vom Leben ( Farewell from Life ) by Theodor Körner ( author ) | Theodor Körner. Dietrich's final on-camera film appearance was a cameo role in Just a Gigolo ( 1979 ), starring David Bowie and directed by David Hemmings.
At a press-conference on the affair, Haughey was paraphrased as having described the affair as " grotesque, unbelievable, bizarre and unprecedented ", from which journalist and former politician Conor Cruise O ' Brien coined the term GUBU.
Alexander's proverbial phrase ( actually, paraphrased Math. 26: 52 ) " Whoever will come to us with a sword, from a sword will perish ," has become a slogan of Russian patriots.
Theognis himself might be imitating others: each of the longer hexameter lines is loosely paraphrased in the shorter pentameter lines, as if he borrowed the longer lines from some unknown source ( s ) and added the shorter lines to create an elegiac version.
The phrase " shouting fire in a crowded theater " was also paraphrased from this portion of the Court's opinion.
The mission ’ s primary science objectives, as paraphrased from the original proposal fact sheet, were:
In 1739 he had published a collection of sacred poems by himself and other writers, mostly paraphrased from the Bible.

paraphrased and &
* " You can be a king or a street sweeper but everyone dances with the grim reaper ", a quote paraphrased from Bill & Ted's Bogus Journey, was the final statement of convicted murderer Robert Alton Harris, who died in California's gas chamber April 21, 1992.
The following are simple equations paraphrased from the Peurifoy & Schexnayder text:

paraphrased and .
The poem was written in Sapphic stanzas, a verse form popularly associated with his compatriot, Sappho, but in which he too excelled, here paraphrased in English to suggest the same rhythms.
The rest of fr. 350 was paraphrased in prose by the historian / geographer Strabo.
Americans tend to apply quotations when signifying doubt of veracity ( sarcastically or seriously ), to imply another meaning to a word or to imply a cynical take on a paraphrased quotation, without punctuation at all.
There is also a poetic paraphrased version written by High Priestess Doreen Valiente in the mid 1950s, which is contained within the traditional Gardnerian Book of Shadows.
Kant's description of the making of a concept has been paraphrased as "... to conceive is essentially to think in abstraction what is common to a plurality of possible instances ..." ( H. J.
However, in many traditions ( given the inherent tendency of Christian liturgical texts to ossification ), it was not unusual for subsequent Christian generations to seek to provide paraphrased Gospel versions in language closer to the vernacular of their own day.
Ælfric of Eynsham paraphrased Bede into Old English, saying " Now the Earth's roundness and the Sun's orbit constitute the obstacle to the day's being equally long in every land.
Following are his five axioms, somewhat paraphrased to make the English easier to read.
* Sappho's countryman and contemporary, the lyric poet Alcaeus, paraphrased a section of Works and Days ( 582 – 88 ), recasting it in lyric meter and Lesbian dialect.
* The lyric poet Bacchylides quoted / paraphrased Hesiod in a victory ode addressed to Hieron of Syracuse, commemorating the tyrant's win in the chariot race at the Pythian Games 470 BC, the attribution made with these words: " A man of Boeotia, Hesiod, minister of the Muses, spoke thus: ' He whom the immortals honour is attended also by the good report of men.
This might be paraphrased: " O warrior, we carried gold on our arms during all of Hakon's life ; now the enemy of the people has hidden gold in the earth.
Rather, he paraphrased them and rewrote them into one continuous narrative that covered four volumes, followed by two volumes of footnotes that give specific sources.
Another use for Leet orthographic substitutions is the creation of paraphrased passwords.
For example, the axiom AC < sub > 11 </ sub > can be paraphrased to say that for any relation R on the set of real numbers, if you have proved that for each real number x there is a real number y such that R ( x, y ) holds, then there is actually a function F such that R ( x, F ( x )) holds for all real numbers.
Pytheas described his travels in a work that has not survived ; only excerpts remain, quoted or paraphrased by later authors, most familiarly in Strabo's Geographica, Pliny's Natural History and passages in Diodorus of Sicily's history.
It is Urban II's own letters, rather than the paraphrased versions of his speech at Clermont, that reveal his actual thinking about crusading.

from and Leaders
The term " Cheer Leader " had been used as early as 1897, with Princeton's football officials having named three students as Cheer Leaders: Thomas, Easton and Guerin from Princeton's classes of 1898, 1898 and 1899, respectively, on October 26, 1897 ; these students would cheer for the team also at football practices, and special cheering sections were designated in the stands for the games themselves for both the home and visiting teams.
* Colin Powell: America's Best Leaders from US News & World Report
Leaders of the lesbian and gay movement of the 1970s, 80s and 90s often attempted to hide masculine lesbians, feminine gay men, transgendered people, and bisexuals from the public eye, creating internal divisions within LGBT communities.
Leaders with their powerful armies, scientists with their latest advances in technology cannot provide the protection from the eventual decay and death.
* It hosted the first Mars Society European Leaders Meeting, with representatives from France, Germany, Poland, Spain and the Netherlands.
Debra Haffner of The Religious Institute on Sexual Morality, Justice, and Healing published An Open Letter on Religious Leaders on Marriage Equality to affirm same-sex marriage from a multi-faith perspective.
In modern times, all Prime Ministers and Leaders of the Opposition have been drawn from the Commons, not the Lords.
Debra Haffner of The Religious Institute on Sexual Morality, Justice, and Healing published An Open Letter on Religious Leaders on Marriage Equality to affirm same-sex marriage from a multi-faith perspective.
The Asia Leaders Programme, a Dual Campus Master Programme, is a shared initiative between the Nippon Foundation and the University for Peace, in collaboration with Ateneo de Manila University, which aims to provide students from Japan and other Asian countries with an opportunity to pursue a peace studies post graduate degree with a content-based language-training module.
* 1277 – Leaders and some 50, 000 citizens of the Southern Song Dynasty of China become the first recorded inhabitants of Macau, as they seek refuge from the invading forces of the Yuan Dynasty.
* Tours, Poiters, from " Leaders and Battles Database " online.
Leaders as diverse as Mao Zedong, General Vo Nguyen Giap, Baron Antoine-Henri Jomini, General Douglas MacArthur, and leaders of Imperial Japan have drawn inspiration from the work.
One of its more notable ( and controversial ) Leaders was Nicholas Freeman, who was Leader from 1977 until 1989.
Leaders emerge from within the structure of the informal organization.
The International Young Leaders Network exists to identify and nurture young and emerging leaders aged 18 to 33 from the Christian community globally.
Leaders do not entertain any suggestions or initiatives from subordinates.
Leaders emerge from within the structure of the informal organization.
Leaders grew from the ranks: John Dunoskovich in the Croatian community, and George Lemich among the Serbs.
Leaders of the Forces Nouvelles ( former rebels ) asserted that Gbagbo was not the Head of State and could not make such a request and also asserted that the demand was a part of a plan to commit genocide on ethnicities from the north of the country, as stated by Gbagbo's Minister of Youth and Employment.
Hu Jintao with Leaders of the BRICS countries, from left, Manmohan Singh | Singh, Dmitri Medvedev | Medvedev, Dilma Rousseff | Rousseff and Jacob Zuma | Zuma.
:-- from " From Mad Cows to ' Psi-chotic ' Yeast: A New Paradigm in Genetics ," NAS Distinguished Leaders in Science Lecture Series, November 10, 1999.
Leaders of both factions came from the upper class, in contrast to Bonifacio, who came from the lower middle class.
In 2005 the foundation established the community of Young Global Leaders, the successor to the Global Leaders of Tomorrow, consisting of under-forty-year-old leaders from all around the world and myriad disciplines and sectors.

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