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Page "Battle of Blenheim" ¶ 26
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By and series
By what one reader called a `` series of dissolving views '', he merges one period into another and gives a sense of continuous growth.
By the 2005 series Australia's wins had increased to 115 whereas England's had increased to only 93 ( with 82 draws ).
By the 1930s, a series of favorable biographies enhanced his prestige.
By the late Bronze Age, however, a series of treaties had established safe passage for merchants around the Eastern Mediterranean, spreading from Minoan Crete and Mycenae in the northwest to Elam and Bahrain in the southeast.
By 1973, the series began to appear in two more magazines, Shogaku Gonensei ( fifth grade of primary school ) and Shogaku Rokunensei ( sixth grade of primary school ).
By 1987, with Yzerman, now the captain following the departure of Danny Gare, joined by Petr Klima, Adam Oates, Gerard Gallant, defenseman Darren Veitch and new head coach Jacques Demers, the Wings won a playoff series for only the second time in the modern era.
By the end of the " Kino-Pravda " series, Vertov made liberal use of stop motion, freeze frames, and other cinematic " artificialities ," giving rise to criticisms not just of his trenchant dogmatism, but also of his cinematic technique.
By this time Vertov had been using his newsreel series as a pedestal to vilify dramatic fiction for several years ; he continued his criticisms even after the warm reception of Sergei Eisenstein's Battleship Potemkin in 1925.
By using Taylor series approximations of the maps and an understanding of the differences that may be eliminated by a change of coordinates, it is possible to catalog the bifurcations of dynamical systems.
By the 2005 series, the Daleks and the Time Lords had engaged in a mutually destructive Time War.
By 1951, 87 subroutines in the following categories were available for general use: floating point arithmetic ; arithmetic operations on complex numbers ; checking ; division ; exponentiation ; routines relating to functions ; differential equations ; special functions ; power series ; logarithms ; miscellaneous ; print and layout ; quadrature ; read ( input ); nth root ; trigonometric functions ; counting operations ( simulating repeat until loops, while loops and for loops ); vectors ; and matrices.
By 1939 her marriage to Pollock was in difficulties, and she began a series of affairs.
By including interaction, scripting, and compilation, Forth was popular on computers with limited resources, such as the BBC Micro and Apple II series, and remains so in applications such as firmware and small microcontrollers.
By early afternoon, the feature was captured and was then held against a series of Axis counter-attacks throughout the day.
By a series of decrees in 1717, Alberoni reduced the powers of the grandees in royal councils.
By the 1960s, TV series, such as The Addams Family and The Munsters, used these stereotypes for camp comedy.
By this time, Parsons's own use of drugs had increased to the extent that new songs were rare and much of his time was diverted to partying with the Stones, who briefly relocated to America in the summer of 1969 to finish their forthcoming Let It Bleed album and prepare for an autumn cross-country tour, their first series of regular live engagements since 1967.
By 1996, a series of RFCs was released defining Internet Protocol version 6 ( IPv6 ), starting with RFC 1883.
By reaching into his mind, Emma reactivates Bobby's powers through opening a series of mental blocks he has placed on himself, and saves him from near death.
By that time, the show's name became Transitions, which was also the name of a four-volume series of mix albums by Digweed released every six months during 2006-2008.
By 1933, it had been transformed into a sculptural environment, and three photos from this year show a series of angled surfaces aggressively protruding into a room painted largely in white, with a series of tableaux spread across the surfaces.
By the time of the next Ashes series of 1932 – 33, Bradman's average hovered around 100, approximately twice that of all other world-class batsmen.
By the end of 2007, each episode of the original TV series averaged a sales figure of 80, 928 copies, including all of the different formats it was published in ( VHS, LD, DVD, etc .).

By and brilliant
By 1560 the leadership of the Oda clan had passed to the brilliant leader Oda Nobunaga.
* August 30 – Seven Years ' War – Battle of Legnica: By a series of brilliant maneuvers, Frederick the Great manages to defeat the Austrian army of Marshal Laudon before it can unite with that of Marshal Daun.
" had composed a brilliant new score ( his most subtle yet ) to a scintillating libretto .... Iolanthe is the work in which Sullivan's operetta style takes a definite step forward, and metamorphosis of musical themes is its characteristic new feature .... By recurrence and metamorphosis of themes Sullivan made the score more fluid ...." Much of Sullivan's " fairy " music pays deliberate homage to the incidental music written by Felix Mendelssohn for a production of Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream.
By 1477, Margaret's position as Duchess of Burgundy was no longer as brilliant as it had been: after Isabel's death in 1471, Charles had become increasingly tyrannical and grandiose, dreaming of assembling a Kingdom of Lotharingia from the North Sea to the Mediterranean ; to accomplish this, he warred continuously with his neighbours, who responded by allying against him.
By an exercise of brilliant psychological deception, and a secretive night march covering nearly 40 miles in 18 hours, the Allies penetrated the allegedly impregnable lines without losing a single man ; Marlborough was now in position to besiege the fortress of Bouchain.
General Jackson went to the convent himself to thank the nuns for their prayers: " By the blessing of heaven, directing the valor of the troops under my command, one of the most brilliant victories in the annals of war was obtained.
By the end of his brilliant career, out of his nine starts The Minstrel won seven races, finishing second and third once each.
She was so tired she went to sleep, and when she awoke she was half skinned ... at night to go through the same process ... By the third morning she was a raw even red, the fourth she had faded to a brilliant pink under the soothing influence of a cream recommended ... The following day she was a pale pink, later a delicate porcelain white "
By manipulating the brain in this way, Emergent managers induce obsession with a single idea or specialty, which they call Focus, essentially turning people into brilliant appliances.
By mid-1917, however, with the armies stalemated on both fronts, he had come to a change of heart, which he elucidated in a brilliant speech in the Reichstag on July 6, in which he called on the government to denounce territorial ambition and urged a negotiated end to the war.
By Lap 21, the two cars were nose to tail, and a lap later, the Williams took the lead in brilliant fashion as Rosberg pulled alongside entering one of the many tight right-hand corners, stayed there through the corner on the outside, and emerged slightly sideways but in front.
By his outstanding courage, tireless determination, and brilliant leadership, Colonel Fertig made an inestimable contribution to the liberation of the Philippine Islands.
By great application joined to an unusually brilliant mind and an extraordinarily retentive memory, he accumulated such a vast store of knowledge that his contemporaries styled him a wonder of the world.

By and marches
By the late 1970s and early 1980s, as many of the actual participants had grown older, moved on to other issues or died, this led to misunderstandings as to who had actually participated in the Stonewall riots, who had actually organized the subsequent demonstrations, marches and memorials, and who had been members of early activist organizations such as Gay Liberation Front and Gay Activists Alliance.
Sheen endorsed marches and walkouts called by the civil rights group By Any Means Necessary ( BAMN ) to force the state of California to honor the Cesar Chavez holiday.
By this time, published marches were plentiful due to prolific composers such as John Philip Sousa, Karl L. King, and Henry Fillmore.
By that date he had been on a tour to the north-west, which went via the Welsh marches to Cheshire, Lancashire and Cumberland ; while other itineraries took him to the west Midlands, the north-east ( reaching Yorkshire and County Durham ), and the Bristol region.
By this time the BM had effectively given up mainstream politics in favour of provocative marches and violence, changes that appealed to the younger element who were disillusioned with the disintegrating NF.
By 1976 Jamaat's street power multiplied by 2, 000, 000 new entrants when it swore to organize marches to Islamabad for implementing Sharia.
By the second half of the ninth century, three political subdivisions ( marches ) existed in the eastern Pyrenees: Toulouse ( green ), Gothia ( blue ), and Hispania ( pink ).
By the mid-1960s he had drifted into the centre of London's emerging underground scene and recorded many peace marches, poetry readings and " happenings ", as well as photographing leading counter-cultural figures including Allen Ginsberg and Malcolm X.
By its end in the May 1993, it turned into a political disaster for the Canadian Forces and was also marked by a few, low key, protest marches in both Somalia, Kenya and Ohio.
By forced marches, sometimes carried on through the better part of the night, he reached Tsedayar on the 17th of October, when he learnt that Bayen Hu had driven off the whole of the population, and was already at Bugur, on the road to Kucha.
By his ingenuity, man dried-out the marches and planted thousands of acres of maritime pines.
By August 1945, all survivors of the marches were killed.

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