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generation and later
Like Achilles in a later generation, he was trained by the centaur Chiron.
Poets of a later generation invented the story of the secret marriage of his sister Ximena to Sancho, count of Saldana, and the feats of their son Bernardo del Carpio.
In chapter 26, a generation later and after approximately forty years of wandering the desert, the Lord orders a second census.
* History of computing hardware ( 1960s – present ) – third generation and later
The battle was remembered in England a generation later as " the Great Battle ".
This example is from the first generation of PDP-8s, built with discrete transistors and later known as the Straight 8.
Catullus, the first of these, is an invaluable link between the Alexandrine school and the subsequent elegies of Tibullus and Propertius a generation later.
According to the, Yamabe's mother, Yamato no Niigasa ( later called Takano no Niigasa ), was a 10th generation descendant of Muryeong of Baekje.
A generation later, the Irish Anglican bishop, George Berkeley ( 1685 – 1753 ), determined that Locke's view immediately opened a door that would lead to eventual atheism.
Formulations such as ' evolution consists primarily of changes in the frequencies of alleles between one generation and another ' were proposed rather later.
Heathers picks up 20 years later when Veronica returns home to Sherwood, Ohio with her teenage daughter, who must contend with the next generation of mean girls, all named " Ashley ".
Similarly, his children's names made them like walking prophecies of the fall of the ruling dynasty and the severed covenant with God – much like the prophet Isaiah a generation later.
The First Industrial Revolution, which began in the 18th century, merged into the Second Industrial Revolution around 1850, when technological and economic progress gained momentum with the development of steam-powered ships, railways, and later in the 19th century with the internal combustion engine and electrical power generation.
Cement was used on a large scale in the construction of the London sewerage system a generation later.
The origins of modern Jewish prayer were established during the period of the Tannaim, " from their traditions, later committed to writing, we learn that the generation of rabbis active at the time of the destruction of the Second Temple ( 70 C. E.
While the first generation of literate programming tools were computer language-specific, the later ones are language-agnostic and exist above the programming languages.
However, Hemingway himself later wrote to his editor Max Perkins that the " point of the book " was not so much about a generation being lost, but that " the earth abideth forever "; he believed the characters in The Sun Also Rises may have been " battered " but were not lost.
" A few lines later, recalling the risks and losses of the war, he adds: " I thought of Miss Stein and Sherwood Anderson and egotism and mental laziness versus discipline and I thought ' who is calling who a lost generation?
Hofmann was renowned not only as an artist but also as a teacher of art, and a modernist theorist both in his native Germany and later in the U. S. During the 1930s in New York and California he introduced modernism and modernist theories to a new generation of American artists.
Eventually Sumer was unified by Eannatum, but the unification was tenuous and failed to last as the Akkadians conquered Sumeria in 2331 BC only a generation later.
A generation later, Father Le Loutre's War began when Edward Cornwallis arrived to establish Halifax with 13 transports on June 21, 1749.
Alfred Marshall's textbook, Principles of Economics ( 1890 ), was the dominant textbook in England a generation later.
* 1987 – In Japan, NEC releases the first 16-bit ( fourth generation ) video game console, the PC Engine, which was later sold in other markets under the name TurboGrafx-16.
Because a modeling language is visual and at a higher-level of abstraction than code, using models encourages the generation of a shared vision that may prevent problems of differing interpretation later in development.
However, what one generation may see as positive, later generations may experience negative effects from.

generation and Thomas
Like the pillars of Hercules, like two ruined Titans guarding the entrance to one of Dante's circles, stand two great dead juvenile delinquents -- the heroes of the post-war generation: the great saxophonist, Charlie Parker, and Dylan Thomas.
Thomas remained a popular guest on radio talk shows for the BBC who regarded him as " useful should a younger generation poet be needed ".
Thomas Hobbes and Baruch Spinoza, in the next generation, are often also described as an empiricist and a rationalist respectively.
For this reason, Thomas Shapiro suggests that this generation " is in the midst of benefiting from the greatest inheritance of wealth in history.
Lunar meetings were continued by the younger generation of the families of earlier Lunar members, including Gregory Watt, Matthew Robinson Boulton, Thomas Wedgwood and James Watt junior, and possibly Samuel Tertius Galton.
" St. Thomas Aquinas is more emphatic: " It is heretical to say that the intellectual soul is transmitted by process of generation.
Thomas Bayard was the fourth generation of the family to serve in the U. S. Senate.
A brief resurgence of production beginning in the early 1970s yielded the Mutual Broadcasting System's The Zero Hour ( hosted by Rod Serling ), National Public Radio's Earplay, and veteran Himan Brown's CBS Radio Mystery Theater and General Mills Radio Adventure Theater, later followed by the Sears / Mutual Radio Theater, The National Radio Theater of Chicago, NPR Playhouse, a newly produced episode of the former 1950s series X Minus One, and works by a new generation of dramatists, notably Yuri Rasovsky, Thomas Lopez of ZBS and the dramatic sketches heard on humorist Garrison Keillor's A Prairie Home Companion.
Many stars from hockey's previous generation, including Anders Hedberg, Thomas Gradin and Anders Kallur, were also either Örnsköldsvik natives ( Hedberg ) and / or played in the town for the Modo Hockey club.
At the same time, Britain's Sir Thomas Allen was considered to be the most versatile baritone of his generation in regards to repertoire, which ranged from Mozart to Verdi and lighter Wagner roles, through French and Russian opera, to modern English music.
Talented German and Austrian lieder singers of a younger generation include Olaf Bär, Matthias Goerne, Wolfgang Holzmair ( who also performs regularly in opera ), Thomas Quasthoff, Stephan Genz and Christian Gerhaher.
Unlike other stage actresses of her generation, she did relatively little Shakespeare, preferring the more modern dramatists such as Henrik Ibsen and new plays adapted from the novels of Henry James and Thomas Hardy among others.
Julius Orton, a seventh generation descendant of Thomas, served as security for a pack train headed for Placerville, a booming California gold mining town, motivated by his futile search for gold.
After the area was previously regarded as Hick's Neck and later Milburn, Baldwin was founded in 1855 ( as Baldwinsville ) and named in honor of Thomas Baldwin ( 1795 – 1872 ), who was a sixth generation member of the Baldwin family of Hempstead and the leading merchant of Milburn at the time.
In country house building, major commissions for Kent were designing the interiors of Houghton Hall ( c. 1725 – 35 ), recently built by Colen Campbell for Sir Robert Walpole, but at Holkham Hall the most complete embodiment of Palladian ideals is still to be found ; there Kent collaborated with Thomas Coke, the other " architect earl ", and had for an assistant Matthew Brettingham, whose own architecture would carry Palladian ideals into the next generation.
Up to the early eighteenth century, English dictionaries had generally focused on " hard words " and their explanation, for example those of Thomas Blount and Edward Phillips in the generation before.
Notable inhabitants of these properties were the Markwicks ( builders and carpenters, from 1700 ) at Coppinghall and Milton Cottage ( Interestingly, the current generation of notable Markwicks in Uckfield run the local picture house ), Edward Kenward ( 19th century maltster ) at the Malt House, Thomas Pentecost ( a Victorian leather cutter and local poet ) in a cottage near the Grammar School and General Sir George Calvert Clarke ( commander of the Royal Scots Greys at Balaclava ) at Church House.
The polemic introduction to New Lines targeted in particular the 1940s poets, the generation of Dylan Thomas and George Barker — though not by name.
By the end of the 16th century, a new generation of composers, including John Dowland, William Byrd, Orlando Gibbons, Thomas Weelkes and Thomas Morley were helping to bring the art of Elizabethan song to an extremely high musical level.
* April-After Thomas Betterton's death, the great Shakespearean roles he dominated for a generation are divided up among fellow actors Barton Booth, Robert Wilks, and John Mills.
Within a generation, George Wyatt, whose father Thomas Wyatt had known the Boleyns personally, described Jane as a " wicked wife, accuser of her own husband, even to the seeking of his own blood.
A purist in point of form and style, of the school of Thomas Macaulay and Henry Hart Milman, Reeve outlived his literary generation, and became one of the most reactionary of old Whigs.
When Thomas Nashe wanted to praise Edward Alleyn as the best actor of his generation, he called Alleyn a Roscius ( Pierce Penniless, 1592 ); John Downes titled his history of Restoration drama Roscius Anglicanus ( 1708 ).
He was one of the earliest English parliamentary orators ; his speeches greatly impressed his contemporaries, and in a later generation, as Thomas Macaulay observes, they were " a favourite theme of old men who lived to see the conflicts of Robert Walpole and William Pulteney.

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