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two-volume and work
Bohr and Mottelson continued to work together, publishing a two-volume monograph, Nuclear Structure.
Originally published in a two-volume edition, this work studies the books of the Hebrew prophets.
Chambers has been referred to as the father of the modern encyclopedia for this two-volume work.
Many believe " the Gospel of Luke and the Acts of the Apostles originally constituted a two-volume work ", which scholars refer to as Luke-Acts.
Those biblical scholars who consider the two books a single, two-volume work often refer to both together as Luke-Acts.
He published a large work, available in a two-volume English translation as Feudal Society.
This 900-page, two-volume work includes 70 pages on sexual selection in human evolution, and 500 pages on sexual selection in other animals.
His plan for the work gradually extended to a two-volume compilation on the whole of economic thought.
Surviving preliminary materials show that Newton ( up to some time in 1685 ) conceived his book as a two-volume work: The first volume was to be ' De motu corporum, Liber primus ', with contents that later appeared ( in extended form ) as Book 1 of the ' Principia '.
The most definitive translation is a two-volume critical work by Andrew George.
Syme's next great work was his definitive two-volume biography of Tacitus ( 1958 ), his favorite among the ancient historians.
A two-volume work, Foundations of Human Hereditary Teaching and Racial Hygiene, co-written by him, Erwin Baur and Fritz Lenz, served as the " scientific " basis for Nazism's attitude toward other races.
A compilation of his recorded work, The Ministry Years, was released as a two-volume set in 1987 and 1988 and included five previously unreleased songs.
Of his numerous writings, the best known were Lectures on the Science of Human Life ( Boston, 1839 ), of which several editions of the two-volume work were printed in the United States and sales in England were widespread, and Lectures to Young Men on Chastity.
Morroe Berger also wrote the book " Benny Carter-A Life in American Music ," ( 1982 ) a two-volume work, covers Carter's career in depth, an essential work of jazz scholarship.
Tylor ’ s ideology is best described in his most famous work, the two-volume Primitive Culture.
He twice refused the offer of the post of the Governor-General of India, preferring to finish his two-volume work, History of India ( 1841 ).
As a historian, Trithemius wrote extensively as a historian, starting with a chronic of Sponheim and culminating in a two-volume work on the history of Hirsau Abbey.
The Decline of the West (), or The Downfall of the Occident, is a two-volume work by Oswald Spengler, the first volume of which was published in the summer of 1918.
He wrote a standard two-volume work Trigonometric Series.
Bohr and Mottelson continued to work together, publishing a two-volume monograph, Nuclear Structure.
* Endgame ( Derrick Jensen books ), two-volume work written by Derrick Jensen
Quinn has since published several critical studies of Mormon hierarchy, including his two-volume work that starts with his dissertation The Mormon Hierarchy: Origins of Power and a companion volume The Mormon Hierarchy: Extensions of Power.

two-volume and which
In 2000, the British publisher Gollancz Science Fiction issued a two-volume, complete edition of Howard's Conan stories as part of its Fantasy Masterworks imprint, which including several stories that had never seen print in their original form.
His penultimate enthusiasm was with the genitalia of butterflies about which he published a paper in the Transactions of the Linnean Society But before his death he returned to rotifera, much of his research appearing in a two-volume study with another zoologist, C. T.
Second, the New York Public Library released a two-volume set of " The Collected Works of Scott Joplin ," which renewed interest in Joplin among musicians and prompted new stagings of Joplin's opera Treemonisha.
In 2004 Zottola Publishing produced the two-volume set Mitlanyál, which deals with the Tsolyáni pantheon and provides much background regarding the Tsolyáni culture.
These dismal business efforts – and his misadventures in Sardinia – provided an appropriate milieu in which to set the two-volume Illusions Perdues ( Lost Illusions, 1843 ).
The series has been reprinted as a two-volume set, titled The Belgariad Volume One, containing the first three books of the series, and The Belgariad Volume Two, which contains the last two books.
A two-volume edition, abridged by John Terraine to omit battles outside the European continent, was published in 1970 by Picador: ths is not to be confused with the original edition of 1939-40, also in two volumes, of which the three volume edition is a substantial revision, as described in its Preface.
His two-volume History of Melanesian Society ( 1914 ), which he dedicated to St Johns, presented a diffusionist thesis for the development of culture in the south-west Pacific.
But Fassbinder's TV series Berlin Alexanderplatz was a naturalistic adaptation of the two-volume novel by Alfred Döblin, which Fassbinder had read many times.
In 1825 the Irish writer Thomas Moore published a two-volume sympathetic biography Memoirs of the Life of Richard Brinsley Sheridan which became a major influence on subsequent perceptions of him.
Just as one of the great works of the Revolutionary period was written by a Frenchman, so too was one of the great works about America from this generation, viz., Alexis de Tocqueville's two-volume Democracy in America, which ( like the colonial explorers ) described his travels through the young country, making observations about the relations between democracy, liberty, equality, individualism and community.
During Roberts ' research into Major Rogers, his researcher uncovered transcripts of both of Major Rogers ' courts-martial ( once as the accuser and once as the accused ), which had been thought lost for over a century, and these were published in the second volume of a special two-volume edition of Northwest Passage.
In Karl Popper's definition, found in his two-volume book The Open Society and Its Enemies, he defines an " open society " as one which ensures that political leaders can be overthrown without the need for bloodshed, as opposed to a " closed society ," in which a bloody revolution or coup d ' état is needed to change the leaders.
Time described the work as " a ponderous, lifeless, two-volume work which was technically a history of Santo Domingo, actually a careful indictment of U. S. foreign policy in the Hemisphere.
Before leaving St. Olaf College, he completed work on his magnum opus, the two-volume Systematic Theology ( 1997 – 99 ), which has since been widely regarded as one of the most important and creative recent works of systematic theology.
From 1952 to 1957 he edited a two-volume work on Statistical Sources in the United Kingdom, which was a standard reference until the mid-1970s.
In 1905, he published a two-volume Supplement to the History of the Birds of New Zealand, which brought the work up to date.
He had three sons who served in the American Civil War: Samuel Fessenden, killed at the Second Battle of Bull Run, and Brigadier-General James D. Fessenden and Major-General Francis Fessenden, the latter of whom wrote a two-volume biography of his father which was published in 1907.
Another actor, John Walker, published his two-volume Elements of Elocution in 1781, which provided detailed instruction on voice control, gestures, pronunciation, and emphasis.
The links between the NA Dead Romance ( a standalone volume in which Bernice Summerfield does not actually appear ) and the two-volume Eighth Doctor novel Interference ( all written by Lawrence Miles ) are particularly close.

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