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By and contrast
By contrast, the energetic reaction of the leader to the full demands his decision imposes upon him strengthens the moral intuition and gives us the measure of the man.
By contrast, even experienced linguists commonly know no more of the range of possibilities in tone systems than the over-simple distinction between register and contour languages.
By contrast, a good deal of nuclear pacifism begins with the contingencies and the probabilities, and not with the moral nature of the action to be done ; ;
By contrast, the National Union Party was united and energized as Lincoln made emancipation the central issue, and state Republican parties stressed the perfidy of the Copperheads.
By contrast, the cursive developed out of the Nabataean alphabet in the same period soon became the standard for writing Arabic, evolving into the Arabic alphabet as it stood by the time of the early spread of Islam.
has no zero in F. By contrast, the fundamental theorem of algebra states that the field of complex numbers is algebraically closed.
By contrast, the Rijndael specification per se is specified with block and key sizes that may be any multiple of 32 bits, both with a minimum of 128 and a maximum of 256 bits.
The largest species are red alder ( A. rubra ) on the west coast of North America, and black alder ( A. glutinosa ), native to most of Europe and widely introduced elsewhere, both reaching over 30 m. By contrast, the widespread Alnus viridis ( green alder ) is rarely more than a 5 m tall shrub.
By the standards of 19th century tycoons, Carnegie was not a particularly ruthless man but a humanitarian with enough acquisitiveness to go in the ruthless pursuit of money ; on the other hand, the contrast between his life and the lives of many of his own workers and of the poor, in general, was stark.
By contrast, Kabbalism assumed an " eternal Torah " which was not identical to the Torah written in Hebrew.
By contrast, while defendants in most civil law systems can be compelled to give a statement, this statement is not subject to cross-examination by the prosecutor and not given under oath.
By contrast, in an inquisitiorial system, the fact that the defendant has confessed is merely one more fact that is entered into evidence, and a confession by the defendant does not remove the requirement that the prosecution present a full case.
By contrast, Tom Wolfe's Bonfire of the Vanities ( 1987 ) portrays a wealthy, white protagonist, Sherman McCoy, getting lost off the Major Deegan Expressway in the South Bronx and having an altercation with locals.
By contrast, in mainstream Analytical philosophy the topic is more confined to abstract investigation, in the work of such influential theorists as W. V. O. Quine, to name one of many.
By contrast, substance theory explains the compresence of properties by asserting that the properties are found together because it is the substance that has those properties.
By contrast, evidence based on the textual differences between the Septuagint and the Masoretic Text has been used to argue that the context of the MT truly does depict a historical Jeremiah.
By contrast most of the party's seats were won either due to the absence of a candidate from one of the other parties or in rural areas on the " Celtic fringe ", where local evidence suggests that economic ideas were at best peripheral to the electorate's concerns.
By contrast, the normal vaginal discharge will vary in consistency and amount throughout the menstrual cycle and is at its clearest at ovulation-about 2 weeks before the period starts.
By contrast, the British press were jubilant ; many newspapers sought to portray the battle as a victory for Britain over anarchy, and the success was used to attack the supposedly pro-republican Whig politicians Charles James Fox and Richard Brinsley Sheridan.
By contrast, in civil law jurisdictions ( the legal tradition that prevails in, or is combined with common law in, Europe and most non-Islamic, non-common law countries ), courts lack authority to act where there is no statute, and judicial precedent is given less interpretive weight ( which means that a judge deciding a given case has more freedom to interpret the text of a statute independently, and less predictably ), and scholarly literature is given more.
By contrast to statutory codification of common law, some statutes displace common law, for example to create a new cause of action that did not exist in the common law, or to legislatively overrule the common law.
By contrast, a hard conversion or an adaptive conversion may not be exactly equivalent.
" By contrast, the composition from the Byzantine point of view portrays Constantine Palaeologus as a brave leader who gave his life for the cause.
By contrast, in ceremonial monarchies, the monarch holds little actual power or direct political influence.
By contrast, Liechtenstein and Monaco are considered democratic states, yet the ruling monarchs in these countries wield significant executive power.

By and dictionary
By dictionary entries, the term subcontinent signifies " having a certain geographical or political independence " from the rest of the continent, or " a vast and more or less self-contained subdivision of a continent.
By 1858 the need for an update resulted in the first planning for a new comprehensive dictionary, which would document standard English, a term coined at that time by the planning committee.
By extending the range of meta-data held, the attributes of an application could be held within a dictionary and used at runtime.
* A dictionary of Indian literature, Volume 1 By Sujit Mukherjee
By 1595, Valignano could boast in a letter that not only had the Jesuits printed a Japanese grammar and dictionary, but also several books ( mostly the lives of saints and martyrs ) entirely in Japanese.
By 1955, the publication of the ISCC-NBS Dictionary of Color Names ( a color dictionary used by stamp collectors to identify the colors of stamps ), now on the Internet, listed dozens of different shades of lavender.
By contrast, Webster's New World Dictionary merely cites Webster as a generic name for any American English dictionary, as does Random House's line of Webster's Dictionaries.
By dictionary it means " heath roses " and was chosen for its ironic contrast with the many punk band names that reflect dark or violent themes.
By means of his excellent grammars, dictionary, and various works on German style, he contributed greatly towards rectifying the orthography, refining the idiom, and fixing the standard of his native tongue.
* Salem cyclopedia: a cultural and historical dictionary of Salem District, Tamil Nadu By Busnagi Rajannan
* Historical register and dictionary of the United States Army, from ..., Volume 1 By Francis Bernard Heitman
By the late 1990s, with the rise of wikis ( a simple repository and data dictionary that was easy for the public to use ), the way consensus applied to joint editing, meeting agendas and so on had become a major concern.
By contrast, Johnson's 1755 dictionary used-our for all words still so spelled in Britain ( like colour ), but also for words where the u has since been dropped: ambassadour, emperour, governour, perturbatour, inferiour, superiour ; errour, horrour, mirrour, tenour, terrour, tremour.
By August 1840 the dictionary was largely complete.
By the early 18th century, he had compiled a nearly 600-page dictionary of Kaskaskia Illinois-French.
Esse quam videri is the motto used on the coats of arms of the following families: Acraman, Adams, Allies, Bakewell, Barnard, Beadon, Bostock, Bourne, Bowen, Bowne, Breamore, Brownlee, Brownlow, Cady, Cambria, Roy Clarke, Clavering, Cook, Coutts, Crawley, Creer, Croft, Crofts, Dickinson, Downes, Frank, Harmer, Halliday, Hamill ( O ' hAdhmaill, O ' hAghmaill, Hammill ), Hannum, Henshaw, Hood, Houk, Isserman, Ivey, Longley, McManners, Manning, Miller zu Aichholz, Panon-Desbassayns de Richemont, Proud, Partridge family coat of arms, see A genealogical and heraldic dictionary of the landed gentry of England ..., Volume 2 By Sir Bernard Burke, Pickard-Cambridge, Pridgen, Renshaw, Reynes, Round ( Essex County ), Seward, Shreeve, Sherriff, Sibley, Sturges, Swire, Strickland, Thurston, Thruston, Turner, Tyler, Vorsatz, Walmsley, Womack and Woodgate.
By using an empirical approach like OZ, anyone can afford to do this ; Dr. Kelley ’ s dictionary and syntax growth reached asymptote ( achieving from 86 % to 97 % recognition rates, depending on the measurements employed ) after only 16 experimental trials and the resulting program, with dictionaries, was less than 300k of code.

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