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By and launching
By 2005 the CIRA was believed to be an established presence on the island of Great Britain with the capability of launching attacks.
By launching the archive as a web app, Playboy was able to circumvent both Apple's App Store content restrictions and their 30 % subscription fee.
By the early 1970s, the FSLN was launching limited military initiatives.
By simply building and launching large quantities of rockets, and hence launching a large volume of payload, costs can be brought down.
By integrating varying delivery streams, hybrids enable pay-TV operators more flexible application deployment, which decreases the cost of launching new services, increases speed to market, and limits disruption for consumers.
By the 1980s, Asper seemed eager to grow his chain of stations, launching two stations in Saskatchewan and winning a legal battle for a station in Vancouver during that decade, and acquiring a fledgling system in the Maritimes in the early 1990s.
By the time of the 1637 launching of Britain's powerful Sovereign of the Seas, the forecastle was gone altogether.
By launching multiple unprovoked attacks on soldiers and settlers Maniapoto warriors defied the wishes of the Maori king for peaceful relations with the government.
By law, boats are required to be inspected before launching.
By the time the redoubt was captured, the attack was running many hours behind schedule and the possibility of launching the combined infantry and mounted assault on the town before nightfall looked slim.
By this time the Ndwandwe had adopted Zulu battle tactics and weapons so Shaka wore the invaders down with guerrilla tactics before launching his major attack when the Ndwandwe army was divided during the crossing of the Mhlatuze River.
By 7 p. m. the crowds extended for several blocks and included many students from the local polytechnic and university, Hungarians and Romanians in a human chain, first singing hymns, but about 7: 30 launching into the patriotic song Deşteaptă-te, române!
By 1860, Faidherbe had built a series of forts between Médine and St. Louis, launching missions against the Trarza Moors in Waalo ( north of the Sénégal river ), who had previously collected taxes on goods coming to Saint-Louis from the interior.
By the end of May 2006, the club's dramatic situation started to emerge, with players openly declaring they are unpaid for months, plus a shock decision by UEFA to ban the club from participating in the upcoming UEFA Cup brought the club one step from complete ruin, with the organized fanbase launching an all-out war on Goumenos in the June 2006, going as far as to occupy the club's offices in Toumba stadium for a handful of days.
By the 24th, the Currituck had begun launching aircraft on reconnaissance missions.
By cranking his forearm cover to charge the mechanism and pressing his spark crystal to release it, Primal's fist shoots forward in a " blast punch " action, also launching a spring-loaded missile.
By 1986, there were 32 operational cruise missile launching installations in England ( RAF Greenham Common and RAF Molesworth ), Belgium ( Florennes Air Base ), and on Sicily ( Comiso Air Base ).
By the law document, issued by the Russian Government on April 8, 2009 (# 480-r ) on behalf of Russian President's law document of October 7, 2008 (# 1448 ) " On the pilot project launching on creating National Research Universities " the university MEPhI was granted this new status.
By the time the Galactica arrived, the Cylons were already launching their first wave against the outer colonies.
On July 25, 2008, Quizon celebrated his 80th birthday, with the launching of a biographical book, Dolphy, Hindi Ko Ito Narating Mag-isa ( Dolphy, I Didn't Get Here All By Myself ).
By April an aerodrome and an army camp were established there and Deir al-Balah became a launching point for British forces against Ottoman-held Gaza and Beersheba to the north and northeast, respectively.
By this time, Hampton's cavalry was making progress against Gibbon's infantry to the south, launching a surprise dismounted attack that caused many of Gibbon's men to flee or surrender.
By 1961, AMF controlled and operated 42 plants and 19 research facilities scattered across 17 countries, producing everything from remote-controlled toy airplanes to ICBM launching systems.

By and ideal
By ideal, Rogers is suggesting something not real, something that is always out of our reach, the standard we cannot meet.
By 1909 after the failure of a syndicalist general strike in France, Sorel and his supporters left the radical left and went to the radical right, where they sought to merge militant Catholicism and French patriotism with their views-advocating anti-republican Christian French patriots as ideal revolutionaries.
By contrast, the nematode worm Caenorhabditis elegans has just 302 neurons making it an ideal experimental subject as scientists have been able to map all of the organism's neurons.
Every simple R-module is isomorphic to a quotient R / m where m is a maximal right ideal of R. By the above paragraph, any quotient R / m is a simple module.
By the above paragraph, we find that I is a maximal right ideal.
By the 15th century, the term had become mostly detached from its military origins, not least because the rise of infantry in the 14th century had essentially confined knightly horsemanship to the tournament grounds, and essentially expressed a literary ideal of moral and courteous behavior.
By the time of Imagawa Ryoshun's " Regulations " at the beginning of the 15th century, the Bushidō ideal was fairly clear, and the term itself came into widespread use.
By contrast, the windows of the nave are dominated by Old Testament exemplars of ideal kingship / queenship in an obvious nod to their royal patrons.
By the 19th Century BCE, Harran was established as a merchant outpost due to its ideal location.
By the 1860s he was propounding an ideal society called Pantarchy, and from this he moved on to a philosophy he called " universology ", which stressed the unity of all knowledge and activities.
By the Chinese Remainder Theorem, each can further be decomposed into a direct sum of submodules of the form, where is a power of a prime ideal.
Noticing how similar the foundry is to the place where the gold is made into ingots, Holland decides that the ideal way of smuggling the gold out of the country would be as Eiffel Tower paperweights sold in Paris, and puts this hypothetically to his new friend: " By Jove, Holland, it's a good job we're both honest men.
By the mid-1930s, the dry cleaning industry had adopted tetrachloroethylene ( perchloroethylene ), or " perc " for short, as the ideal solvent.
By putting all these ideas together on his return from the Paris family holiday, the Christmas Cracker was born complete with a surprise novelty gift, a trinket, a tissue paper hat, a snap to make a bang when pulled apart and a piece of paper with a joke or motto-a maxim of appropriate character to express a principle or ideal suited to the occasion.
By this Polykleitos meant that a statue should be composed of clearly definable parts, all related to one another through a system of ideal mathematical proportions and balance, no doubt expressed in terms of the ratios established by Pythagoras for the perfect intervals of the musical scale: 1: 2 ( octave ), 2: 3 ( harmonic fifth ), and 3: 4 ( harmonic fourth ).
By means of these elements the actual creation of the world took place, and the ten Sefirot, which before this had only an ideal existence, became realities.
By the principles of skepticism, the ideal case is that every individual could make his own mind up on the basis of the evidence rather than appealing to some authority, skeptical or otherwise.
By the later 14th century, the term became romanticized for the ideal of the young nobleman seeking to prove himself in honourable exploits, the knight-errant, which among other things encompassed the pas d ' armes, including the joust.
By seeking refuge in France and subsequently invading Ireland, James II had given William III the ideal instrument to convince the English parliament that entry into a major European war was unavoidable.
He found an ideal site, and in 1910 he bought about south and west of the village ( By the time of his death in 1931 he had bought up an estate of 1, 500 acres ).
By this term he meant, in general, those strands of Buddhist thought, most prominent in East Asia and especially in Japan, that regard enlightenment or the ideal state as inherent from the outset and as accessible in the present, rather than as the fruit of a long process of cultivation.
By a C *- algebraic argument, one can show that I is a left ideal of A.
By the middle of the 1970s, Dr. Bard's ideal of an additional campus in the revitalized downtown Inner Harbor was realized with the construction of two buildings along East Lombard Street named the Bard and Lockwood Buildings.
By Hilbert's basis theorem the ideal I is finitely generated ( as an ideal ).

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