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At and times
At such times Thomas wondered when and where a counterattack would strike him.
At these times he felt a kind of pain in his upper chest, but it was an objective pain, in no way different from others in intensity and not different in kind ; ;
At times, three ships a day from the Soviet bloc are unloading in Cuban ports.
At times, clumps of 10 to 15 closely-packed nuclei were also observed.
At times pioneer children got lice in their hair.
At different times he served as glee-club and choir leader and as organist.
At times we can say that it was the major factor.
At times they would ride frenziedly through the camp, letting the women see their courage, how handsome they were in their regalia.
At various times in the more than 100 years that have elapsed since the song was written, particularly during the John F. Kennedy administration, there have been efforts to give " America the Beautiful " legal status either as a national hymn, or as a national anthem equal to, or in place of, " The Star-Spangled Banner ", but so far this has not succeeded.
At times when he was confined to bed, he drew, listened to the radio and collected pictures of movie stars around his bed.
At times it was applied to various priests, e. g. at the court of the Frankish monarchy the Abbas palatinus (' of the palace ') and Abbas castrensis (' of the camp ') were chaplains to the Merovingian and Carolingian sovereigns ’ court and army respectively.
At times, Alcott offered his own hand for an offending student to strike, saying that any failing was the teacher's responsibility.
At times between the 3rd and mid-15th century, antipopes were supported by a fairly significant faction of religious cardinals and secular kings and kingdoms.
At times the imperialist democracy acted with extreme brutality, as in the decision to execute the entire male population of Melos and sell off its women and children simply for refusing to became subjects of Athens.
At times the development of armour has run parallel to the development of increasingly effective weaponry on the battlefield, with armourers seeking to create better protection without sacrificing mobility.
At various times the choice was made by the canons of Canterbury Cathedral, the King of England, or the Pope.
At magnitude 5. 5, it is only 1 / 370th as bright visually as Antares A, although it shines with 170 times the Sun's luminosity.
At times he rose, at other times he shrank to the ground, he moved as if he wanted to play all the instruments himself and sing for the whole chorus.
At times during the piece, Beethoven directs that the beat should be one downbeat every three bars, perhaps because of the very fast pace of the of the movement, with the direction ritmo di tre battute (" rhythm of three bars "), and one beat every four bars with the direction ritmo di quattro battute (" rhythm of four bars ").
At a pressure of 55 GPa ( roughly 540 times atmospheric pressure ) bromine converts to a metal.
At the time of his retirement from the England team in 1970, he was the nation's most capped player, having turned out 106 times at the highest level.
At times, Charlton was not on speaking terms with United's other superstars George Best and Denis Law, and Best refused to play in Charlton's testimonial match against Celtic, saying that " to do so would be hypocritical ".
At first the predictions of Einstein's formula were seemingly refuted by a series of experiments by Svedberg in 1906 and 1907, which gave displacements of the particles as 4 to 6 times the predicted value, and by Henri in 1908 who found displacements 3 times greater than Einstein's formula predicted.

At and propelled
At launch the A-4 propelled itself for up to 65 seconds on its own power, and a program motor controlled the pitch to the specified angle at engine shutdown, from which the rocket continued on a ballistic free-fall trajectory.
At Solatron he enquired about the possibility of electrically propelled personal vehicles.
At that point, the two mules were loaded onto a platform at the rear of the car and allowed to ride, as gravity propelled the trolley back down the avenue to the downtown Ontario terminus.
At the time, Morley and Keeler were already famous, but the photo propelled the Arne Jacobsen model 3107 chair to stardom.
At the end of the oral preparatory phase, the food bolus has been formed and is ready to be propelled posteriorly into the pharynx.
The Gothenburg sound, propelled by both the Boss HM-2 Heavy Metal with cleaner recordings and melded with New Wave of British Heavy Metal guitar lines, was pioneered by bands such as At the Gates, Dark Tranquillity and In Flames for their respective albums Slaughter of the Soul, The Gallery and The Jester Race.
" At This Moment " propelled his movie career as he and the Beaters were featured prominently in the Bruce Willis movie Blind Date as well as a scene in the 1987 comedy film Adventures in Babysitting.
At first he was cast as their editorialist, and his deadpan, double-talk comments on the issues of the day propelled him into the national consciousness.
At this point Fisher's popularity rose dramatically and propelled him to his now legendary status as a pioneer in the field of growth investing.
At St. Lucy's Priory High School, Nuveman-Deniz propelled the Lady Regents to a CIF title.
At the end of 1978, Relix underwent a major transition that propelled it from more of a newsletter to a true magazine.

At and object
At exactly 7:30, he felt a fluttering object brush his face.
At the instant of any observation of an object, the apparent position of the object is displaced from its true position by an amount which depends solely upon the transverse component of the velocity of the observer, with respect to the vector of the incoming beam of light ( i. e., the line actually taken by the light on its path to the observer ).
At the same time, object databases attempt to introduce key ideas of object programming, such as encapsulation and polymorphism, into the world of databases.
At even faster velocities the object will follow a range of hyperbolic trajectories.
At some point, the married couple may become the object of a charivari, a good-natured hazing of the newly-married couple.
( At that time, nebula was the generic term for any visually extended or diffuse astronomical object, including galaxies beyond the Milky Way, until galaxies were confirmed as extragalactic systems by Edwin Hubble in 1924.
At the conclusion of the season, Buffy destroys an object, a seed, that is the source of the magic in the world, leaving Willow powerless.
At Meissen, Brandenburg, and Merseburg he succeeded in giving the papal measure due official publicity, but at Leipzig he was the object of the ridicule of the student body and was compelled to flee by night to Freiberg, where he was again prevented
At the climax, O appears as a slave, nude but for an owl-like mask, before a large party of guests who treat her solely as an object.
At the denotational level, the term refers to situations where a single entity can be seen to mean more than one mathematical object.
At emission, the object was at distance d from the Sun, and moved at angular rate μ radian / s, that is, μ = v < sub > t </ sub > / d with v < sub > t </ sub > = velocity transverse to line of sight from the Sun.
At 12: 07 a. m., a security camera at the high altitude W. L. Eccles Observatory ( 9600 ft above sea level ) recorded a movie of the passage of the object to the north.
At the Voyager 2 images Ophelia appears as an elongated object, the major axis pointing towards Uranus.
At the Voyager 2 images Bianca appears as an elongated object, the major axis pointing towards Uranus.
At the Voyager 2 images Cressida appears as an elongated object, the major axis pointing towards Uranus.
At the Voyager 2 images Desdemona appears as an elongated object, the major axis pointing towards Uranus.
At the Voyager 2 images Juliet appears as an elongated object, the major axis pointing towards Uranus.
At the age of 46, in 1536, she was back in Rome, where, besides winning the esteem of Cardinals Reginald Pole and Contarini, she became the object of a passionate friendship on the part of 61-year-old Michelangelo.
At the January 2, 2007 funeral of Gerald Ford, George H. W. Bush reminisced in his eulogy about how Ford took it in stride when SNL's Chevy Chase made Ford the object of impressions.
At one point, it was hoped that QPW and Paradox for Windows would be able to share a common object model.
At an Air Traffic Control center in Indianapolis, Indiana, a controller listens as two airline flights almost have a mid-air collision with an apparent unidentified flying object ( UFO ).
At the start of a new scene, the z-buffer must be cleared to a defined value, usually 1. 0, because this value is the upper limit ( on a scale of 0 to 1 ) of depth, meaning that no object is present at this point through the viewing frustum.
At a stadium or arena, sports fans will voice their pleasure with a particular incident, player, or team by cheering, which consists of clapping, fist-pumping, or shouting positive exclamations toward the field of play and ultimately, the favorable object.

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