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Chiefly and because
Chiefly because there is no dominant sanctioning organization for the sport, the game has mutated into many variations: 9-man, 8-man, 7-man, 5-man, and 4-man on a side ; with kicking and punting and without ; with point-after conversions ( including some with 1, 2, and 3 point tries ) or without ; and field sizes that vary from full CFL size, NFL size ( 120 yards long by 53 yards wide ), to fields a third that size.
Chiefly because of disease, however, only 300 returned alive of the 1, 100 South Carolinian volunteers who fought in the war.

Chiefly and also
Rather unfortunately, Thayer's Lexicon became obsolete quickly as Gustav Adolf Deissmann's work with the Egyptian papyri was soon to revolutionize New Testament and Koine Greek Lexicography with the publication of his Bible Studies: Contributions Chiefly from Papyri and Inscriptions to the History of the Language, the Literature, and the Religion of Hellenistic Judaism and Primitive Christianity, published in 1901 ( 2nd edition 1909 ) and also Light from the Ancient East: the New Testament Illustrated by Recently Discovered Texts of the Graeco-Roman World London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1910.
The Southeastern Ceremonial Complex ( traditionally Southern Death Cult, later also as Southern Cult or Chiefly Warfare Cult ) is the name given to the regional stylistic similarity of artifacts, iconography, ceremonies, and mythology of the Mississippian culture that coincided with their adoption of maize agriculture and chiefdom-level complex social organization from 1200 CE to 1650 CE.

Chiefly and other
Reagan ’ s coattails refers to the influence of Ronald Reagan ’ s popularity in elections other than his own, after the American political expression to “ ride in on another ’ s coattails .” Chiefly, it refers to the “ Reagan Revolution ” accompanying his 1980 election to the U. S. Presidency.
Chiefly, Klemperer's diary chronicles the daily life of restricted Jews during the Nazi terror, including the onset of a succession of prohibitions concerning many aspects of everyday existence ( e. g., finances, transportation, medical care, the maintenance and use of household help, food and diet, and the possession of appliances, newspapers, and other items ).
* Chiefly British: chili powder, dried, ground red chile peppers, sometimes with cumin and other spices

Chiefly and among
Chiefly among these are Sharp-shinned Hawks, domestic cats and loggerhead shrikes, all of which are likely to ambush the hummingbird while it sits on a perch.
Chiefly, the term refers to scholastic honor societies, those that recognize students who excel academically or as leaders among their peers, often within a specific academic discipline.
Chiefly among the reasons cited is the government's attempt to keep it under its control by deputing senior civil servants as CEOs and by toying with the annual budget string.

Chiefly and them
Chiefly a text medium in the beginning, the World Wide Web gave rise to any number of personal quotation collections that continue to flourish, even though very few of them seem to facilitate accurate information or correct citation.

Chiefly and .
It is less generally realized that his Letters to Malcolm: Chiefly on Prayer ( 1964 ) was a similar exercise, exploring theological questions through correspondence addressed to a fictional recipient, " Malcolm ", though this work may be considered a " novel " only loosely in that developments in Malcolm's personal life gradually come to light and impact the discussion.
* Robert Burns publishes Poems, Chiefly in the Scottish Dialect.
Chiefly in the United States, conservation is seen as differing from environmentalism in that it aims to preserve natural resources expressly for their continued sustainable use by humans.
* General W. T. Sherman as College President: A Collection of Letters, Documents, and Other Material, Chiefly from Private Sources, Relating to the Life and Activities of General William Tecumseh Sherman, to the Early Years of Louisiana State University, and the Stirring Conditions Existing in the South on the Eve of the Civil War ( posthumous, 1912 )
* Butterflies of Indo-China Chiefly Thailand, Laos and Vietnam.
Chiefly in the Denton Holme, Caldewgate and Wapping suburbs which lie in the Caldew Valley area of Carlisle.
Chiefly he is criticized for being more concerned with the superficial details of the philosophers ' lives, lacking the intellectual capacity to explore the doctrines of the philosophers in his book with any penetration.
( Chiefly translated from original manuscripts in the library of His Excellency Sir George Grey ) London, Trübner & Co. ( 1864 )
Timber is very heavy all over the Township Chiefly Hemlock Birch Pine Maple Tamarac and Cedar. Black River enters the Township near the South East corner, it is generally Deep and flows in a gentle Current in a Westerly direction to the South West corner of the Township, not well adapted for good motive power or mills.
Chiefly Hemlock Birch Pine and Tamarac.
Chiefly white-collar workers are employed by ConocoPhillips in Bartlesville, as the industrial extraction and refining work is done elsewhere in the state and throughout the world.
Chiefly based on the River Don, it runs for a length of 43 miles ( 69 km ) and has 27 locks.
Chiefly in the US, the latter type may refer to stretch-knit sleep apparel with rib-knit trimmings.
D., Given Chiefly Through Letters and Journals.
Chiefly from Unpublished Sources.
* Jeremy Collier-An Ecclesiastical History of Great Britain, Chiefly of England ( vol.
Thomas James M. A., ( Ill. John Tenniel ), Aesop's Fables: A New Version, Chiefly from Original Sources, 1848.
Chiefly, the back-story of both Belle and the Beast is given.

remembered and because
More potent a charm to bring back that time of life than this record of a few pictures and a few remembered facts would be a catalogue of the minutiae which are of the very stuff of the mind, intrinsic, because they were known in the beginning not by the eye alone but by the hand that held them.
Again Reverend Corder saved the bridge when Union soldiers planned to destroy it, after filling its two lanes with hay and straw -- but for what reason is not recorded nor remembered, certainly not because of pressure from an opposing Confederate force.
If Felix was still wearing the hat and carrying the horn because he'd forgotten about them, he now remembered.
The 1664 – 1666 epidemic was on a far smaller scale than the earlier " Black Death " pandemic ; it was remembered afterwards as the " great " plague only because it was the last widespread outbreak of bubonic plague in England during the four-hundred-year timespan of the Second Pandemic.
NFT, because of its design, provides a system where all three requirements for healthy plant growth can be met at the same time, provided that the simple concept of NFT is always remembered and practised.
Zahi Hawass, the former chief of Egypt's Supreme Council of Antiquities, asked that the stele be repatriated to Egypt, urging in comments to reporters: " If the British want to be remembered, if they want to restore their reputation, they should volunteer to return the Rosetta Stone because it is the icon of our Egyptian identity ".
The series is best remembered because the Loma Prieta earthquake on October 17, 1989, disrupted the planned Game 3 of the series at Candlestick Park.
Cunningham came up with the name WikiWikiWeb because he remembered a Honolulu International Airport counter employee who told him to take the Wiki Wiki Shuttle, a shuttle bus line that runs between the airport's terminals.
The film is mostly remembered because of the " Letty Lynton dress ", designed by Adrian: a white cotton organdy gown with large ruffled sleeves, puffed at the shoulder.
Darby first cites F. W. Maitland's comment following his compilation of a table of statistics from material taken from the Domesday Book survey, " it will be remembered that, as matters now stand, two men not unskilled in Domesday might add up the number of hides in a county and arrive at very different results because they would hold different opinions as to the meanings of certain formulas which are not uncommon ", then after adding that " each county presents its own problems " Darby concedes that " it would be more correct to speak not of ' the Domesday geography of England ', but of ' the geography of Domesday Book '.
Caracalla is remembered as one of the most notorious and unpleasant of emperors because of the massacres and persecutions he authorized and instigated throughout the Empire.
Though unpopular at the end of his reign — his funeral cortege was booed — Leopold II is remembered today by many Belgians as the " Builder King " ( Koning-Bouwer in Dutch, le Roi-Bâtisseur in French ) because he commissioned a great number of buildings and urban projects, mainly in Brussels, Ostend and Antwerp.
No one could remember why these names were used because no one remembered human origins on Earth.
Jane resents having to live in the shadow of her sister, who became more famous than she ever was, and who is now being remembered because of a revival of her films on television.
This is because he wants to be remembered as a sailor, as opposed to a drunkard who died a strange and dishonorable death.
Several years later, de Havilland remembered the slight and exacted her own revenge by brushing past Fontaine, who was waiting with her hand extended, because de Havilland allegedly took offense at a comment Fontaine had made about de Havilland's husband.
Bow remembered: " All this time I was ' running wild ', I guess, in the sense of trying to have a good time ... maybe this was a good thing, because I suppose a lot of that excitement, that joy of life, got onto the screen ".
Prospect Heights is also remembered for their town hall burning down in 2006 ( notable because the town hall is located across the street from the fire department ).
And then, on the day the President was to deliver the speech, he suddenly remembered because Malacañang was asking for the speech, so he said, “ This is an emergency.
Abercrombie is remembered today less for his writings than because of his close friendship with Edward Marsh, Rupert Brooke, and other ' Georgian ' poets.
Columbia studio executive John Veich remembered, " If we knew it was going to cost that much, we wouldn't have greenlighted it because we didn't have the money.
He is now remembered chiefly because of the contents of his will, which directs that eight lectures shall be delivered annually at Oxford in the University Church on as many Sunday mornings in full term, " between the commencement of the last month in Lent term and the end of the third week in Act term, upon either of the following subjects: to confirm and establish the Christian faith, and to confute all heretics and schismatics ; upon the divine authority of the Holy Scriptures ; upon the authority of the writings of the primitive fathers, as to the faith and practice of the primitive Church ; upon the divinity of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ ; upon the divinity of the Holy Ghost ; upon the articles of the Christian faith as comprehended in the Apostles and Nicene Creeds.
Although the second Frederick of Sicily, he chose to call himself " Frederick III " ( being one of the rare medieval monarchs who actually used a regnal number ) — presumably because only some fifty years before, his well-known and remembered great-grandfather had reigned Sicily and also used an official ordinal: Fridericus secundus, imperator etc ..
Because he never became prime minister, and because of the great capacity many considered that he had for the post, Hugh Gaitskell is remembered largely with respect from people both within and outside of the Labour Party.

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