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By and carrying
By extension, the word for carrying or drawing a beer came to mean the serving of the beer and, in some senses, the act of drinking, or a drink of beer itself, regardless of serving method.
By the later stages of the Eighty Years War the Dutch had switched entirely from the heavier ships still used by the English and Spanish to the lighter frigates, carrying around 40 guns and weighing around 300 tons.
By 22 June 2012, the Angolan vessel Rio M ' bridge, carrying the mission's equipment, had arrived back in Luanda.
By 07: 50, Mihdhar and the other hijackers, carrying knives and box cutters, had made it through the airport security checkpoint and boarded Flight 77 to Los Angeles.
By entrenching his infantry in a refused position in the centre line, then carrying out a cavalry envelopment to culminate a classic defensive-offensive battleplan.
By bonding ( interconnecting ) all exposed non-current carrying metal objects together, they should remain near the same potential thus reducing the chance of a shock.
By the 1830s, railroads on several continents were carrying containers that could be transferred to other modes of transport.
By 1960, Silver City made 40, 000 yearly Channel crossings, carrying 90, 000 vehicles and 220, 000 passengers.
By 2000 or so, commercial systems capable of carrying 128 signals were available.
By 1952, the U. S. had dropped insects carrying a wide variety of diseases over China and North Korea, including plague, anthrax, encephalitis, cholera, dysentery, neurotropic viruses, and plant and livestock pathogens.
By 1943, Germany began mass producing the A-4 as the Vergeltungswaffe 2 (“ Vengeance Weapon ” 2, or more commonly, V2 ), a ballistic missile with a range carrying a warhead at.
By 1980 each Royal Artillery fire unit consisted of a 101 FC 1 tonne 24v Land Rover towing the Rapier Launcher and carrying 4 missiles on board, a 109 " 3 / 4 ton 24v FFR ( Fitted For Radio ) Land Rover towing a 1 ton MST ( Missile Supply Trailer ), containing up to a further 10 missiles.
By 1840 more than 30 schooners were operating out of the harbor, carrying fish and produce.
By default, it would be carrying WRAZ since it is in the Raleigh-Durham DMA.
By the next century the iconic depiction of the Virgin enthroned carrying the infant Christ was established, as in the example from the only group of icons surviving from this period, at Saint Catherine's Monastery, Mount Sinai.
By 1797 the aqueduct was open, carrying the canal above the river, and boats were now able to travel the from Preston to Tewitfield.
By the 1990s, Alitalia was carrying 25 million passengers annually.
By a stroke of luck, a band of Cossacks captured a messenger carrying Napoleon's plans to Bernadotte and quickly forwarded the information to General Pyotr Bagration.
By 2006, the Petit Larousse definition had become '( Norman word ) Region where the fields and meadows are enclosed by earth banks carrying hedges or rows of trees and where the habitation is generally dispersed in farms and hamlets.
By July 1940 this system was well developed as the Kammhuber Line, and proved able to deal with the small raids by isolated bombers the RAF was carrying out at the time.
By way of example, he noted that the line from Thetford to Swaffham carried a total of 5 trains each weekday in each direction, carrying an average of 9 passengers with only 10 % of the costs of operating the line covered by fares ; another example he used was the Gleneagles-Crief-Comrie line with had 10 trains a day and five passengers average earning only 25 % of costs.
By 1900, it was one of the most powerful banking houses of the world, carrying through many deals especially reorganizations and consolidations.
By composing and orchestrating the appropriate level of resources, skill, ingenuity, and experience for effecting specific benefits for service consumers, service providers participate in an economy without the restrictions of carrying inventory ( stock ) or the need to concern themselves with bulky raw materials.
By late on 30 November, 78th Division — supported by 4th Armoured Brigade — had taken Fossacesia, and the whole ridge on the far bank of the Sangro — carrying the main Bernhardt defences — was under Eighth Army control.

By and SCSI
By 1990, SCSI had matured enough to handle high data rates and multiple types of drives, and ATA was quickly overtaking ST-506 in the desktop market.
By 1991, things were starting to slow down, as the PC industry moved from ST-506 and ESDI drives to ATA and SCSI, and thus were buying fewer hard disk controller boards.
By September 1986, the ProFile would be superseded by the introduction of the first cross-platform Hard Disk 20SC SCSI-based drive for the Macintosh and interface card for the Apple II family ( excluding the IIc series, which had no SCSI interface of any kind ) and Lisa / XL series.

By and commands
Cleopatra ’ s “‘ Roman ’ language of command works to undermine Antony's authority .” By using a Romanesque rhetoric, Cleopatra commands Antony and others in Antony ’ s own style.
By definition, each company is led by an officer ( a captain or lieutenant ) who commands several firefighters.
By the commands of Camillus, the Roman soldiers were protected particularly against the Gallic main attack, the heavy blow of their swords.
By repeating this maneuver a defender can narrow the front of the spearhead until it no longer commands enough width for the following infantry to effectively move.
By constitutional convention, the Crown's prerogative powers over the armed forces and constitutional powers as Commander-in-Chief are exercised by the Prime Minister and Cabinet, the governing ministry that commands the confidence of the House of Commons.
By direction of the Secretary of Defense, the Secretary of the Air Force assigns military units of the Department of the Air Force, other than those who carry out the functions listed in 10 USC 8013 ( b ), to the Unified and Specified Combatant Commands to perform missions assigned to those commands.
By using TeX commands, it is possible to directly insert " literal PostScript " into the DVI file and have such snippets of PostScript appear in the final file generated by < tt > dvips </ tt >.
By May, Fifth Air Force's surviving personnel and aircraft were detached to other commands and the headquarters remained unmanned for several months, but elements played a small part in the Battle of the Coral Sea ( 7 – 8 May 1942 ) when the 435th Bomb Squadron of the 19th Bomb Group saw the Japanese fleet gathering in Rabaul area nearly two weeks before the battle actually took place.
By the ninth main-line novel ( Ashes of Victory ) Honor has emerged also as a strategist of note as well as key political figure, and has been rapidly promoted to differing high general officer ( Admiral ) ranks in both the Manticoran and Grayson space navies, holding higher ranks in her persona as a Grayson, but most often accepting demotion to appear in Manticore commands.
By means of relays energized by train-line wires, the engineer ( or motorman ) commands all of the traction motors in the train to act together.
By holding down the GameSpeak button and pressing various commands, Abe can command them to follow him, stay put and activate mechanisms, as well as praise or scold them.
By the beginning of The Armour of Contempt, there are three cultural sections: Tanith, Verghastite and Belladon ; led by Majors Rawne, Kolea and Baskevyl respectively ( each is native to the section he commands ).
' By function ' was an indirect method where a client would just specify the function name of the library, for example ' system_support ' and the actual location of the library is found in a table previously set up by an operator with ' SL ' ( system library ) commands, for example ' SL system_support = * system / library / support '.
By default the user's password can be retained through a grace period ( 15 minutes per pseudo terminal ), allowing the user to execute several successive commands as the requested user without having to provide a password again.
" Underscoring the delicate security situation in Afghanistan, British General David Richards, who commands NATO's International Security Assistance Force, said on October 8, " By this time next year I would understand if a lot of Afghans, down in the south in particular, said to us all, ' Listen, you're failing year after year at delivering the improvements which you have promised to us.
By 13 September the Republican front to the north-west of El Mazuco began to weaken under the relentless artillery bombardment, and the Republicans were forced to yield Sierra Llabres, whose height commands both the village of El Mazuco and the western approaches on 14 September.
By default they came pre-programmed with the most common BASIC commands, in a similar fashion to GW-BASIC on the IBM PC.
By converting the PostScript or other page description language input into a series of graphics commands, the contents of a page can usually be represented in a more modest amount of memory.
By 1991, Air Weather Service had divested itself of its major field structure and the bulk of Air Force Weather was realigned under the direct administration of the supported commands.
By the middle of March nine separate Chinese military commands were massed close up to the Tonkinese border around the enormous entrenched camps of Yen Cua Ai and Bang Bo.
By 1900, he was appointed as the superior chief of the second and third zones of Manila, and he also held the commands of Morong and Marinduque.
By combining these different commands, the player can make combo attacks, throws, and special attacks which can break the enemy's defenses.
By World War II, all army groups, field armies, corps, and divisions, as well as all major Army commands, had unique SSI.
By late 1974, forces under its command included Anti-Aircraft Division 377, Infantry Division 968, the 5 regional commands ( division-level ): 470th, 471st, 472nd, 473rd and 571st.

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