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Page "Scholasticism" ¶ 15
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By and reading
By the time the child first attacks the actual problem of reading, he is completely familiar and at ease with all of the elements of words.
# By the event that triggers the seizures, such as reading or music
By replacing ten cards with five symbols and using three reels instead of five drums, the complexity of reading a win was considerably reduced, allowing Fey to devise an effective automatic payout mechanism.
By contrast, offering readers modern teenage-oriented fiction may not exercise their advanced reading skills, while the material may contain themes more suited to adolescents.
By this time the Allies were already reading Naval Enigma routinely.
By the age of eight, he was reading other traditional Chinese novels, including the Water Margin, Romance of the Three Kingdoms, and Dream of the Red Mansion.
By deep application, and by constantly snatching the leisure moments which might present themselves for reading, he acquired considerable knowledge, and began to aspire to a university education, which he obtained at St. Andrews.
By reading the lower part of an address range bits in sequence ( page cycle ) one can read with significantly shorter access time ( 30 ns ).
By this time Hawker was already reading and writing poetry.
By his own account and that of many others, around the age of 11 years old, Oberth became fascinated with the field in which he was to make his mark through reading the writings of Jules Verne, especially From the Earth to the Moon and Around the Moon, re-reading them to the point of memorization.
The track finishes with a backmasked reading from Rudyard Kipling's Gunga Din: " Tho ' I've belted you an ' flayed you, By the livin ' God that made you, You're a better man than I am, Gunga Din!
Other notable instanced occurred on July 24th 1997 when the guided missile destroyer and frigate rendered honors to the Constitution during her 200th Birthday celebration, and on September 14, 2001, when the crew of the German destroyer Lütjens manned the rails as they approached the destroyer USS Winston Churchill and displayed an American flag and a banner reading " We Stand By You ".
" Williams commented on the matter: " After reading hundreds of e-mails, I have made my decision ... By pulling my opening October 3rd, stepped on the toes of the First Amendment Freedom of Speech, so therefore me, my song, and All My Rowdy Friends are out of here.
By the eighteenth century, the game had matured, and in France, playing cards, tokens, the reading out of numbers had been added to the game.
By 14 March, when the second reading came on, the controversy had assumed threatening proportions ; and George Dixon, the Liberal member for Birmingham and chairman of the National Education League, moved an amendment, the effect of which was to prohibit all religious education in board schools.
By now, Strucker has regained his youth by reading the text of the Scroll, but he is unable to obtain the content of the last line, which is written nowhere and present only in the Nameless Monk's memory.
By then, she had become proficient in reading music, a skill that landed her a job as a sheet music demonstrator at Jones Music Store.
By contrast, the Dual Honours system at Keele remains distinctive and popular, with almost 90 per cent of current undergraduates reading dual honours.
By 1686 the model was well enough established that the general public was reading about it in Conversations on the Plurality of Worlds, published in France by Bernard le Bovier de Fontenelle and translated into English and other languages in the coming years.
By the fifth century, St Augustine of Hippo confirmed the Christian reading of the pagan olive branch into Noah, writing that, " perpetual peace is indicated by the olive branch ( oleae ramusculo ) that the dove brought with it when it returned to the ark.
By radiating sound waves outward and reading the feedback, he could locate and analyze unseen objects in a sonar-like fashion.
By age seven, he was giving reading lessons ( unbeknownst to the rest of the family, being offered after the household were abed ) to a family servant.
By the early twentieth century, Christian Science reading rooms began to appear in the business districts of cities where there was a church and featured the Christian Science Monitor as well as the church ’ s religious literature.
By the year 2000, there were over 1, 000 studies on readability formulas in professional journals about their validity and merit. The study of reading is not just in teaching.

By and thoroughly
By the time of the Tang Dynasty five-hundred years after Buddhisms arrival into China, it had transformed into a thoroughly Chinese religious philosophy dominated by the school of Zen Buddhism.
By this point the coastal trading cultures were thoroughly dominant over the inland river valleys that had once been the heart of the great powers.
By 1800 the coast of the Pacific Northwest had been thoroughly explored by maritime fur traders.
By about 1900 one finds managers trying to place their theories on what they regarded as a thoroughly scientific basis ( see scientism for perceived limitations of this belief ).
By the end of his life he knew thirteen languages thoroughly and another twenty-eight reasonably well, making him a hyperpolyglot.
By this time, he had mastered and thoroughly understood architecture.
By now thoroughly disenchanted with the Salon, Degas joined forces with a group of young artists who were intent upon organizing an independent exhibiting society.
By the mid-19th century, the doughnut looked and tasted like today ’ s doughnut, and was viewed as a thoroughly American food.
By the time she had graduated from Rockford Seminary, she knew the Bible and especially the New Testament, thoroughly, having studied it throughout her young life, including in college courses.
By the late 1990s a “ remarkably broad academic consensus ” existed that Glass-Steagall had been “ thoroughly discredited .”
By 1949, Weyl was thoroughly disillusioned with the ultimate value of intuitionism, and wrote: " Mathematics with Brouwer gains its highest intuitive clarity.
By Heine's advice, he worked hard at Latin, which he knew less thoroughly than Greek, and Heine praised his progress in Latin style to Ruhnken and Valckenaer.
By late 1943 Japan's ' outer ' defensive ring had been thoroughly punctured, with the U. S. fleet working its way over or past such strongholds in their steady progression across the Central Pacific islands.
By 1965, the surgical anatomy was thoroughly and widely understood, antibiotics were widely available and useful for treating postoperative infections, and other major complications had also become more manageable.
By this stage, Holden ’ s 30 year old six-cylinder was thoroughly outmoded and would have been difficult to re-engineer to comply with pending emission standards and the introduction of unleaded fuel.
By the middle of the 11th century the abbots of St. Gall had established their power in the land later called Appenzell, which, too, became thoroughly Teutonized, its early inhabitants having probably been Romanized Raetians.
By the middle of the 11th century the abbots of St Gall had established their power in the land later called Appenzell, which, too, became thoroughly teutonized, its early inhabitants having probably been romanized Raetians.
By the end of the 5th century, the elite culture was thoroughly Indianized.
By the middle of the 11th century the abbots of St Gall had established their power in the land later called Appenzell, which by that time was thoroughly Alemannic.
By this point, Burgess had become thoroughly sick of " The Purple Cow ," and wrote the following " Confession: and a Portrait Too, Upon a Background that I Rue " in The Lark, number 24 ( April 1, 1897 ).
By the late 1940s, the B-17 Flying Fortresses and B-24 Liberators used in the European Theater of the war were thoroughly obsolete as combat aircraft and were mostly sent to the smelters.
By type 4, the matrix has thoroughly recrystallized and coarsened in grain size.
As Dozois has stated, " By the definition of SFWA, Interzone doesn't really qualify as a ' professional magazine ' because of its low rates and circulation, but as it's thoroughly professional in the caliber of writers that it attracts and in the quality of the fiction it produces, just about everyone considers it to be a professional magazine anyway.
By allowing our evidence to encompass everything we know, Williamson is able to give thoroughly evidentialist accounts of many important epistemological concepts.

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