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work and turn
This means that work equals Q which in turn equals Af.
We now know that things rarely ever work out in such cut-and-dried fashion, and that car loadings, while perhaps interesting enough, are nevertheless not the magic formula that will always turn before stock prices turn.
Until such work is done, there must remain the nagging suspicion that alienation may be little more than an expression of the malaise of the intellectual, who, rejected by and in turn rejecting the larger society, projects his own fear and despair onto the broader social screen.
Fromm also cites a poll on attitudes toward work restriction conducted by the Opinion Research Corporation in 1945, in which 49 per cent of manual workers said a man ought to turn out as much as he could in a day's work, while 41 per cent said he should not do his best but should turn out only the average amount.
Some women can sit and sew, crochet, tat or knit by the hour, and look calm and relaxed and turn out beautiful work.
The goal of the Annales was to undo the work of the Sorbonnistes, to turn French historians away from the narrowly political and diplomatic toward the new vistas in social and economic history.
Selection by lottery was the standard means as it was regarded as the more democratic: elections would favour those who were rich, noble, eloquent and well-known, while allotment spread the work of administration throughout the whole citizen body, engaging them in the crucial democratic experience of, to use Aristotle's words, " ruling and being ruled in turn " ( Politics 1317b28 30 ).
Since Alexander's work in the field came at the turn of the century, his ideas influenced many originators in the field of mind-body improvement.
Writing about AD 94, Clement of Rome states that the apostles appointed successors to continue their work where they had planted churches and for these in their turn to do the same because they foresaw the risk of discord.
Graduate students in turn compete for acceptance into a BTP ; if accepted then stipend, tuition and health insurance support is provided for two or three years during the course of their Ph. D. thesis work.
Holinshed in turn used an earlier work, the Scotorum Historiae ( 1526 7 ) by Hector Boece, as his source.
I want to see institutions like Throop turn out perhaps ninety-nine of every hundred students as men who are to do given pieces of industrial work better than any one else can do them ; I want to see those men do the kind of work that is now being done on the Panama Canal and on the great irrigation projects in the interior of this country — and the one-hundredth man I want to see with the kind of cultural scientific training that will make him and his fellows the matrix out of which you can occasionally develop a man like your great astronomer, George Ellery Hale.
The output work W here is the movement of the piston as it is used to turn a crank-arm, which was then typically used to turn a pulley so to lift water out of flooded salt mines.
He was also very energetic in his work as a missionary, and, in addition to founding several churches in the Hebrides, he worked to turn his monastery at Iona into a school for missionaries.
" Most samples of early work claimed to be crochet turn out to actually be samples of nålebinding.
" If that didn't work, Atkins would instruct Porter to turn the offending player down in the mix.
Both Desilu, Too and Lucille Ball Productions work hand-in-hand with MPI Home Video in the home video re-issues of the Ball / Arnaz material not currently owned by CBS ( successor-in-interest to Paramount Television, which in turn succeeded the original Desilu company ).
In Rerum Novarum, Leo XIII states that people are likely to work harder and with greater commitment if they themselves possess the land on which they labour, which in turn will benefit them and their families as workers will be able to provide for themselves and their household.
At the turn of the 20th century, Otto Stolz, Paul du Bois-Reymond, Giuseppe Veronese, and others produced controversial work on non-Archimedean models of Euclidean geometry, in which the distance between two points may be infinite or infinitesimal, in the Newton Leibniz sense.

work and cites
In order to reinforce his position that the Greeks were inclined towards plagiarism, he cites numerous instances of such inappropriate appropriation by classical Greek writers, reported second-hand from On Plagiarism, an anonymous 3rd century BC work sometimes ascribed to Aretades.
Kamil Zvelebil cites the forms such as dramila ( in's Sanskrit work Avanisundarīkathā ) ( found in Ceylonese chronicle Mahavamsa ) and then goes on to say ( ibid.
* This work in turn cites:
John Gardner, in The Art of Fiction, cites in this context the work of Barthelme and its " seemingly limitless ability to manipulate techniques as modes of apprehension apprehend nothing.
For example, Kenneth Miller cites the lab work of Barry G. Hall on E. coli, which he asserts is evidence that " Behe is wrong.
Dawkins cites as inspiration the work of geneticist L. L. Cavalli-Sforza, anthropologist F. T. Cloak and ethologist J. M. Cullen.
Brennan is regularly credited as co-author of many songs in his later albums, and Waits often cites her as a major influence on his work.
* This work in turn cites:
More recent work on Word Grammar cites neurocognitive linguistics as a source of inspiration for the idea that language is nothing but a network.
Offering an alternative, Nussbaum cites John Rawls's work in A Theory of Justice to highlight " an example of a rational argument ; it can be said to yield, in a perfectly recognizable sense, ethical truth.
References to Dr Toveys work is made in A Tribute to Dr Frank I Tovey on his 90th Birthday by Lian-Sheng Ma Ma's paper cites references going back to 1969.
) cites the use of homo oeconomicus by C. S. Devas in his 1883 work The Groundwork of Economics in reference to Mill's writings, as one of a number of phrases that imitate the scientific name for the human species:
In the passage below from Language As Symbolic Action, Burke cites Hegel's coinage of the term " Thersitism ," and he proceeds to describe a version of it as a process by which an author both privileges protest in a literary work but also disguises or disowns it, so as not to distract from the literary form of the work, which must push on toward other effects than the protest per se:
In attempting to define noise music and its value, Paul Hegarty ( 2007 ) cites the work of noted cultural critics Jean Baudrillard, Georges Bataille and Theodor Adorno and through their work traces the history of " noise ".
* This work in turn cites:
" Lee cites Theodore Kelsey, a Living Treasure of Hawai ' i renowned for his work as a Hawaiian translator who wrote a letter to Long in 1936 ( now in the Hawai ' i State Archives ) criticizing his use of the terms " unihipili " and " aumakua.
British acoustic artist and punk rocker Frank Turner has a Black Flag icon tattoo on his wrist and cites the band as one of his primary inspirations, particularly in regards to their work ethic.
Songwriter and founder of the band Neil Hannon has often claimed that both the film and book had a profound influence on much of his work and cites them as all-time favourites.
In particular he cites a mother's return to work as an obstacle to EC.
The Dickson Baseball Dictionary, cites William Henry Nugent's work asserting that it was derived from the fancy, a collective term from England used to describe the fans of a specific hobby or sport from the early 18th Century to the 19th, especially to the followers of boxing.
Macrobius's list and explanation are probably based directly on Cornelius Labeo's work, as he cites him often in his Saturnalia as when he gives a list of Maia's cultural epithets and mentions one of his works, Fasti.

work and biographies
Since his death in 1979, Al Capp and his work have been the subject of more than 40 books, including three biographies.
* The Eldritch Dark — This website contains almost all of Clark Ashton Smith's written work, as well as a comprehensive selection of his art, biographies, a bibliography, a discussion board, readings, fiction tributes and more.
The Great Man approach to history was most fashionable with professional historians in the 19th century ; a popular work of this school is the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition ( 1911 ) which contains lengthy and detailed biographies about the great men of history, but very few general or social histories.
In 1360, Boccaccio began work on De mulieribus claris, a book offering biographies of one hundred and six famous women, that he completed in 1374.
Duchesne and others have viewed the beginning of the Liber Pontificalis up until the biographies of Pope Felix III ( 483 492 ) as the work of a single author, who was a contemporary of Pope Anastasius II ( 496-498 ), relying on Catalogus Liberianus, which in turn draws from the papal catalogue of Hippolytus of Rome, and the Leonine Catalogue, which is no longer extant.
Encompassing more than 1, 300 pages ( including 1, 150 pages of text ), the work countered earlier biographies such as Albert Goldman's Elvis from 1981 with an in-depth, scholarly examination of Presley's life and music.
His work extends over 130 chapters — not in historical sequence, but divided into particular subjects, including annals, chronicles, and treatises — on music, ceremonies, calendars, religion, economics, and extended biographies.
Indeed, in the period immediately after his death, Mozart's reputation rose substantially: Solomon describes an " unprecedented wave of enthusiasm " for his work ; biographies were written ( first by Schlichtegroll, Niemetschek, and Nissen ; see Biographies of Mozart ); and publishers vied to produce complete editions of his works.
Lastly, the work of Célestin Port, Dictionnaire historique, géographique et biographique de Maine-et-Loire ( 3 vols., Paris and Angers, 1874 1878 ), and its small volume of Préliminaires ( including a summary of the history of Anjou ), contain, in addition to the biographies of the chief counts of Anjou, a mass of information concerning everything connected with Angevin history.
There have now been more than half a dozen biographies of her, yet a good deal of the basic scholarship of locating and editing her work remains unfinished ; significant unpublished writings of hers are still being found in library archives.
The principal surviving literary sources are Dio Cassius ( a contemporary and sometimes first-hand observer, but for this reign, only transmitted in fragments and abbreviations ), Herodian and the Historia Augusta ( untrustworthy for its character as a work of literature rather than history, with elements of fiction embedded within its biographies ; in the case of Commodus, it may well be embroidering upon what the author found in reasonably good contemporary sources ).
In addition to Wernly's work, there are biographies of Zschokke by E. Münch ( 1831 ), Emil Zschokke ( 3rd ed.
The company treated its illustrators as selling points, profiling them in full-page biographies and permitting them to sign their work, a rarity in 1950s comic books.
However, it is clear, based on scholarly work on this subject ( see, for example, the Gillian Gill and Robert Peel biographies of Eddy ), that Quimby continued to practice various forms of hypnotism, mesmerism, and physical manipulation of the body.
Gill's work included a review of numerous other Eddy biographies over the years.
Her first major work, published by Weidenfeld & Nicolson, was Mary, Queen of Scots ( 1969 ), which was followed by several other biographies, including Cromwell, Our Chief of Men ( 1973 ).
His principal surviving work is the Lives of the Sophists, a collection of the biographies of twenty-three philosophers and sophists.
A cultural historian, he was known for his work on the Renaissance, as well as numerous biographies about writers and artists.
This work describes the holy state as existing in the family and in public life, gives rules of conduct, model " characters " for the various professions and profane biographies.
" King defended his project and maintained that future biographies on Frame would eventually fill in the gaps left by his own work.
In 1851 he brought out a life of Count Yorck von Wartenburg ( Berlin, 1851 1852 ), generally considered one of the best biographies in the German language and then began his great work on the Geschichte der preussischen Politik, or, in English, The History of Prussian Politics, ( Berlin, 1855 1886 ).
He went to live in the country at East Ilsley and started work on a book then called Victorian Silhouettes containing miniature biographies of a dozen notable Victorian personalities.
The Musical Times wrote of the work, " His masterly biographies of Beethoven, Mendelssohn, and Schubert are models of biographical literature, and are written in a most fascinating style.

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