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Some Related Sentences

Admitting and may
Admitting feelings may become difficult for the individual.

Admitting and truth
Admitting the formula of Arcesilaus, " that he knew nothing, not even his own ignorance ," to be an exposition of his real sentiments, it was impossible in one sense that skepticism could proceed further: but the Academic skeptics do not seem to have doubted the existence of truth in itself, only our capacities for obtaining it.

Admitting and I
Admitting that he feared for his life, the former Ecclesville councillor who said he had made attempts to correct the “ mess ,” claimed that because of scare tactics and lies employed by a certain individual he was manipulated and led down a path of no return, “ one lie after another lie .” “ I wanted to come out and say exactly what happened but I was afraid and was being guided.

Admitting and was
" Admitting " a certain reservation, even disappointment ," Anthony Boucher nevertheless concluded that Heinlein was " simply creating an agreeably entertaining light novel, and in that task he succeeds admirably.
Admitting that he was " immensely proud " of Divine and the cause which he " strived for ", Jay noted in the book's introduction that he wrote the work because he felt that Divine deserved a " memorial " that would act as a " record for posterity ".
Admitting that he was viewed as a " pudgy, fun-loving, music-crazed bum " in his youth, Hull initially failed to attract the attention of a junior team.
Admitting what he did, Frank then begs for mercy at Tony's feet, even offering $ 10, 000, 000 he keeps in a safe in Spain ( a country which at that time was a tax haven due to Franco's recent death ).
Admitting paternity, he refused to marry her and was sent to Fleet prison where he wrote verse.

Admitting and two
Admitting that there are stylistic problems between Second Thessalonians and First Thessalonians, he argues that part of the problem is due to the composite nature of First Thessalonians ( Murphy-O ' Connor is only one of many scholars who argue that the current text of Second Thessalonians is the product of merging two or more authentic letters of Paul.

recollections and may
In his Arden edition, R. A. Foakes argues for a date of 1605 – 6, because one of Shakespeare's sources, The True Chronicle History of King Leir, was not published until 1605 ; close correspondences between that play and Shakespeare's suggest that he may have been working from a text ( rather than from recollections of a performance ).
For his life may be consulted the recollections of him collected by the brothers Dupuy ( Thuana, sive Excerpta ex ore J.
However, Fowler's recollections, not shared until 2003, 51 years after the event, may be imperfect.

recollections and truth
: For their intention in writing was that either from their own memory and recollections, or from the witness of those who " themselves from the beginning were eyewitnesses and ministers of the Word " we might know " the truth " concerning those matters about which we have been instructed ( see Luke 1: 2 – 4 ).

recollections and ("
According to his own recollections, his group of Moldavians was kept under close watch by Alexandru Sturdza, who, in addition, enlisted Kogălniceanu's help in writing his work Études historiques, chrétiennes et morales (" Historical, Christian and Moral Studies ").
Balki, who was a shepherd on Mypos, interprets what little he knows about the United States by relying on his own ( often out-of-context ) recollections of American pop culture (" America: Land of my dreams and home of the Whopper ").
John Stuart Mill recalls his family living in Newington Green " from 1810 to the end of 1813 "; it was at the time " an almost rustic neighbourhood ", and it was during walks with his father before breakfast " generally in the green lanes towards Hornsey " (" my earliest recollections of green fields and wild flowers ") that John Stuart would recount to James Mill what he had learnt reading the previous day.

recollections and When
When Catlin returned east in 1838, he assembled the paintings and numerous artifacts into his Indian Gallery, and began delivering public lectures which drew on his personal recollections of life among the American Indians.
When Fowler arrives to try and restore order, he begins talking of his days in the RAF, leading Ginger to realize that she and the other chickens can build a plane made from Fowler's pictures and personal recollections.
When ( in 1946 ) Elliott Roosevelt published his defense of his father ’ s foreign policy, As He Saw It, he triggered a long-standing historiographical dispute over the truthfulness of his recollections of the wartime summits.
When Lobo later encounters Robin and Wonder Girl again as members of the Teen Titans, he demonstrates no recollections of them or their history together, demonstrating that he has indeed forgotten his time as their teammate.

recollections and I
In later life, Ted would record some of these childhood recollections in a series of newspaper articles written around the time of World War I.
Later she and collaborators would edit these conversations, including Hunt's recollections of her grandparents ' histories of slavery, into a popular book, I am Annie Mae: A Black Texas Woman in Her Own Words and then subsequently into a musical drama.
Beaumont, who was part of the original installation team writes ..' I have vivid recollections of my colleagues during these years when we completed the installation and putting into service of the station to the accompaniment of the Luftwaffe's efforts to put southern England out of action and can I can still recall the line of craters left on the north side of the road opposite the station by a stick of bombs deposited by a German bomber one night and the cannon shells which penetrated the diesel generator building on another occasion.
Hawks claimed he based the film on his own recollections while Saunders insisted that the screenplay was derived from the interviews of other veterans of World War I.
Her first, primordial recollections are of a father that died in World War I, and of the summer of 1920, when she was 10 and competing with her 11-year-old brother Gordon for fossils.
I was born on the banks of the Wabash at Terre Haute ... My fondest recollections are of my mother and of my early days along this stream.
The 17th Duke of Norfolk would later in life speak of his " vivid recollections of meeting G. K. Chesterton when I ... attended some of his lectures to the Newman Society, which I will never forget.

recollections and was
While she was thus engaged, McFeeley questioned her about her whereabouts the previous day, any recollections she had of people hanging around, of overcurious delivery boys or repairmen, of strange cars cruising the neighborhood.
Tatian was an Assyrian who was a pupil of Justin Martyr in Rome, where, Justin says, the apomnemoneumata ( recollections or memoirs ) of the Apostles, the gospels, were read every Sunday.
Shaffer largely based his allegations on the recollections of Navy Captain Scott Phillpott, who later recanted his recollection, telling investigators that he was " convinced that Atta was not on the chart that we had ".
An account of Musashi's life, the Niten-ki 二天記, was published in Kumamoto in 1776, by Toyota Kagehide, based on the recollections of his grandfather Toyota Masataka, who was a second generation pupil of Musashi.
After Feynman's death, scholars studying the historical development of nanotechnology have concluded that his actual role in catalyzing nanotechnology research was limited, based on recollections from many of the people active in the nascent field in the 1980s and 1990s.
Based on family recollections and tombstone inscriptions he claimed that Point du Sable was born in Saint-Marc in Haiti, studied in France, returned to Haiti to deal coffee before traveling to Louisiana.
His early recollections were musical ; he was taught to play the piano and violin, and began composing when he was about twelve.
Use of " physical means of persuasion " ( torture ) was sanctioned by a special decree of the state, which opened the door to numerous abuses, documented in recollections of victims and members of the NKVD itself.
Gwynne was known for his sense of humor and retained fond recollections of Herman, saying in later life, "...
Uruk was prominent in the national struggles of the Sumerians against the Elamites up to 2004 BC, in which it suffered severely ; recollections of some of these conflicts are embodied in the Gilgamesh epic, in the literary and courtly form that has come down to us.
Whether Quicksilver Messenger Service was what Valenti had in mind, it appears from Duncan's recollections that he had at least talked with Cipollina about forming a band ; Cipollina remembered that:
He revels in the recollections of the torment he inflicted on the inmates, remembering with a cold smile the suffering he was responsible for.
The book, published by Fourth Estate ( an imprint of HarperCollins ), was a more personal history than Faithfull and contains a wide range of material, including a detailed early history of her mother's life in Austria, her recollections of friends who have died, and her assessments of various recent health problems.
In particular, there was still no observational evidence of the westward-traveling " Kelvin " waves ; Lindzen postulated their existence theoretically .< ref > Actually, the evidence was coming in at the time, see However, Lindzen says in his 1987 recollections that he did not see this study until after the Lindzen and Holton ( 1968 ) paper was already submitted ( 1987, p. 330 ).</ ref >
In fact, this collaboration benefited Lane's career as much as her mother ' smany of Lane's most popular short stories and her two most commercially successful novels were written at this time and were fueled by material which was taken directly from her mother's recollections of Ingalls-Wilder family folklore — Let the Hurricane Roar ( later retitled Young Pioneers ) and Free Land, both addressed the difficulties of homesteading in the Dakotas in the late 19th century, and how the " free land " in fact cost many homesteaders their life savings.
This was fully reported in the Illustrated London News of 30 October 1875 and included some of the recollections of the survivors including those of Edward Richard Woodham.
Rather, it was a retrospective account of his recollections and observations, written in the form of two books.

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