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Common and fields
Some collectors may specialize in specific fields ( such as Nobel Prize winners ) or general topics ( military leaders participating in World War I ) or specific documents ( i. e., signers of the Charter of the United Nations ; signers of the U. S. Constitution ; signers of the Israeli Declaration of Independence ; signers of the Charter of the European Common Union ; signers of the World War II German or Japanese surrender documents ).
Common examples of structures include groups, rings, fields and lattices.
At one important lake in Jiangxi Province in China the Siberian Cranes feed on the mudlfats and in shallow water, the White-naped Cranes on the wetland borders, the Hooded Cranes on sedge meadows and the last two species also feed on the agricultural fields along with the Common Cranes.
* The Burlington Town Common and Simonds Park are in the center of town and there are multiple parks and public recreation facilities throughout town which have basketball courts, tennis courts, baseball fields, soccer fields, gymnasia, an indoor skating rink ( Burlington Ice Palace ) and a skatepark.
There are a number of parks and open spaces in the area including Richmond Park, accessed via Sheen Gate ; Palewell Common, which has a playground, playing fields, a polo field, tennis courts and a pitch and putt course ; and East Sheen Common which leads onto Bog Gate, a secluded entrance to Richmond Park.
* The softball fields lie in the southwest corner of the Common.
Common habitats include woodlands, fields, rivers, creeks, roadsides, and gardens.
Common fields for the Bachelor of Engineering degree include the following fields ::
It remained farmland until April 1797, when the Common Council of New York purchased the fields to the east of the Minetta ( which were not yet within city limits ) for a new potter's field, or public burial ground.
Some inefficiencies such as function call interfaces and lack of pointer-free arrays of user-defined data types are dictated by the Common Lisp standard and still need to be worked around ( e. g. by inlining more and using macros to build constructs that look like user-defined structures but are actually accessing fields in preallocated specialized arrays ).
Common Corncockle ( Agrostemma githago ) – also written " corn cockle " and " corn-cockle " and known locally simply as " the corncockle " –, is a slender pink flower of European wheat fields.
Common elements found in interface design are action buttons, text fields, check boxes, radio buttons and drop-down menus.
Common occupation fields are semi-professionals, such as lower-level managers or school teachers, small business owners and skilled craftsmen.
Besides these fields there were also common wastes, Frampton Common, Adam's Land, Brockridge, Goose Green, Woodend Green, and Tovey's Green to name a few.
The Central Common has more large fields, tennis courts, a soccer field, an outdoor city-owned swimming pool, skateboarding facilities, and a smaller fountain.
The fungi Drechslera monoceras and Exserohilum monoceras have been evaluated with some success as potential biocontrol agents of Common Barnyard Grass in rice fields ; more research is necessary however because they too may not be host specific enough to be of practical use.
The Halifax Mainland Common also provides indoor and outdoor all-weather sports fields, and baseball diamonds.

Common and were
In early 1776, Thomas Paine argued in the closing pages of the first edition of Common Sense that the “ custom of nations ” demanded a formal declaration of American independence if any European power were to mediate a peace between the Americans and Great Britain.
Common meter hymns were interchangeable with a variety of tunes ; more than twenty musical settings of " Amazing Grace " circulated with varying popularity until 1835 when William Walker assigned Newton's words to a traditional song named " New Britain ", which was itself an amalgamation of two melodies (" Gallaher " and " St. Mary ") first published in the Columbian Harmony by Charles H. Spilman and Benjamin Shaw ( Cincinnati, 1829 ).
Pilots and flight attendants were trained to adopt the " Common Strategy " tactic, which was approved by the FAA.
The " Common Strategy " approach was not designed to handle suicide hijackings, and the hijackers were able to exploit a weakness in the civil aviation security system.
Although anthems were written in the Elizabethan period by Tallis ( 1505 – 1585 ), Byrd ( 1539 – 1623 ), and others, they are not mentioned in the Book of Common Prayer until 1662, when the famous rubric " In quires and places where they sing here followeth the Anthem " first appears.
Common among the mislabeled works are all of the reasons identified for misattributing Cuyp ’ s works: the lack of biography and chronology of his works made it difficult to discern when paintings were created ( making it difficult to pinpoint an artist ); contentious signatures added to historians ’ confusion as to who actually painted the works ; and the collaborations and influences by different painters makes it hard to justify that a painting is genuinely that of Aelbert Cuyp ; and finally, accurate identification is made extremely difficult by the fact that this same style was copied ( rather accurately ) by his predecessor.
Common themes were based on fantasy, or were intended to give the user the illusion of being somewhere else, such as in a sanatorium, wizard's castle, or on a pirate ship.
Instead, the forms of service that were to be included in the Book of Common Prayer were drawn from the Missal ( for the Mass ), Breviary for the daily office, Manual ( for the occasional services ; Baptism, Marriage, Burial etc.
Consequently, when the accession of Elizabeth I re-asserted the dominance of Protestantism in England, there remained a significant body of Reformed believers who were nevertheless hostile to the Book of Common Prayer.
The effect of the failure of the 1928 book was salutary: no further attempts were made to revise the Book of Common Prayer.
An Act of Parliament passed in the year 1563, entitled “ An Act for the Translating of the Bible and the Divine Service into the Welsh Tongue ,” ordered that the Old and New Testament, together with the Book of Common Prayer, were to be translated into Welsh.
Common alphabets were introduced and allowed for the uniformity of language across large distances.
Carbon 14 dating of a cave at Laang Spean in northwest Cambodia reveals people who made pots were living in Cambodia as early as 4200 BCE ( Before the Common Era ).
Mather reported that, from his view, " none that have used it ever died of the Small Pox, tho at the same time, it were so malignant, that at least half the People died, that were infected With it in the Common way.
However, there were no widespread reforms of the Common Law.
The Conservatives ( approximately 40 ) wanted to keep the status quo ( since Common Law protected the interests of the gentry, and tithes and advowsons were valuable property ).
" The early lectionaries of the Anglican Church ( as included in the Book of Common Prayer of 1662 ) included the deuterocanonical books amongst the cycle of readings, and passages from them were used in the services ( such as the Benedicite )
At the same time, a new Act of Uniformity was passed, which made attendance at church and the use of an adapted version of the 1552 Book of Common Prayer compulsory, though the penalties for recusancy, or failure to attend and conform, were not extreme.
At the age of nine, he and his older brother Peter were sent to a large and one of the best Latin schools in the Netherlands, located at Deventer and owned by the chapter clergy of the Lebuïnuskerk ( St. Lebuin's Church ), though some earlier biographies assert it was a school run by the Brethren of the Common Life.
In his 1925 essay " A Defence of Common Sense ", he argued against idealism and scepticism toward the external world on the grounds that they could not give reasons to accept their metaphysical premises that were more plausible than the reasons we have to accept the common sense claims about our knowledge of the world that sceptics and idealists must deny.
In 1983, Brundtland was invited by then United Nations Secretary-General Javier Pérez de Cuéllar to establish and chair the World Commission on Environment and Development ( WCED ), widely referred to as the Brundtland Commission, developing the broad political concept of sustainable development in the course of extensive public hearings that were distinguished by their inclusiveness and published its report Our Common Future in April 1987.
Common also were attacks by defenders of social hierarchy on Rousseau's " romantic " belief in equality.

Common and aggregated
Common examples of an aggregated node in a food web might include parasites, microbes, decomposers, saprotrophs, consumers, or predators, each containing many species in a web that can otherwise be connected to other trophic species.

Common and enclosed
The Park was the first public park in south London, and was created when the Common was enclosed in 1852, and designated one of the Royal Parks of London ( today, management of the Park is undertaken by Lambeth Council ).
At this time the manor lands included Wimbledon Common ( then called a heath ) and the enclosed parkland around the manor house.
The 1757 Enclosure act saw Common land enclosed thus placing strictures on where local people could graze their animals and affected Bishopthorpe.
Rhoshirwaun Common, following strong opposition, was enclosed in 1814 ; while the process was not completed in Aberdaron, Llanfaelrhys and Y Rhiw until 1861.
1805 (+ 1814 )-Dulwich Common enclosed.
By 1836 an ornamental iron fence fully enclosed the Common and its five perimeter malls or recreational promenades, the first of which, Tremont Mall, had been in place since 1728, in imitation of St. James's Park in London.
The Common Council passed a resolution in June 1899 directing those having hay to sell " vacate the plot of land enclosed by the fence.
Wimbledon Common together with Putney Heath and Putney Lower Common is legally protected by the Wimbledon and Putney Commons Act of 1871 from being enclosed or built upon.
* 1852 Kennington Common was enclosed.
Common land at Mynydd Rhiw and Mynydd y Graig was enclosed by Act of Parliament in 1811, and barley and oats were grown.
The Common Iranian word for " enclosed space " was * pari-daiza-( Avestan pairi-daēza -), a term that was adopted by Christian mythology to describe the garden of Eden or Paradise on earth.
The Common was enclosed in 1816, new roads were laid and the intervening land was sold.
Common land was then enclosed – a flock of sheep only needed a handful of shepherds to look after them, and villagers who were no longer required were evicted from the lands.
With the enclosure of Arnewood Common in the early nineteenth century, the main centre of population moved northwards, away from the coast, and in order to meet this change the ancient parish church was demolished in 1830 and moved to its present situation close to the now enclosed Downton Common, two miles ( 3 km ) to the north.
When the park was enclosed by Charles I in 1637, Ham parish lost the most of the affected land, over stretching towards Robin Hood Gate and Kingston Hill, almost half of which was Common land.
The field remained as common land until 1804 when it was controversially enclosed by the Corporation of Leicester, setting aside a part of the field as ' Freemen's Common ' for the use of freemen of the city.

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