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Page "Analytical Engine" ¶ 31
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By and comparison
By comparison, Stone Harbor bird sanctuary's allies seem less formidable, for aside from the Audubon Society, they are mostly the snowy, common and cattle egrets and the Louisiana, green, little blue and black-crowned herons who nest and feed there.
By comparison, Fritzie and Laura Andrus were quivering fledglings.
By comparison, corporate profit tax generated less than 16 percent of the revenues.
By comparison self-propelled artillery can stop at a chosen location and begin firing almost immediately, then quickly move on to a new position.
By comparison, bronze is principally an alloy of copper and tin.
By comparison Whorf's other work in linguistics, the development of such concepts as the allophone and the cryptotype, and the formulation of " Whorf's law " in Uto-Aztecan historical linguistics, have met with broad acceptance.
By comparison, the same index ranked neighbor Ukraine, 131st and Russia, 140th.
By comparison to biotechnology, bioengineering is generally thought of as a related field with its emphasis more on higher systems approaches ( not necessarily altering or using biological materials directly ) for interfacing with and utilizing living things.
Coal ( from the Old English term col, which has meant " mineral of fossilized carbon " since the 13th century ) is a combustible black or brownish-black sedimentary rock usually occurring in rock strata in layers or veins called coal beds By comparison in 2007, natural gas provided of oil equivalent per day, while oil provided per day.
By comparison, estimates of the population density per square kilometer of the Indian Ocean's other island microstates ranged from 241 ( Seychelles ) to 690 ( Maldives ) in 1993.
By comparison, the former colony of the United Province of Canada ( divided into the District of Canada East, and the District of Canada West ) and the western provinces were dozens of times larger and in some cases were expanded to take in territory formerly held in British Crown grants to companies such as the Hudson's Bay Company ; in particular the November 19, 1869 sale of Rupert's Land to the Government of Canada under the Rupert's Land Act 1868 was facilitated in part by Maritime taxpayers.
By comparison, when Mount St. Helens erupted in 1980, it released ~ 1. 2 km < sup > 3 </ sup > ( DRE ) of ejecta.
( By comparison, the ratio in twelfth-century China was one bureaucrat for every 15, 000 people.
By comparison, electron microscopes are limited by the de Broglie wavelength of the electron.
By way of comparison, the routes départementales cover a total distance of 365, 000 km.
By comparison, the other major English domestic cup, the League Cup, involves only the 92 members of the Premier League and Football League.
By comparison, the density of lead is 11, 340 kg / m < sup > 3 </ sup >, and that of the densest element, osmium, is 22, 610 kg / m < sup > 3 </ sup >.
By comparison, recent figures ( as of 14 November 2008 ) estimate Zimbabwe's annual inflation rate at 89. 7 sextillion ( 10 < sup > 21 </ sup >) percent., which corresponds to a monthly rate of 5473 %, and a doubling time of about five days.
By comparison, this proportion reached only 17 per cent in Wallonia, barely 10 per cent in most West European countries, 16 per cent in France and 25 per cent in England.
By comparison, this amounts to approximately addresses for each of the seven billion people alive in 2011.
By comparison, according to the Gnostic view of Salvation, creation was perfect to begin with ; it did not need time to grow and mature.
By way of comparison, the Niger – Congo family is said to have some 1, 500 languages.
By comparison, in 2008 Koenigsegg with its staff of 45 produced 18 cars at an average price of US $ 1 million each ; Saab employed 3, 400 workers and made more than 93, 000 cars.
By comparison, a re-release of Monty Python and the Holy Grail had earned $ 1. 8 million USD three years earlier.

By and Harvard
By the American Revolution, most residents lived near the Common and Harvard College, with farms and estates comprising most of the town.
According to the Harvard University Library, " By the late 19th century, 70 to 90 % of the urban populations of Europe and North America were infected with the TB bacillus, and about 80 % of those individuals who developed active tuberculosis died of it.
" By 1796 every student at Harvard was given a copy of Bishop Watson's rebuttal of The Age of Reason.
By the 1980s, however the " financial systems approach ," influenced by neoliberalism and propagated by the Harvard Institute for International Development, became the dominant ideology among microcredit organizations.
By summer's end the teens are engaged, and Win buys Freud's bear and motorcycle and travels the country performing to raise money to go to Harvard, which he subsequently attends while Mary starts their family.
By early March, Paul Allen, Bill Gates, and Monte Davidoff, another Harvard student, had created a BASIC interpreter that worked under simulation on a PDP-10 mainframe computer at Harvard.
By the late nineteenth century, Dwight's method give way to the case method which by the turn of the twentieth century had become the standard curriculum at all of the other premier American law schools at Harvard, Yale and the University of Pennsylvania.
By the end of 1933, he received an appointment as Lecturer in German Art and Culture at Harvard University with the help of a professor of government there.
By arrangement with Harvard, Everett spent two years in Europe, studying and traveling on full salary.
By the time she was in her 30s, Fuller had earned a reputation as the best-read person in New England, male or female, and became the first woman allowed to use the library at Harvard College.
* Minnow, Martha and Jody Freeman ( 2009 ), Government By Contract: Outsourcing and American Democracy, Harvard U. P.
By 1922, schools of public health were established in Columbia, Harvard and Yale universities.
" Inelastic Scattering Of Electrons By Protons ", Department of Physics at Harvard University, United States Department of Energy ( through predecessor agency the United States Atomic Energy Commission ), ( December 1966 ).
By 1905, the Racquet and Tennis Club, Harvard, Princeton, and Columbia Clubs in Manhattan had courts, as did Brooklyn's Crescent A. C. and the Heights Casino.
By 1994, Pickard had enrolled at the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University.
By 1859 Cumberland, Harvard, and the University of Virginia School of Law, were the three largest law schools in the United States.
By the time Quentin was a sophomore at Harvard, also like his father, he was showing promise as a writer.
By the Autumn of 1926, Hurston had begun a course at Barnard, Hughes had returned to college in Pennsylvania, Davis was at Harvard and occupied with editing Crisis, Bennett was at Howard and occupied with her column for Opportunity, and even Thurman had taken a new job editing World Tomorrow magazine.
By 1922, other schools of public health at Harvard, Columbia and Yale had all been established in accordance with the Hopkins model.
By the mid-1950s, the IPR was facing other challenges – notably the development of well-funded centers for Asian Studies at major American Universities such as Harvard, Yale, Berkeley, Michigan and Columbia.
By his presence and by his serious concern with music in a liberal arts college he awakened a regard for music among many generations of Harvard men.
By the end of its existence it attracted both long-time residents and, by virtue both of its proximity to Harvard Yard and its late opening hours, numerous students from Harvard University, and had become one of the few places where students and residents, and residents from different social and economic classes, mixed informally.

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