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At and core
At its core, the Amiga has a custom chipset consisting of several coprocessors, which handle audio, video and direct memory access independently of the Central Processing Unit ( CPU ).
At its core, the term " Balkans " are States that have been shaped by membership of Byzantium and the Ottoman Empire.
At various stages of stellar evolution, the nuclei required for this process will be exhausted, and the core will collapse, causing it to become denser and hotter.
At the core of SFA is a contact management system for tracking and recording every stage in the sales process for each prospective client, from initial contact to final disposition.
" At its core, the gameplay is similar to classic shooter games ( such as Space Invaders ), presenting the player with the challenge of surviving while shooting every enemy in sight, but with its pseudo-3D first-person perspective giving environments a spatial representation that has a major effect on the level design and gameplay experience.
At its core are Einstein's equations, which describe the relation between the geometry of a four-dimensional, pseudo-Riemannian manifold representing spacetime, and the energy – momentum contained in that spacetime.
At the other extreme, an Sc galaxy has open, well-defined arms and a small core region.
At its core, Russian nihilism was characterized by the belief that the world lacks comprehensible meaning, objective truth, or value.
At high currents, iron core inductors also show gradual departure from ideal behavior due to nonlinearity caused by magnetic saturation.
At VHF or higher frequencies an air core is likely to be used.
At its core, the Tanakh is an account of the Israelites ' relationship with God from their earliest history until the building of the Second Temple ( c. 535 BCE ).
At their core, however, will be instructional content, practice, and assessment.
At the rim they lay their eggs, then travel the 50, 000 light-years back to the core.
At the core of Merleau-Ponty's philosophy is a sustained argument for the foundational role that perception plays in understanding the world as well as engaging with the world.
At its core was Television, described by critic John Walker as " the ultimate garage band with pretensions ".
At its core, a raster image editor works by manipulating each individual pixel.
At the center of the nebula remains the core of the star, which cools down to become a small but dense white dwarf.
At its core, the common attribute that Web 2. 0 brings is to help navigate the vast amount of information available on the Web in order to find what is being sought.
At the core of these and myriad other examples is a conflict formally equivalent to the Prisoner's Dilemma.
At maturity, the base and core of the trillium ovary turns soft and spongy.
At their core, all models of ubiquitous computing share a vision of small, inexpensive, robust networked processing devices, distributed at all scales throughout everyday life and generally turned to distinctly common-place ends.
At the core of the controversy were insistent African demands for greater participation in government and European fears of losing political control.
At three hundred pounds, Whiteman was huge both physically and culturally —" a man flabby, virile, quick, coarse, untidy and sleek, with a hard core of shrewdness in an envelope of sentimentalism ," according to a 1926 New Yorker profile.
At age 19 Cameron Diaz starred in " She's No Angel ," a 1992 soft core bondage movie.

At and social
At what stage are social sciences then??
At that time it was a series of sophisticated social dances whose steps were often combined with other steps devised by the choreographer.
At family or small social gatherings, one mate may be shared by the group, with the host preparing the mate to the preference of each guest.
# At the third stage there are physical and social consequences, i. e., hangovers, family problems, work problems, etc.
At the time of Jesus, there was no single, coherent form or order within Second Temple Judaism, and significant political, social and religious differences existed among the Jews.
At the same time, he reassured the landowners that social reforms would be limited to the cities.
At the bottom of the white social hiearchy came the so-called " poor whites ," often given such pejorative names as red legs in Barbados, or walking buckras in Jamaica.
At least 90 % of the inhabitants of drylands live in developing nations, where they also suffer from poor economic and social conditions.
At the University of Göttingen, Hilbert was surrounded by a social circle of some of the most important mathematicians of the 20th century, such as Emmy Noether and Alonzo Church.
At the turn of the 21st century, the expanding domain of economics in the social sciences has been described as economic imperialism.
At this time, Victor Gollancz suggested Orwell spend a short time investigating social conditions in economically depressed northern England.
At the BBC, Orwell introduced Voice, a literary programme for his Indian broadcasts, and by now was leading an active social life with literary friends, particularly on the political left.
At independence, Ghana had a substantial physical and social infrastructure and $ 481 million in foreign reserves.
At least one work of fiction, the film Final Fantasy: The Spirits Within, uses Gaia philosophy as a central point to the plot, and may arguably represent a fictional parallel to Sir James Lovelock in the character of Dr. Cid, who is met with skepticism from the scientific and social community when he promotes the idea of a " living Earth ".
At home he attended to social needs.
At the time when the futility of armed resistance without external support was realized by most Poles, the various segments of the Polish society were undergoing deep and far-reaching social, economic and cultural transformations.
At the end of the day, members met for meetings and had a curfew of 9 p. m. On Sundays, the members respected the " Holy day " and did no unnecessary work, but attended church services, singing groups, and other social activities.
At the same time social, political, and economic forces were at work that would become the basis to argue for a radically different kind of art and thinking.
At the end of the 19th-and beginning of the 20th-centuries, the Methodist Church responded strongly to what it regarded as social ills ( i. e. gambling, use of intoxicating beverages, etc.
* At present-day there is developing an interdisciplinary approach which aims at considering macroevolution at a transdisciplinary scale, and concentrates on the comparison between biological and social macroevolution as this gives new significant possibilities to understand peculiarities of each of the two types of macroevolution.
At their best, free-form stations have never been equaled for their degree of social activism, programmatic freedom, and listener involvement.
At some point, the word took on connotations of bookishness and social ineptitude.
At Gjerstad rectory, she enjoyed arranging balls and social gatherings.
* 1825 – At Union College in Schenectady, New York a group of college students form Kappa Alpha Society, the first college social fraternity.

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