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Clearly and would
Clearly express questioning ( interrogation ) would qualify but the concept also extends to surreptitious attempts to acquire information from the defendant through the use of undercover agents or paid informants.
Clearly one of the main issues with nuclear propulsion would be safety, both during a launch for the passengers, but also in case of a failure during launch.
Clearly, Burnham's stated preference for socialism would not bind those two groups together against Jagan, an avowed Marxist.
Clearly, this method would require a significant human and industrial presence in space to be at all feasible.
Clearly, if a spark plug were to protrude into the Wankel's combustion chamber it would foul the rotating tip ; and if the plug were recessed to avoid this, the sunken spark might lead to poor combustion.
Clearly the ideal scientific option would be to send a spacecraft to the sun and grab some solar plasma ; however, obtaining solar matter is not that straightforward because of the intense heat ( millions of degrees ) of the Sun ’ s superheated gases as well as the dynamic electromagnetic environment of the corona, whose flares regularly interfere with the electronics of distant spacecraft.
Clearly this would not have been possible with asphalt.
Clearly the experiences of persons practicing Sudarshan Kriya are exactly the opposite of what a hyperventilating exercise would be expected to produce.
Clearly this would mean north of Iceland and not Scarborough.
Clearly shaken by this statement, Wiglesworth would not acknowledge Hawk after the show, opting not to hug her.
Clearly they were a speculative middle-class project, but in 1910 they were isolated among fields half a mile from the village-hardly attractive, one would have thought, to prospective purchasers.
Clearly inspired by its older namesake in Bath, it differs from the Bath crescent in that it is not a true crescent at all but two quadrant terraces each terminated by a circular bow in the Regency style which rises as a tower, a feature which would not have been found in the earlier classically inspired architecture of the 18th century which the design of the crescent seeks to emulate.
Clearly this is undesirable as our vision would rotate when we looked up and down.
Clearly, a dictionary would not solve the problem, as a dictionary is a report of already known synonyms, and thus is dependent on the notion of synonymy, which Quine holds as unexplained.
Trescothick stated that he would see how he progresses before committing to the international scene: " Of course I'd love to play for England again .... Clearly, if I want to continue my career I have to undertake another tour.
Clearly many of these would have been influenced by the spelling, and indeed pronunciation, of the vernacular language, and thus varied between different European countries.
Clearly a die could roll too few sixes as easily as too many and we would be just as suspicious, so we should use the two-tailed test which ( for example ) splits the 5 % probability across the two tails.
Clearly, " All Golds " was a play on the amateur " All Blacks " name but it was also an insult to the players, criticising the arrangement where they would each share in the wealth of the tour.
Clearly, in these liberties, at this time, it was the small-time miners, most of whom would have had other sources of income, usually farming, who were paying their dues and selling to the lead merchants and smelters.
Clearly, if an object were simultaneously subject to both a centripetal force and an equal and opposite centrifugal force, the resultant force would vanish and the object could not experience a circular motion.
Clearly you would because you're just, like, fucked up.
Clearly the church would have been at the heart of village life in Hannington.
Clearly Bob will not go on his own: he would not set off alone, but if he did then Alice would follow, and Alice's personal liberty means the joint preference must have both to go > Bob to go.

Clearly and have
MSP Alex Johnstone wrote " Clearly, the Declaration of Arbroath is a literary work of outstanding universal significance by any stretch of the imagination " In 2008, the Campaign Group Chairman, Councillor Jim Millar launched a public petition to reinforce the bid explaining " We're simply asking people to, local people especially, to sign up to the campaign to have the Declaration of Arbroath and Arbroath Abbey recognised by the United Nations.
Clearly, then, any two Englishmen must have at least this one ancestor in common, and thus any individual could claim kinship with the king.
Clearly, we have
Clearly, those who study folklore and literature are interested in them, but scholars from a variety of fields have found ways to profitably incorporate the study proverbs.
Clearly the box must have a volume of 60 units.
" Clearly, Vinson suggested, clear and present danger did not intimate " that before the Government may act, it must wait until the putsch is about to be executed, the plans have been laid and the signal is awaited.
Clearly, there are some individuals, including non-humans such as a racehorse, which have economic value unique to their individual body and being that cannot be captured or defined as an " intellectual " asset nor as a set of " social " relationships ( because horses do not socialize in the sense humans do ).
Clearly, Elpenor is embarrassed to have died young without any honor, and seeks to hide his true fate from everyone else.
Clearly if one does not have enough money to pay the price then they cannot buy any of that item.
Clearly by this time, dynastic power began to weaken, for which several explanations have been proposed.
Clearly, these have to be functions, taking inputs from some computational domain and returning outputs in some ( possibly different ) domain.
" Clearly these categories were not so relevant to non-profits or units within complex organizations ( which might have high degrees of internal specialization ), and much of the early literature on Balanced Scorecard focused on suggestions of alternative ' perspectives ' that might have more relevance to these groups.
Clearly, Sinan must have appreciated this form, since he repeated it later in mosques such as the Sokollu Mehmed Pasha Mosque at Kadırga and the Atik Valide Mosque at Üsküdar.
He has recently been critical of the Iraq war: " the UK and US pour blood and treasure into overseas campaigns which seem to have no ending and no goal ... Clearly I was naive ".
Clearly, looking at the passenger satisfaction scores for First Great Western, the train company and Network Rail have a lot to do.
" Clearly biofuels have great potential for good and, perhaps, also for harm.
Clearly,, so we have

Clearly and little
" Clearly intended to complement rather than challenge the primary advisory roles of the Tuesday luncheons and the National Security Adviser and his staff, NSC meetings for the balance of the administration considered a broad range of anticipated rather than pressing issues and gave little attention to Vietnam.
Clearly the Caledonians understood they had little chance of winning such an engagement and sought to avoid one until Agricola had penetrated deep into their territory and reduced them to the necessity of risking such a dangerous gambit.
In an op-ed during her gubernatorial campaign, Whitman wrote, " Clearly, when examining our positions on immigration, there is very little over which Jerry Brown and I disagree ".
Clearly the advantage of this is that both DRM and analogue radios can receive a signal they can discriminate and demodulate, with little disadvantage to either mode.
Clearly religious content in art is rare, but little is known about the significance that most of the decoration of practical objects had for its makers, and the subject and meaning of the few objects without a practical function is equally unclear.

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