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By and lifting
By lifting the intermediate lever with a jack that disengages in its highest position, the Cristofori action made it possible for the hammer to fall ( after its initial blow ) to a position considerably lower than the highest position to which the key had lifted it.
By 5 April 2008, after his and the teams early season poor form, Owen had scored six goals in the previous six matches, with Newcastle registering four wins and two draws, lifting Newcastle into mid-table after earlier relegation fears.
By the lifting property the map f lifts to a continuous map g: D < sup > 2 </ sup > → C such that the restriction of f to the boundary S < sup > 1 </ sup > of D < sup > 2 </ sup > is equal to γ.
By repeatedly lifting one of the handsticks while providing slack with the other the speed of rotation of the spool can be increased as the spool " rolls " down the string.
By lifting the handle, the operator could cause the scraper to bite deeper.
By a lifting element, the entire frame including treadmill running deck will be raised and thus simulates a pitch angle for uphill running.
By the 14th century a bascule arrangement was provided by lifting arms ( called " gaffs ") above and parallel to the bridge deck whose ends were linked by chains to the lifting end of the bridge ; in the raised position the gaffs would fit into slots in the gatehouse wall (" rainures ") which can often still be seen, as at Herstmonceux Castle.
By the time of the Oresteia, dramatists would have had a skene and probably also a wheeled platform for special effects ( ekkyklema ) and a lifting device ( mechane ) available for their productions, as well as the use of a third actor.
By trapping air, primitive wings would have enabled birds to efficiently regulate their temperature, in part, by lifting up their feathers when too warm.
By 2007, this lifting of the ban, along with several other factors such as traffic congestion, lessening racial prejudice, increasingly progressive and environmental attitudes, have rekindled interest in what has come to be known as the Metro Purple Line.
By the end of 2006, debt and backlogged audits had been sufficiently reduced to permit the lifting of the moratorium.

By and seat
By a vote of 338-320, the Bundestag voted to move the seat of government to Berlin.
By choosing the angle of bank to match the car's speed around the curve, the car seat transmits only a perpendicular force to the passengers, and the passengers no longer feel a need to lean nor feel a sideways push by the car seats or doors.
By the 9th century BC, the Kingdom of Israel, once united under King Solomon, was divided into the northern Kingdom of Israel and southern Kingdom of Judah, which retained the historic seat of government and focus of the Israelite religion at the Temple in Jerusalem.
By early 1984, after the Colts ' lease on the dilapidated 64, 124 seat Memorial Stadium had expired, Irsay wanted the city of Baltimore to upgrade the stadium or build a new one.
By the time the first national elections were held in the Federal Republic in 1949, Kiesinger had joined the Christian Democratic Union ( CDU ) and won a seat in the Bundestag, the West German parliament.
" By resigning from the DGA, Rodríguez was forced to relinquish his director's seat on the film John Carter of Mars ( in development ) for Paramount Pictures.
By 1139, a settlement belonging to Governor Piotr Włostowic ( a. k. a. Piotr Włast Dunin ) was built, and another was founded on the left bank of the River Oder, near the present seat of the University.
By extension, the term seat is often used in less formal contexts to refer to an electoral district itself, as for example in the phrases " safe seat " and " marginal seat ".
By November 1529, he had secured a seat in Parliament as a member for Taunton and was reported to be in favour with the King.
By early 1978, Volkswagen had reported 90, 000 Rabbits sold with automatic seat belts.
By this time Chania was the seat of a bishop.
By May 2011 however his party had collapsed in several states, including Rhineland-Palatinate and Bremen where they failed to secure the 5 % threshold necessary for a seat in parliament.
By 1233, Radom was the seat of a castellan.
By the time of Charles Martel and Saint Boniface, they were again subject to the Franks and ruled by Frankish dukes with their seat at Würzburg in the south.
By using a press and a set of dies, one can reshape, deprime, reprime, recharge the case with gunpowder, and seat and crimp a new bullet ( or shot charge ) in place.
By this time, Asquith had become very unpopular with the public ( as Lloyd George was perceived to have " won the war " by displacing him ) and, along with most leading Liberals, lost his seat in the 1918 elections, at which the Liberals split into Asquith and Lloyd George factions.
By 1810, the county seat was at Denbigh.
By 1680, the settlement was known as Hampton, and it was incorporated as a town in 1705 and became the seat of Elizabeth City County.
By 1930, there were 195 residents, mostly living in what would become the town of Mentone, which became the county seat when Loving was reconstituted in 1931.
By 1929, Spearman became the county seat.
By the 1875 election, a town had been started and an election moved the county seat to Lakeview.
By 1872, when the gold rush in Elizabethtown had died down, the county seat was moved to Cimarron.

By and upwards
By the end of World War Two, the US had built eight new wind tunnels, including the largest one in the world at Moffett Field near Sunnyvale, California, which was designed to test full size aircraft at speeds of less than 250 mph and a vertical wind tunnel at Wright Field, Ohio, where the wind stream is upwards for the testing of models in spin situations and the concepts and engineering designs for the first primitive helicopters flown in the US.
By the late 1980s, complete Synclavier systems were selling for upwards of $ 200, 000, to famous musicians such as Sting, Michael Jackson and Stevie Wonder, and to major studios the world over.
By 1905, under his management as Publisher, the sales had risen to upwards of £ 200, 000 per year and the profits in that 29 years of service averaged £ 8, 242 per year.
By 1896, with financing from moguls like J. P. Morgan, John Jacob Astor IV, and the Vanderbilts, they had constructed giant underground conduits leading to turbines generating upwards of, and were sending power as far as Buffalo, away.
By contrast, in a system with positive cooperativity such as hemoglobin, the plot begins as a line with slope, then ramps up to a new line ( also with slope ) that is offset upwards.
By 1938 on Sundays upwards of 80 % of the British audience turned their dials away from the BBC to these IBC stations which followed an American format of commercial broadcasting.
By using methods of flashing pages he produced students who could read upwards of 1, 200 to 1, 400 words per minute.
By a coordinated news, editorial and cartoon campaign this newspaper succeeded in invalidating upwards of 40, 000 fraudulent ballots in November and brought about the appointment of a new election board.
By the end of the burn the craft is flying upwards at some multiple of the speed of sound, up to about and Mach 3. 5, and it continues to coast upwards unpowered ( i. e. ballistically ).
By 1999, the station saw its greatest success, billing upwards of $ 20 million a year.
By combining the alchemical symbols for fire ( upwards triangle ) and water ( downwards triangle ), the alchemical symbols for earth and air are also created.
By further increasing gas velocity, the bulk density of the bed will continue to decrease, and its fluidization becomes more violent, until the particles no longer form a bed and are “ conveyed ” upwards by the gas flow.
By grabbing it, Headdy can launch himself upwards.
By far the largest of these is Paris, at 2. 1 million inhabitants ( 11 million in the Parisian region ), followed by Lille, Lyon, Marseille ( upwards of 1. 2 million inhabitants each ).
) By the time he ran for mayor, he was making 200 speeches a year at fees that ranged upwards from $ 1, 000 each.
By the late 18th century cleavage enhancing corsets grew more dramatic in pushing the breasts upwards.
By keeping only this tower open, air is drawn upwards using the Coandă effect.
By the time the band had completed the recording sessions for the new album, they had produced upwards of forty different songs and partial songs, fourteen of which were ultimately selected to appear on their third studio album, The Aquabats vs. the Floating Eye of Death !.
By keeping the school open the total number of pupils attending the school in 1942 leapt upwards to about 230, with the school picking up pupils from the nearby, closed North Cairns and Good Counsel Convent Schools.

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