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Page "belles_lettres" ¶ 502
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By and distinguishing
By far, the largest part of this population is the northeast Arctic cod, as it is labelled by the ICES, or the Arcto-Norwegian cod stock, also referred to as skrei, a Norwegian name meaning something like " the wanderer ", distinguishing it from coastal cod.
By the war ’ s end, there were numerous competitors like George Munro and Robert DeWitt crowding the field, distinguishing their product only by title and the color choice of the paper wrappers.
By not participating in the labor force and using money, freegans are distinguishing themselves from the mainstream economy.
By the early eighteenth century, epaulettes became the distinguishing feature of an officer, leading to officers of military units without epaulettes to petition their government for the right to wear epaulettes, to ensure that they would be recognized as officers.
By distinguishing between total and agent systems, it is possible to investigate an agent's behavior when it is isolated from the environment and when it is embedded within an environment.
By this he seems to have understood an immediate, ( in the first instance aesthetic ), mode of conception ; since he appealed, in support of this view, to the consideration that artistic skill has its foundation not in sensuous activity, but in an unerring power of distinguishing between its objects, that is, in a rational perception of them.
By way of distinguishing it from this work, Littleton ’ s book is called in all the early editions " Tenores Novelli ".
By this time the remaining ethnic distinction between the increasingly Romanized Visigoths and their Hispano-Roman subjects had all but disappeared ( the Gothic language lost its last and probably already declining function as a church language with the extirpation of Arianism, and dress & funerary customs also cease to be distinguishing features in ca.
By the twelfth century, sources give a clear indication that heraldry had been implemented as a distinguishing feature, especially for use in battle.
By using proportion and scale, Rohe was able to perceive its innermost order and distinguishing features and to express them in space and form.
By the time PCI Windows accelerators became commonplace, Tseng's high host-throughput was no longer a distinguishing feature.
By the latter year he had attained high military rank, and after distinguishing himself at the first Battle of Breitenfeld ( 1631 ) he commanded a regiment of foot on the Rhine and defended Rheinfelden against the Swedes with the utmost bravery, surrendering only after enduring a five-months ' siege.
By portraying African-American women as self-defined, self-reliant individuals confronting race, gender, and class oppression, Afrocentric feminist thought speaks to the importance that knowledge plays in empowering oppressed people. One distinguishing feature of Black feminist thought is its insistence that both the changed consciousness of individuals and the social transformation of political and economic institutions constitute essential ingredients for social change.
By successfully distinguishing a case, the holding or legal reasoning of the earlier case will either not apply or will be limited.
By making the double navel the distinguishing physical feature of the Tyranians, Roddenberry was effectively filming every navel that he'd been forced to censor from Star Trek twice over.
By 2007, the setting of Hurricane Punch, Mahoney was free from the institution, but seeing a therapist, because his mind had trouble distinguishing fact from pulp fiction.

By and celestial
By the third millennium BCE, widespread civilizations had developed sophisticated awareness of celestial cycles, and are believed to have consciously oriented their temples to create alignment with the heliacal risings of the stars.
By maintaining a constant angular relationship to a bright celestial light, such as the Moon, they can fly in a straight line.
By inspiration of celestial grace
By the end of the Middle Ages, the common opinion in Europe was that celestial bodies were moved by external intelligences, identified with the angels of revelation.
By 1958, the celestial navigation system used by the Snark allowed its most accurate test, which appeared to fall four nautical miles ( 7. 4 km ) short of the target.
By the 4th century BC, Babylonians ' astronomy and their system of celestial omens were influencing the Greek culture and, by late 2nd century BC, Egyptian astrology was also mixing in.
" He then stripped off one of his sleeves ( a sign of swearing oath ) and pledged: " By Chancellor's celestial might, the Southerners will never rebel again.
By the third millennium BC, widespread civilisations had developed sophisticated awareness of celestial cycles, and are believed to have consciously oriented their temples to create alignment with the heliacal risings of the stars.
By detecting any differences from previous observations of the same areas of the sky, it is expected to discover a very large number of new asteroids, comets, variable stars and other celestial objects.
By reading the position of the lower rod, in combination with the vertical length, the zenith distance ( or, alternatively, the altitude ) of a celestial object could be calculated.
By convention, sunrise and sunset refer to times at which the Sun ’ s upper limb appears on or disappears from the horizon ; the standard value for the Sun ’ s true altitude is − 50 ′: − 34 ′ for the refraction and − 16 ′ for the Sun ’ s semidiameter ( the altitude of a celestial body is normally given for the centre of the body ’ s disc ).

By and terrestrial
By analyzing the different arrival times of the bursts as detected by different satellites, the team was able to determine rough estimates for the sky positions of sixteen bursts and definitively rule out a terrestrial or solar origin.
By removing this greenhouse gas from the air, forests function as terrestrial carbon sinks, meaning they store large amounts of carbon.
By analyzing the different arrival times of the bursts as detected by different satellites, the team was able to determine rough estimates for the sky positions of sixteen bursts and definitively rule out a terrestrial or solar origin.
By 130 million years ago, the waters covering Dorset's landmass had subsided leaving the area almost completely terrestrial save for the large rivers that dominated it.
By inhabiting an ecotone, in this case the terrestrial and aquatic habitat boundary, green frogs ( and other aquatic ranid frogs ), by employing a simple leap, leave behind their many and faster terrestrial enemies that cannot similarly cross that boundary.
By operating in the UHF frequency band, a lower frequency band than that used by conventional terrestrial cellular networks, the MUOS provides warfighters with the tactical ability to communicate in " disadvantaged " environments, such as heavily forested regions where higher frequency signals would be unacceptably attenuated by the forest canopy.
By 2007, Glendive would be the only remaining US terrestrial television market to have no digital signals at all.
By terrestrial standards, the lake appears to be extremely shallow.

By and existence
By 1883 the `` Battenkill Telegraph Company '' was in existence and Alvin Pettibone was its president.
By way of explanation we ourselves are prone to imagine that this achievement stems from the same American Catholic zeal and generosity which brought the parochial school system into existence.
By simply denying that an efficient first cause is problematic, being easily explained as the creative action of an omnipotent God, medieval theologians re-purposed and enhanced Aristotle's argument, as if the intention had been to prove God's existence.
By 1891 it was reported that no fewer than 162 Nationalist Clubs were in existence.
By the 1820s, a national network was in existence.
By forging Mathieu as an absolute rationalist, analyzing every situation, and functioning entirely on reason, he removed any strands of authentic content from his character and as a result, Mathieu could " recognize no allegiance except to self " ( Sartre 1942: 13 ), though he realized that without " responsibility for my own existence, it would seem utterly absurd to go on existing " ( Sartre 1942: 14 ).
By that time, Reinitzer had discovered and described three important features of cholesteric liquid crystals ( the name coined by Otto Lehmann in 1904 ): the existence of two melting points, the reflection of circularly polarized light, and the ability to rotate the polarization direction of light.
By determination is meant existence within boundaries, a being this and not that.
By contrast, meroplankton are only planktic for part of their lives ( usually the larval stage ), and then graduate to either a nektic or benthic ( sea floor ) existence.
By the mid twentieth century the Crossbow Corps had become largely defunct, save for parading on state holidays ; but in 1956 the practice of training its members in crossbow shooting was revived, and a ' Crossbow Federation ' was formed to encourage competition in this art, so that the unit ( although still entirely ceremonial in nature ) now again has a very active existence.
By AD 350, King Ezana of Axum had captured and destroyed Meroe city, ending the kingdom's independent existence, and conquering its territory into modern-day northern Sudan.
By 12: 30 pm, a vase of flowers becomes the " miracle, moment by moment, of naked existence ".
Charles Darwin's theory of how evolution works (" By Means of Natural Selection ") is explicitly competitive (" survival of the fittest "), Malthusian (" struggle for existence "), even gladiatorial (" nature, red in tooth and claw ").
By 1969, at the end of the 1960s the New York Mets won the World Series in only the 8th year of the team's existence.
By contrast existence is often restricted solely to that which has physical existence or has a direct basis in it in the way that thoughts do in the brain.
By the beginning of the 16th century, European sources noted the existence of the gold-rich states of Akan and Twifu in the Ofin River Valley.
The practice was developed in the mid-eighteenth century and was tied to the idea of coverture, the idea that " By marriage, the husband and wife are one person in law ; that is, the very being or legal existence of the woman is suspended during the marriage.
By shifting the center of gravity from consciousness ( psychology ) to existence ( ontology ), Heidegger altered the subsequent direction of phenomenology, making it at once both personal and mysterious.
By the mid-1980s CompuServe was one of the largest information and networking services companies in existence, and it was the largest consumer information service in the world.
By studying several different tribes of the Western Pacific ( employing the method of comparison, popular in ethnography ), Malinowski gave confirmations of Lewis Morgan's idea that matriarchy ( gyneocracy ) was a common feature of primitive societies at early stages, and that female rule needed matrilineality for its existence.
By looking at records and art dated to the time period of the Roman conquest of the Gauls, there is evidence of his existence.
By introducing the idea of electronic bands, the theory explains the existence of conductors, semiconductors and insulators.
By the existence of inverses, this function has a two-sided inverse,.

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