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Borrowing and had
He had more than sixteen hundred subscribers to The Pennylesse Pilgrimage ; or, the Moneylesse Perambulation of John Taylor, alias the Kings Magesties Water-Poet ; How He TRAVAILED on Foot from London to Edenborough in Scotland, Not Carrying any Money To or Fro, Neither Begging, Borrowing, or Asking Meate, Drinke, or Lodging., published in 1618.
Borrowing Maiorescu's theory about how Westernization had come to Romania as " forms without concept " ( meaning that some modern customs had been forced on top of local traditions ), Iorga likewise aimed it against the liberal establishment, but gave it a more radical expression.
Borrowing its appearance cues from the Zonda GR, the Monza included a dry sump version of the Zonda S 7. 3 engine tuned to and had improved cooling.
Borrowing from the principles of De Stijl, Sutnar's work had a reduction to primary colors, straight lines, and an overall harmony of irregular text alignment.

Borrowing and would
Borrowing the technique used in weather forecasts, Child devised a large blue room, which would be set up in Studio A of Anglia Studios.

Borrowing and could
Borrowing from Thomas Pynchon, Neoism could be more suitably called an " anarchist miracle " of an international network of highly eccentric persons collaborating, often with extremist intensity, under the one shared identity of Monty Cantsin and Neoism.

Borrowing and between
Borrowing language and concepts from a wide variety of philosophical schools, especially Edmund Husserl, the Marburg school of neo-Kantianism, Ernst Cassirer's Philosophy of Symbolic Forms -- and, as some contend, Franz Xaver von Baader, Dooyeweerd builds on this foundation of a supposed " antithesis " to make distinctions between one kind of thinking and another, theorizing that diverse kinds of thinking disclose diverse kinds of meaning, and that this meaning corresponds in some way to the actual state of affairs.
Borrowing between manuals occurs in English organs from about 1700, but extension of pipe ranks for the purpose of borrowing at different pitches is a relatively recent development.
Borrowing a concept used by Emil Fischer in 1894 to explain the interaction between an enzyme and its substrate, Ehrlich proposed that binding of the receptor to an infectious agent was like the fit between a lock and key.

Borrowing and them
Borrowing Coleman's quotation from Putnam's book, Coleman once mentioned we cannot understate " the importance of the embeddedness of young persons in the enclaves of adults most proximate to them, first and most prominent the family and second, a surrounding community of adults ".
Borrowing an idea developed in England in 1916, cards were placed on holders along the range and scaled models of the missile fired through them.
Borrowing on expertise developed in CMS over the past 5 years, the team is synthesizing nanopowders based on sol-gel processing, and then sintering them accordingly in order to obtain the solid-state laser components.

Borrowing and .
Borrowing in anticipation of current taxes and other revenues is a routine procedure of the majority of municipalities at all times.
Borrowing a line from Don Marquis' Mehitabel.
Borrowing from the French Physiocrats the idea that all wealth originates with the land, making farming the only truly productive enterprise, agrarianism claims that agriculture is the foundation of all other professions.
The " borrowing " of religious rituals from other faith traditions by Unitarian Universalists was discussed at the UU General Assembly in 2001 during a seminar titled Cultural Appropriation: Reckless Borrowing or Appropriate Cultural Sharing by the Religious Education Dept, UUA.
Borrowing the recently introduced Chrysler Horizon from their European division, Dodge was able to get its new Omni subcompact on the market fairly quickly.
Borrowing heavily from Alfred Hitchcock, Carpenter slowly builds the suspense and intrigue before the final confrontation.
Borrowing from concepts available in logic ( and as illustrated in graphical notations such as conceptual graphs and topic maps ), some RDF model implementations acknowledge that it is sometimes useful to group statements according to different criteria, called situations, contexts, or scopes, as discussed in articles by RDF specification co-editor Graham Klyne.
* McLaughlin, John E. ( 2000 ) " Language Boundaries and Phonological Borrowing in the Central Numic Languages " In Casad, Gene and Willett, Thomas ( eds.
Borrowing a proven Disney formula, there have been attempts to broaden the ABC brand name.
Borrowing a discovery from boats that extending a control surface's area forward of the hinge lightens the forces needed first appeared on ailerons during World War I when ailerons were extended beyond the wingtip and provided with a horn ahead of the hinge.
< li > 假借 jiǎjiè: Borrowing, in which a character is used, either intentionally or accidentally, for some entirely different purpose.
Borrowing and integrating the highest forms from many different approaches, Kundalini Yoga can be understood as a tri-fold approach of Bhakti yoga for devotion, Shakti yoga for power, and Raja yoga for mental power and control.
The Lexical Basis of Grammatical Borrowing.
Borrowing from the New Town movement in the UK, some 30 new towns have been built all over Japan.
" Borrowing a phrase from the ending of The Thing from Another World, he retitled the film Watch the Skies, rewriting the premise concerning Project Blue Book and pitching the concept to Willard Huyck and Gloria Katz.
Borrowing and repayment arrangements linked to inflation-indexed units of account are possible and are used in some countries.
Borrowing from the Italian fascist organization Dopolavoro " After Work ", but extending its influence into the workplace as well, KdF rapidly developed a wide range of activities, and quickly grew into one of Nazi Germany's largest organizations.
Borrowing by American cities dates to the nineteenth century ; records of U. S. municipal bonds indicate use around the early 1800s.
The March 1993 budget forecast a Public Sector Borrowing Requirement for 1993-94 of £ 50bn, equivalent to 8 % of GDP.

metaphor and had
Alcaeus rarely used metaphor or simile and yet he had a fondness for the allegory of the storm-tossed ship of state.
The use of cyberspace as a metaphor has had its limits, however, especially in areas where the metaphor becomes confused with physical infrastructure.
It is a matter of opinion whether this demonstrates a lack of attention to craftsmanship or a conscious effort to expand the boundaries of science fiction, either into a kind of magical realism, continuing the process of literary exploration that he had begun with Stranger in a Strange Land, or into a kind of literary metaphor of quantum science ( The Number of the Beast dealing with the Observer problem, and The Cat Who Walks Through Walls being a direct reference to the Schrödinger's cat thought experiment ).
:" As soon as a noun enters the domain of metaphor, as one modern scholar has pointed out, it clamours for extension ; and satura ( which had had no verbal, adverbial, or adjectival forms ) was immediately broadened by appropriation from the Greek word for “ satyr ” ( satyros ) and its derivatives.
Huxley had used Blake's metaphor in The Doors of Perception while discussing the paintings of Vermeer and the Nain brothers, and previously in The Perennial Philosophy, once in relation to the use of mortification as a means to remove persistent spiritual myopia and secondly to refer to the absence of separation in spiritual vision.
However, Wally Schirra had been prevented from naming his Apollo 7 spacecraft Phoenix in honor of Grissom's Apollo 1 crew since it was believed the average taxpayer would not take a " fire " metaphor as intended.
Although the critics were superlative in their praise, they expressed disappointment at the unremittingly dark portrayal of human nature, fearing Thackeray had taken his dismal metaphor too far.
Lakoff further argues that one of the reasons liberals have had difficulty since the 1980s is that they have not been as aware of their own guiding metaphors, and have too often accepted conservative terminology framed in a way to promote the strict father metaphor.
The metaphor implies that the creators showed little care for the original software or the resulting product, as if the new compilation or version had been indiscriminately created or ported with a shovel.
In The Birth of the Clinic: An Archeology of Medical Perception ( 1963 ), Foucault extended his critique to institutional clinical medicine, arguing for the central conceptual metaphor of " The Gaze ", which had implications for medical education, prison design, and the carceral state as understood today.
* " I had butterflies in my stomach " is a metaphor, referring to my nervousness feeling as if there were flying insects in my stomach.
* Socrates also had a Antaios metaphor: Your comparison with.
In that speech, Irving used the metaphor of a cruise ship named Holocaust, which Irving claimed had "... luxury wall to wall fitted carpets and a crew of thousands … marine terminals established in now virtually every capital in the world, disguised as Holocaust memorial museums ".
Lin had recently escaped Limbo, an apparent metaphor for what happened to Danvers after the cancellation of Supergirl.
The earliest sources regard the two dragons as distinctly different, and in a metaphor of the Adventus Saxonum describes one as being native to the island of Britain ( it had arrived first ) which was then joined by another new and alien dragon that fought it for supremacy.
Journalist Nora Ephron wrote that she had loved the novel when she was 18 but admitted that she " missed the point ," which she suggested is largely subliminal sexual metaphor.
His dismissive attitude, " gave some readers a way to see that there need be no clash between construction and reality ," inasmuch as " the metaphor of social construction once had excellent shock value, but now it has become tired.
Readers who interpret the relationship as overtly homosexual quote such lines as the fact that Charles had been " in search of love in those days " when he first met Sebastian, and his finding " that low door in the wall ... which opened on an enclosed and enchanted garden " — an image that some interpret as a Freudian metaphor for homosexual sex, though it recurs when Charles is expelled from Brideshead by Lady Marchmain, suggesting it refers more generally to the glamorous world Sebastian represents: " a door had shut, the low door in the wall I had sought and found in Oxford.
The paternal metaphor was completed with the addition of a maternal figure — Russia, the motherland, who had produced “ father ” Stalin ’ s heroic sons such as Chkalov.
Broadcasts reportedly from Downing Street parody previous BBC political editor Andrew Marr, showing his supposed eccentric manner, interminable sentences, and jerky movements — he is shown with giant hands operated by rods and speaks in mixed metaphor: " Well Fiona, might I say my goose has well and truly had its chips ".

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