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oft-cited and point
Ewing and Lundstrom point out that the " most influential and oft-cited " account of O ' Hare's last mission came in a 1962 history of the Enterprise by CDR Edward P. Stafford, which relied on action reports and recollections of former Enterprise crew, but did not contain interviews with any of the living participants.
Although published long before Babbitt in 1899, Thorstein Veblen's The Theory of the Leisure Class, which critiqued consumer culture and social competition at the turn of the 19th to 20th century, is an oft-cited point of comparison.

oft-cited and was
Tarantino has defended his use of the word, arguing that black audiences have an appreciation of his blaxploitation-influenced films that eludes some of his critics, and, indeed, that Jackie Brown, another oft-cited example, was primarily made for " black audiences ".
His Chronica Majora is an oft-cited source, though modern historians recognize that Paris was not always reliable.
Saparmurat Niyazov, who was ruler of Turkmenistan from 1985 to 2006, is another oft-cited cultivator of a cult of personality.
Joseph Charboneau ( born June 17, 1955 ) was a Major League Baseball player for the Cleveland Indians and is one of the most oft-cited examples of baseball's fabled sophomore jinx.
The oft-cited quote: " The bowler's Holding, the batsman's Willey " occurred when Michael Holding of the West Indies was bowling to Peter Willey of England in a Test match at The Oval in 1976.
William of Ockham helped to fuse Latin, Greek and Islamic writing into a general theory of logic ; " Ockham's Razor " was one of his oft-cited conclusions.

oft-cited and Association
* The " Publication Manual " of the American Psychological Association has an oft-cited section on " Guidelines to Reduce Bias in Language ".

oft-cited and be
" However, fans consider the origins of furry fandom to be much earlier, with fictional works such as Kimba, The White Lion released in 1965, Richard Adams ' novel Watership Down, published in 1972 ( and its 1978 film adaptation ), as well as Disney's Robin Hood as oft-cited examples.
Accuracy at longer distances is oft-cited as a criticism of bullpups ; however, if barrel length is of similar dimensions, and all other factors are equal, accuracy should be similar.
Several Québécois communities claim to be the birthplace of poutine, and one oft-cited tale credits Fernand Lachance as inventing the name.
An oft-cited example is plena " full, complete ", which is Latinate in form ( French plein ( e ), Latin plen-" full "), but has the semantic range of Russian полный polnyi " full, complete ", as can be seen in the phrase plena vortaro " a complete dictionary ", a usage not possible with the French or Latin words.
Poll Position is an oft-cited source for major media organizations and blogs that consider the company's polls to be impartial and sound.

oft-cited and is
An oft-cited means of gaining insight into the occult is the use of a focus ; a physical object, a ritualistic action ( for example, meditation or chanting ), or a medium in which one becomes wholly immersed.
He cites the Burt Affair, about the allegedly fraudulent, oft-cited twin studies, by Cyril Burt ( 1883 – 1971 ), wherein he claimed that human intelligence is highly heritabile.
One oft-cited quote of Newkirk's is: " When it comes to feelings like hunger, pain, and thirst, a rat is a pig is a dog is a boy.
Bede's account of the conversion is oft-cited.
Another oft-cited example is Maxwell's equations, derived to model the elementary electrical and magnetic phenomena known as of the mid 19th century.
Haupt's critical work is distinguished by a combination of the most painstaking investigation with bold conjecture ; his oft-cited dictum that " If the sense requires it, I am prepared to write Constantinopolitanus where the MSS have the monosyllabic interjection o " well expresses this boldness.
The oft-cited first sentence of this work ( see Ars longa, vita brevis ) is:
An oft-cited example is in the field of developmental psychology.
The number of saves, or percentage of save opportunities successfully converted, is an oft-cited statistic of relief pitchers, particularly those in the closer role.
Bem is perhaps best known for his theory of " self-perception ", the most oft-cited competitor to Leon Festinger's cognitive dissonance theory.
One oft-cited instance of this is a rally held by UMNO Youth shortly before Ops Lalang in 1987, where future Deputy Prime Minister and then UMNO Youth Chief Najib Razak threatened to bathe a keris ( dagger ) with Chinese blood.
One common and oft-cited example is kata dakrua leibōn " shedding tears ", in which the pre-verb kata " down " has not yet joined the verbal participle leibōn " shedding ".
An oft-cited example is a 19, 000-word article on beekeeping by staff editor Michael Lenehan.

oft-cited and .
Henry Cornelius Agrippa, Christopher Cattan, and John Heydon produced oft-cited and well-studied treatises on geomancy, along with other philosophers, occultists, and theologians until the 17th century, when interest in occultism and divination began to dwindle due to the rise of the Scientific Revolution and the Age of Reason.
Influential, oft-cited essays such as McClary 1989 and McClary 2006 are highly dismissive of modernist music.
" A more general and oft-cited quote defines a granfalloon as " a proud and meaningless association of human beings.
An oft-cited study by Vaughan ( 1988 ) provides an example.
Prior to the September 11 attacks, Sen. Rudman had served on a now oft-cited and praised national panel investigating the threat of international terrorism.

turning and point
We face, indeed, what may be a turning point in history, and we must act decisively and wisely.
He saw the Starbird as she lay, her slender mast up and gently turning, its point describing constant languid circles against a cumulus sky.
When was the turning point??
The publication of Alfred Kroeber's textbook, Anthropology, marked a turning point in American anthropology.
Davis believed the loss of Johnston " was the turning point of our fate ".
This would be the turning point in the Peninsular War against Napoleon-led France.
* The Capture of Brielle, marked a turning point in the uprising of the Low Countries against Spain in the Eighty Years ' War.
The turning point for Ainu culture was the beginning of the Meiji Restoration in 1868.
It was the battle with the largest number of casualties in the American Civil War and is often described as the war's turning point.
This was a key turning point in the Battle of the Atlantic, enabling the Royal Air Force, the U. S. Army Air Forces, and the U. S. Navy to provide aerial coverage in the Mid-Atlantic gap.
This command included the Battle of El Alamein, a turning point in the Western Desert Campaign.
The climax of the third book is the account of the Council of Whitby, traditionally seen as a major turning point in English history.
A decisive battle is one of particular importance ; often by bringing hostilities to an end, such as the Battle of Hastings or the Battle of Hattin, or as a turning point in the fortunes of the belligerents, such as the Battle of Stalingrad.
This, his maiden Test century in his fifth Test, was the turning point of the series as West Indies won the final two Tests to win the series 2 – 1. Lara went on to name his daughter Sydney after scoring 277 at SCG.
However, defeat at the Battle of Salamis would be the turning point in the campaign, and the next year the expedition was ended by the decisive Greek victory at the Battle of Plataea.
It was the battle with the largest number of casualties in the American Civil War and is often described as the war's turning point.
Many military historians say that the battle of Schwetz / Świecino was the turning point of the Thirteen Years ' War, leading to the final victory in 1466.
" The confrontation between Italy and Ethiopia at Adwa was a fundamental turning point in Ethiopian history ," writes Henze.
Calvin considered the first coming of Christ as the key turning point in human history.
The discovery of the New World represented a major turning point in the history of food because of the movement of foods from and to Europe, such as potatoes, tomatoes, corn, yams, and beans.
Industrialization was also a turning point that changed how food affected the nation.
One important turning point came in the Seven Years ' War, when the British conquered the port of Havana and introduced thousands of slaves in a ten month period.
A critical turning point comes when the King decides not to give money to a man who has committed theft but instead to cut off his head and also to carry out this punishment in a particularly cruel and humiliating manner, parading him in public to the sound of drums as he is taken to the execution ground outside the city.
The loss marked a major turning point in Northern Territory politics, a result which was exacerbated when, at the 2005 NT election, the ALP won a second landslide victory, reducing the once-dominant party to a total of just four members in the Legislative Assembly. The 2008 saw the CLP reverse its earlier election losses, increasing its representation from four to 11 members.
Even though it did not feel like it, this was a turning point in the club's history leading to a period of turbulence and change including further promotion and exile.

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