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one and would
With every leaping stride of the horse beneath him he crossed one more patch of earth that had been his, that he would never see again.
As I dug in behind one of the bales we were using as protection, I grudgingly found myself agreeing with Oso's logic, especially when I imagined what would have happened to Missy if Old Knife's large party of screeching warriors had overrun our company.
By counting the number of stalls and urinals I attempted to form a loose estimate of how many men the hall would hold at one time.
She would return this symbol to the mountain, as one pours seed back into the soil every Spring or as ancient fertility cults demand annual human sacrifice.
At one and the same time, she was within it but still searching for the drawbridge that would give her entry.
I clapped the big man with the bleached hair on his shoulder and said heartily, hoping it would make an impression on the women: `` This one is the maku Frayne.
Any posse riding down the street to demand Blue Throat's surrender would be wiped out with one deadly burst of fire.
I asked Wisman what would happen if he broke out the go codes and tried to start transmitting one.
No one wanted a larger family or no children, and none hoped for a castle or said that living in less settled circumstances would be satisfactory.
Presenting an individualized Negro character, it would seem, is one of the most difficult assignments a Southern writer could tackle ; ;
The Irish accent is, as one would expect, combined with slight inflections from the French.
This sentence would have most of the characteristics of a question, but it has some of the characteristics of a statement because the questioner has conveyed the fact that he has no faith in his own timepiece or the one attached to his car.
Thus the cocktail party would appear to be the ideal system, but there is one weakness.
And I would further note that they all -- with one exception again -- sang in one key or another the same song.
Harris J. Griston, in Shaking The Dust From Shakespeare ( 216 ), writes: `` There is not a word spoken by Shylock which one would expect from a real Jew ''.
If a child had a single drop of Negro blood, he would revert to the ancestral line which, except as slaves under a superior race, had not made one step of progress in 3,000 years.
But a novel in which one man Karamazov explored the divisions within his personality would scarcely merit publication in the Psychoanalytic Quarterly.
How much they esteemed him is shown by the fact that their underground committee selected him as one of the few who would be helped to escape.
In light of all this, one would require special reasons for saying that the paths of the heavenly bodies were other than circular.
If in any one calculation Ptolemy had had to invoke 83 epicycles all at once, while Copernicus never required more than one third this number, then ( in the sense obvious to Margenau ) Ptolemaic astronomy would be simpler than Copernican.
You probably would not remember, since you never seemed to remember even the same moments as I, much less their intensity, one sunny midday on Fifth Avenue when you had set out with me for some final shopping less than a week before the wedding you staged for me with such reluctance at the Farm.
Among the dolls was one that meant very much to the First Lady, who would pick it up and look at it often.
Now and then, the President would call for `` Little Jack, Master of the Hounds '', which was his nickname for a messenger who had worked in the White House since Teddy Roosevelt's administration, and discuss the welfare of some one of the animals.

one and surmise
In Juggler of Worlds, the Puppeteers, attempting to surmise how this was done without antimatter, identify another technique which can be used to destroy the otherwise invulnerable hulls, one which does suggest some potential defense options.
Plutarch ’ s collection, titled " Life of Marcellus ," focuses on Marcellus ’ military campaigns and political life, rather than being a full-life biography, as one might surmise from the title.
The lifelike images of the apes make one surmise that the emperor painted from the live models that could have been kept in the palace gardens.
The new class of faults, called transform faults, produce slip in the opposite direction from what one would surmise from the standard interpretation of an offset geological feature.
The tones of his debut album Mélodies En Sous-Sol ( spring 2000 ) surmise his musical dreams where one can hear distant echoes of New Order, Dopplereffekt, and PCP.
This is one of the reasons the Puppeteers were so successful at keeping the location of their homeworld a secret — explorers would be looking for a yellow dwarf ( as one could surmise that Puppeteers had evolved around a yellow dwarf from their biology and that they were comfortable on Earth-like planets without pressure suits ) when their planet ( s ) were actually near a red giant.
From the fact that the group of conformal transforms is infinite dimensional in two dimensions and finite dimensional for more than two dimensions, one can surmise that potential theory in two dimensions is different from potential theory in other dimensions.
At the beginning of the first episode of Series 6, the iconic string phrase from the first movement of Gustav Mahler's Sixth Symphony can be heard in, one might surmise, a numerological nod.
The pastry's name, then, is pronounced similarly to that of the famous boxer Joe Louis, and so it is easy for one to surmise that it was named after him, as a tribute and / or for the name's marketing value.

one and procedure
They had to take blood samples to the laboratory to test them, for one thing, and there was much required preliminary procedure.
Being a strictly physiological procedure, one may expect from such a study additional information on the nature of the emotional process itself.
Since the writer had established this democratic procedure in the beginning he had to go along with their decision -- after, of course, pointing out whether he thought their decision was a wise or an unwise one.
This procedure was repeated one day a month for four months.
While roleplaying for testing is not too well understood at the present time, it represents one of the major uses of this procedure.
One of the A.L.A.M. lawyers observed that if the Selden case had been tried under this simplified procedure, the testimony which filled more than a score of volumes, `` at a minimum cost of $1 a page for publication alone, could have been contained in one volume ''.
In one anecdote his arrival at a chemical plant is described in which he was denied access by the director because he would not allow anyone to see the production procedure which was a trade secret.
Most surgeons will only perform an augmentation procedure to treat asymmetry if the woman's breasts differ by at least one cup size.
As of September 2008, only one law remained to be approved, but was delayed because it had a faulty procedure for approval.
Next, Mather pleaded his case to Dr. Zabdiel Boylston, who tried the procedure on his only son and two slaves — one grown and one a boy.
The apparent contradiction between harming or murdering a neighbor through inoculation and the Sixth Commandment --" thou shalt not kill "-- seemed insoluble and hence stood as one of the main objections against the procedure.
The procedure for filing a class action is to file suit with one or several named plaintiffs on behalf of a proposed class.
One controlled procedure has invited ' senders ' to telepathically transmit one of four visual images to ' receivers ' deprived of sensation in a nearby chamber ( Bem & Honorton, 1994 ).
No one shall be liable to be tried or punished again in criminal proceedings under the jurisdiction of the same State for an offence for which he or she has already been finally acquitted or convicted in accordance with the law and penal procedure of that State.
The 72 signatories and 166 parties to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights recognise this rule, under Article 14 ( 7 ): No one shall be liable to be tried or punished again for an offence for which he has already been finally convicted or acquitted in accordance with the law and penal procedure of each country.
This seven-judge procedure has been modified as of the 2012 London Olympics: rather than eliminating one high and one low award and then reducing the total by as in previous international events, the two highest awards and the two lowest are disregarded, leaving three to be summed and multiplied by the difficulty rating.
In the deconstruction procedure, one of the main concerns of Derrida is not to collapse into Hegel ´ s dialectic where these oppositions would be reduced to contradictions in a dialectic whose telos would, necessarily, be to resolve it into a synthesis,
This explains Derrida ´ s worry to always distinguish his procedure from Hegel's one:
Every system must have a class designated as " root ", with one of its creation procedures designated as " root procedure ".
Then one " flows " the charge by systematically redistributing the charge from a vertex to its neighboring vertices according to a set of rules, the discharging procedure.
Urologist Jean Fourcroy writes that women in countries that practise FGM call it one of the " three feminine sorrows ": the first sorrow is the procedure itself, followed by the wedding night when a woman with Type III has to be cut open, then childbirth when she has to be cut again.
The procedure may be carried out on one girl alone, or on a group of girls at the same time.

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