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Both are derived from Donald Knuth's Metafont language and interpreter.
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Some Related Sentences
Both and are
Both I and my feelings come up out of a chain of events that fan out into the past into sources that are ultimately very unlike the entity which I now am.
Both allowances are governed by conditions and restrictions set forth in detail in the state's Travel Regulations.
Both of these systems are essential for the production, development, and use of the National Forests.
Both the photocathode and the image plane of such an electrode configuration are curved concave as seen from the anode aperture.
Both man and wife should be aware of the fact that a lack of climax, and even the absence of the anticipated keen pleasure are not a sign that the wife may be cold or frigid.
Both are primarily concerned with the uses that can be made of the material that the collector has found.
Both Miss Garson and her oilman-rancher husband are active supporters of Boys Clubs of America and patrons of the vivid art and opera colony that flourishes in New Mexico.
Both are 6 feet tall and weigh between 195 and 200 pounds, but Mantle, incredibly muscular ( he has a 17-1/2-inch neck ), looks bigger.
Both these types, and those in between, are in existence by reason of a legislative interest in libraries that began at Albany as early as 1950, with the creation by the legislature of county library systems financed by county governments with matching funds from the state.
Both are members of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, the African Union and other multilateral organizations.
Both and derived
Both Stephanus and Eustathius write of these Amazons in connection with the placename Thibais, which they report to have been derived from Thiba's name.
Both are probably derived from the Latin barica, from Greek baris " Egyptian boat ", from Coptic bari " small boat ", hieroglyphic Egyptian < small >< hiero > D58-G29-M17-M17-D21-P1 </ hiero ></ small > and similar ba-y-r for " basket-shaped boat ".
Both * Gautoz and * Gutaniz are derived ( specifically they are two ablaut grades ) from the Proto-Germanic word * geutan, meaning " to pour ".
Both Greek hippos and Latin equus are derived from the Proto-Indo-European word root ekwo-meaning " horse ".
Both names " plumcot " and " apriplum " have been used for trees derived from a plum seed parent, and are therefore equivalent.
Both words are thought to be derived from Common Germanic * jeχʷla -, and are cognate to Gothic ( fruma ) jiuleis and Old Norse ( Icelandic and Faroese ) jól ( Danish and Swedish jul and Norwegian jul or jol ) as well as ýlir.
Both characteristics can be considered apomorphies, i. e. evolutionarily derived features, and thus form the basis of a common taxon for all animals that possess them.
Both cause large amounts of urine to be produced ( polyuria ), and the term " diabetes " is derived from the Greek name for this symptom.
Both the dohyō-iri, or ring-entering ceremonies performed by the top two divisions before the start of their wrestling day, and in the rituals performed by both combatants immediately before a bout, are derived from Shinto.
Both of these are likely derived from priesthood authority archetypes, such as Celtic Druids, or perhaps Biblical figures like Abraham, Moses, etc.
Both titles are derived from a couplet in T. S. Eliot's poem, The Waste Land ( which appears both in this work and Consider Phlebas as an epigraph ):
Both the botanical name ( from the Greek δρόσος: drosos = " dew, dewdrops ") and the English common name ( sundew, derived from Latin ros solis, meaning " dew of the sun ") refer to the glistening drops of mucilage at the tip of each tentacle that resemble drops of morning dew.
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