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By and turning
By the 1870s, Herbert Spencer and other classical liberals concluded that historical development was turning against them.
By turning these space to public use, the building got 20 % plot ratio more as bonus.
By turning his entire body to ice, instead of just wearing an icy exterior, Bobby now was capable of using his power in new, aggressive ways, adding spikes and padding to his ice structure.
By late 1943, the tide of the war was turning against the Axis powers, but this only spurred Goebbels to intensify the propaganda by urging the Germans to accept the idea of total war and mobilization.
By mid-afternoon, Stonewall Jackson ordered Stuart to command a turning movement with his cavalry against the Union right flank and rear, which if successful would be followed up by an infantry attack from the West Woods.
By turning back at what he thought was the limit of Germany, he not only missed the Balts, but did not discover that more Germans, the Goths, had moved into the Baltic area.
By 1918 a Clerget handbook advised that all necessary control was to be effected using the fuel and air controls, and the engine was to be stopped and started by turning the fuel on and off.
By June 1598, The Japanese forces fought with desperation, turning back several Chinese offensives in Suncheon and Sacheon as the Ming army prepared for a final assault.
By receiving updated milestones, the publisher is able to verify that work is progressing quickly enough to meet the publisher's deadline, and to give direction to the developer if the game is turning out other than as expected in some way.
By 1919, an " influx " of labor had migrated to Berlin turning it into one of the most fertile grounds for the modern arts and sciences in history.
By 1868, the Russians had annexed the Zarafshan Valley, and in 1873, the treaty turning Bukhara into a Russian protectorate was signed in Qarshi, much to the dismay of the Emir's son, Abdul Malik, who took to the hills in rebellion.
By turning from side to side, I had driven the cats from their place at the foot of the bed, and they were disgruntled.
By the mid-1970s, auto manufacturers modified the system so that a warning buzzer would sound for several seconds before turning off ( with the warning light ), regardless of whether the car was started.
By turning on an electro-magnet hidden under the floor, he made it immovable, " proving " that through will power, he could make it impossible to lift for the strongest Algerian warriors.
By 11 PM, it appeared that the Russians had vanished, but they revealed their positions to their pursuers by turning on their searchlights — ironically, the searchlights had been turned on to spot the attackers.
By mid-1943 the tide of war was turning decisively against Germany.
By the simple but costly expedient of never turning the machine off, the engineers reduced ENIAC's tube failures to the more acceptable rate of one tube every two days.
By mid-1944, when it was clear that the war was turning against the Germans, Papon began to prepare for the future, meeting once with Gaston Cusin, a civil servant engaged in the Resistance.
Penman explains her reasons for turning to the mystery genre after writing only historical novels: " By the time I'd finished researching and writing When Christ and His Saints Slept, I was in danger of burning out.
By 1996 the company was turning over more than £ 1 billion.
By 1929 the hospital was having a problem with too little space and had to start turning people away.
By 1859, industries included a woolen cloth factory, seven sawmills, four shingle mills, four clapboard mills, one grooving machine, one turning machine, and two tanneries.
By the mid-1980s the power stations may easily be turning out 200, 000 lb of the stuff each year.
By July 1940 Hitler was turning his mind to the invasion of the Soviet Union, commissioning General Erich Marcks to prepare preliminary plans.

By and mirror
By taking the derivative of the optical path length, the stationary point is found giving the path taken by the light ( though it should be noted that the result does not show light taking the least time path, but rather one that is stationary with respect to small variations as there are cases where light actually takes the greatest time path, as in a spherical mirror ).
By making measurements of the signal at many discrete positions of the moving mirror, the spectrum can be reconstructed using a Fourier transform of the temporal coherence of the light.
By moving the mirror the distant observer sees flashes of light that can be used to send a prearranged signaling code.
By measuring the observed motion of the guide star, and making minute distortions to the primary mirror, the telescope can produce images with much greater sharpness than is possible without adaptive optics.
By the third week of December much of the editorial opinion started to mirror these opinions and prepare the American citizens for the release of the prisoners.
By 1934 Hartnell's financial success ensured his acclaimied move to the glass and mirror art moderne interiors designed by young innovative architect Gerald Lacoste ( 1909 – 1983 ).
By projecting an imaginary line through point O perpendicular to the mirror, known as the normal, we can measure the angle of incidence, θ < sub > i </ sub > and the angle of reflection, θ < sub > r </ sub >.
By the early 1950s, Lacan's concept of the mirror stage had evolved: he no longer considered the mirror stage as a moment in the life of the infant, but as representing a permanent structure of subjectivity, or as the paradigm of " Imaginary order ".
* By Blade: Using essentially the same principle as communication by mirror, by applying blood and breath, communication between two people can be established by calling them by name.
By controlling the thickness and density of metal coatings, it is possible to decrease the reflectivity and increase the transmission of the surface, resulting in a half-silvered mirror.
By scanning the mirror in the reference arm, a reflectivity profile of the sample can be obtained ( this is time domain OCT ).
By the time the mirror instruments were retired they were seldom used for signalling.
By using a rotating mirror, a high-speed camera and correcting for geometric changes, PIV can be performed nearly instantly on a set of planes throughout the flow field.
By analogy a catadioptric system based on a convex mirror is customarily called a lens when used in photography, but not on a telescope.
By modernizing the action, Rattigan has made it possible for the movie to mirror changes in the English class structure during the two decades when it was most obviously becoming obsolete.
By using a mirror they see the lodger retrieve the lunch tray from the hall, discovering that the lodger is a woman.
By June 7, 2005, a mirror site was up, which allowed people to download the final version ( 3. 5. 4. 0 ).
By dawn, he is so tired he falls asleep, causing the aircraft to circle and descend, but sunlight reflecting off the mirror awakens him in time to regain control.
By looking uniquely into the mirror, the image appears undeformed.
By moving the index arm, the index mirror can be made to reveal any object up to 90 ° from the direct line of sight.
By mounting the two horizon mirrors at right angles to each other and permitting the movement of the telescope, the navigator could measure angles from 0 to 90 ° with one horizon mirror and from 90 ° to 180 ° with the other.
By contrast, a market-oriented system might mirror the locational patterns that we find in other business sectors, such as retail location.
By grinding his own mirrors, using Newton's rings to judge the quality of the optics for his telescopes, he was able to produce a superior instrument to the refracting telescope, due primarily to the wider diameter of the mirror.

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