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footnote and New
* Project Gutenberg's Narrative New Netherland, edited by J. Franklin Jameson, includes a footnote about the life of Minuit, but gives an improbable birth date of 1550.
The following footnote appears in French's Gazetteer of New York State and gives two possible versions of the origin of the name:
However, in his memoir A Complete Account of the Settlement at Port Jackson in New South Wales ", Tench wrote that he had never heard of the existence of smallpox among the French sailors 4, footnote.
In his review for The New York Times, A. O. Scott wrote, " Parsons himself might have written a surreal, funny-sad ballad about the aftermath of his own death, but Grand Theft Parsons is little more than a surreal anecdote, told in too much detail and without enough soul or imagination to make anything more than a footnote to a legend ".
The joke appears in a 1978 book ( A New Look at Love, by Elaine Hatfield and G. William Walster, p. 75 ), citing an earlier source ( footnote 19, Chapter 5 ).
In addition to her autobiography, China Eggs, and three dramatic sketches ( the latter published in 2011 by the Gallery of Surrealism, New York, in the book called Kay Sage: the Biographical Chronology and Four Surrealist One-Act Plays-see footnote no 1. below ), Sage wrote several books of poetry, all but one in French.
As a footnote in the weapon's long history, an M1934 was used in the assassination of Mahatma Gandhi in New Delhi on 30 January 1948.
Johann Jakob Griesbach | Griesbach's critical edition of the New Testament explaining at the footnote the reasons for the textual rejection of the Comma Johanneum.
The zanzithophone is mentioned in a footnote on page 66 of Kim Cooper's book In the Aeroplane Over the Sea ( New York: Continuum, 2005 ).
Harold Bloom criticizes the New Historicism for reducing literature to a footnote of history, and for not paying attention to the details involved in analyzing literature.
The notion of " levels of judicial scrutiny ", including strict scrutiny, was introduced in footnote 4 of the U. S. Supreme Court decision in United States v. Carolene Products ( 1938 ), one of a series of decisions testing the constitutionality of New Deal legislation.
Historian Francis Whiting Halsey, who spelled the name of the village Oghwaga, included this footnote in his 1901 work The Old New York Frontier:
When writing his memoir of baseball in the New York 1950s, The Era, Roger Kahn included a footnote that quoted Walker directly about the Robinson issue and about the pressure against his off-season business, from a conversation the two men had after Walker finished giving batting tips to a pair of players, one white, the other black: " That's why I started that thing.

footnote and American
The inn itself is a footnote in history, hosting the army of General Edward Braddock during the French and Indian War, serving as a meeting place for local Sons of Liberty in the years before the American Revolution, and possibly serving dinner to President Andrew Jackson on his way to his inauguration.
Were it not for the death of amateur explorer and treasure hunter Adolph Ruth, the story of the Lost Dutchman's mine would have likely been little more than a footnote in Arizona history as one of hundreds of " lost mines " rumored to be in the American West.
" became a footnote of American history.
Although the name Harlan Lattimore is now looked upon as a mere footnote in American popular music, there can be no denying his role as a pioneering African-American singer who established a style and role later filled by such musical luminaries as Billy Eckstine and Nat King Cole.
Relegated to the status of a minor footnote in the annals of American folk music, the Folksmen would later be characterised as " the group who were too popular to be purist and too purist to be popular.

footnote and Bible
The Tetragrammaton is often represented ( especially in older English versions of the Bible ) by the word ""; and the expression " Hallelujah " by the phrase " Praise ye the " ( Psalm 104: 35 KJV and footnote ).
" An accompanying footnote in Lamsa's English version of the Bible explains Jesus's meaning as " This was my destiny.
Modern versions of the Bible usually omit the addition to 1 John 5: 7, but some place it in a footnote, with a comment indicating that ' it is not found in the earliest manuscripts '.
*" Wife-Beater's Bible " ( 1537 ): A footnote to I Peter 3: 7 is rendered And if she be not obediente and healpeful unto hym, endevoureth to beate the fere of God into her heade, that thereby she may be compelled to learne her dutye and do it .”

footnote and says
In a footnote printed in the second edition of Utilitarianism, Mill says, the morality of the action depends entirely upon the intention — that is, upon what the agent wills to do .” Elsewhere, he says, Intention, and motive, are two very different things.
Additionally, in one of his many drafts, in a footnote on Big Daddy's action in the third act, Williams deems Cat on a Hot Tin Roof a " play which says only one affirmative thing about ' Man's Fate ': that he has it still in his power not to squeal like a pig but to keep a tight mouth about it.
However the name is traditional and well established ; it can be found both in ( Macdonald, 1979 ), which says ( footnote on p. 12 )
A page footnote in some editions says that soon after the book was published, the difference between 6-day taxicab licences ( not allowed to trade on Sundays ) and 7-day taxicab licences ( allowed to trade on Sundays ) was abolished and the taxicab licence fee was much reduced.
The Midrash Rabbah on Genesis 37: 5 ( page 298 in the 1961 edition of Maurice Simon's translation ) says that the " Caphtorim were dwarfs ".< ref > Midrash Rabbah Genesis Volume I, Maurice Simon ( 39. 4M PDF page 346 of 560 ) Simon's footnote on the " dwarfs " says: " Kaftor < nowiki >
" The footnote says, " In the case of more than two channels the encoder and decoder diagrams have to be adapted.

footnote and
* Use supra with note to indicate a footnote within the same piece ( internal cross-reference ).
Hebrew tribal names usually are referred to with the introductory phrase the tribe of ,” even if the base text does not utilize this phrase, with the additional words noted in an explanatory footnote.
The Hebrew and Greek counterpart for saying ,” when pleonastic, may be omitted in translation without a footnote.
The Greek Gehenna is rendered hell .” Tartarus is rendered lowest hell ,” with an explanatory footnote.
" A footnote to the census returns comments the decline in population is attributed to the discontinuance of the flax mill ”.
A commentary footnote in one of the older copies of the Authorized Version seems to agree saying, The only hint about the onycha that we can find is in the Arabic version, where we meet with ladana, suggesting.
Meyer, however, did refer to both as serious thinkers, a Meyer footnote even conceded Kirk in recent years had been more supportive of freedom, and he called Kirk ’ s views on freedom itself excellent ”.
The Ralph L Clark memo of the 29th July contains a footnote reference to a meeting, OSI: FCD: RLC mtw ( 28July52 )” which appears to indicate a 28 July 1952 meeting between F C Durant and Clark on this subject.
It also gives the original Portuguese in a footnote: Ó meu Jesus, perdoai-nos e livrai nos do fogo do inferno ; levai as alminhas todas para o Céu, principalmente aquelas que mais precisarem .”

footnote and Some
Some elements found in the ' Joyce legends ' appeared in a footnote about Joyce family traditions in James Hardiman's History of Galway ( 1820 ).
Some comics will have the actual foreign language in the speech balloon, with the translation as a footnote ; this is done with Latin aphorisms in Asterix.
Some argue that this " most famous footnote " was in fact written not by Justice Stone, but by his law clerk, Louis Lusky.
Some confuse an example of immigrant intent presented in a footnote within the Foreign Affairs Manual.

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