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Common and salt-forming
Common salt-forming cations include:

Common and parent
However, the Lancaster Guardian is no longer based in the city after its office in Common Garden Street was closed by parent company Johnston Press in June 2011 and the paper's staff relocated to The Visitor's office on Victoria Street, Morecambe.
For example, once Common Guillemot chicks fledge, they remain with the male parent for several months at sea.
* Hybrids between the Tufted Duck and the Common Pochard ( A. ferina ) are almost indistinguishable from Lesser Scaup, though neither parent species resembles A. affinis.
Common Pleas parent is King's Bench which is also the parent of equal level Local courts.
The shift of * k → h indicates it was a loanword into the Germanic parent language at a time depth no later than the separation of Common Germanic from Proto-Indo-European, about 500 BC.

Common and acids
Common examples of acids include acetic acid ( in vinegar ), sulfuric acid ( used in car batteries ), and tartaric acid ( used in baking ).
Compared to other grains, amaranth is unusually rich in the essential amino acid lysine Common grains such as wheat and corn are comparatively rich in amino acids that amaranth lacks ; thus, amaranth and other grains can complement each other.
Common food acids include vinegar, citric acid, tartaric acid, malic acid, fumaric acid, and lactic acid.
Common sources of n – 3 fatty acids include fish oils, algal oil, squid oil, and some plant oils such as echium oil and flaxseed oil.
Common biosynthetic oxidative decarboxylations of amino acids to amines are:
Common corrosives are either strong acids or strong bases, or concentrated solutions of certain weak acids and weak bases.
Common high-activity activators are mineral acids, often together with halides, amines, water and / or alcohols:
Common nonvolatile acids in humans are lactic acid, phosphoric acid, sulfuric acid, acetoacetic acid, and beta-hydroxybutyric acid.
Common monounsaturated fatty acids are palmitoleic acid ( 16: 1 n − 7 ), cis-vaccenic acid ( 18: 1 n − 7 ) and oleic acid ( 18: 1 n − 9 ).
Common chiral starting materials include monosaccharides and amino acids.

Common and parentheses
Common misconceptions about adverse events are the following, and in parentheses are the arguments and explanations against those misconceptions:
* Common plant name and the botanical name ( in parentheses ).

Common and where
Groups often join one another in on-campus concerts, such as the Georgetown Chimes ' Cherry Tree Massacre, a 3-weekend a cappella festival held each February since 1975, where over a hundred collegiate groups have appeared, as well as International Quartet Champions The Boston Common and the contemporary commercial a cappella group Rockapella.
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.
Since the early 20th century it has been commonly accepted that Old Irish Bel ( l ) taine is derived from a Common Celtic * belo-te ( p ) niâ, meaning " bright fire " ( where the element * belo-might be cognate with the English word bale in ' bale-fire ' meaning ' white ' or ' shining '; compare Anglo-Saxon bael, and Lithuanian / Latvian baltas / balts, found in the name of the Baltic ; in Slavic languages byelo or beloye also means ' white ', as in Беларусь ( White Russia or Belarus ) or Бе ́ лое мо ́ ре Sea ).
John Knox took The Form of Prayers with him to Scotland, where it formed the basis of the Scots Book of Common Order.
Common law systems place great weight on court decisions, which are considered " law " with the same force of law as statutes — for nearly a millennium, common law courts have had the authority to make law where no legislative statute exists, and statutes mean what courts interpret them to mean.
Hutchins and Adler implemented these ideas with great success at the University of Chicago, where they still strongly influence the curriculum in the form of the undergraduate Common Core.
Common applications are often found where a robust and contactless switch or potentiometer is required.
Common themes in cyberpunk include advances in information technology and especially the Internet, visually abstracted as cyberspace, artificial intelligence and prosthetics and post-democratic societal control where corporations have more influence than governments.
Common tournament configurations include men's singles, women's singles, and doubles, where two players play on each side of the net.
Common tablespoons intended for use as cutlery ( called dessert spoons in the UK, where a tablespoon is always a serving spoon ) usually hold 7 mL to 14 mL, considerably less than some tablespoons used for serving.
He constructed the grammar and vocabulary of at least fifteen Elvish languages and dialects in roughly 3 eras: 1910-c. 1930 Primitive Quendian the proto-language, Common Eldarin, Quenya and Goldogrin ; the middle era from c. 1935 till 1955, where Goldogrin had significantly changed and was now Noldorin, joined by Telerin, Ilkorin, Doriathrin and the Avarin.
Although Common Criteria does not prescribe any SFRs to be included in an ST, it identifies dependencies where the correct operation of one function ( such as the ability to limit access according to roles ) is dependent on another ( such as the ability to identify individual roles ).
The Common Fig tree is cited in the Bible, where in Genesis 3: 7, Adam and Eve cover their nakedness with fig leaves.
In Bengali, where the Common Fig is called dumur, it is referenced in a proverb: tumi jeno dumurer phool hoe gele (" You have become like the dumur flower ").
where he contributes not only expertise in Lisp and computer programming, but also an authoritative perspective on Lisp's evolution and Common Lisp's standardization.
The Common Burial Ground on Farewell Street was where most of the slaves were buried.
Common abbreviations for solid ( non-composite / hardcore ) cannon-fired shot are ; AP, AP-T, API and API-T ; where " T " stands for " tracer " and " I " for " incendiary "
Common usage, as well as signs until 1997, continues Route 128 east along the first 7 miles ( 11 km ) of Interstate 93 to the Braintree Split in Braintree, where I-93 turns north with Route 3 toward downtown Boston.
St Mary's Y. M. A., as they were usually referred to in the local press, played most of their early games on The Common where games were not infrequently interrupted by pedestrians insistent on exercising their right to roam.
Proto-Celtic * Lugus may be related to the root of the Proto-Celtic * lug-rā ‘ moon ’ ( the origin of Welsh lloer, though Peter Schrijver suggests an alternative etymology for lloer, from Common Celtic * lus-rā, where the root would be cognate with that of Latin luridus * lus-idus " pale yellow ").
" He places Coming Up For Air alongside Orwell's 1946 essay Some Thoughts on the Common Toad where he had written that, " retaining one's childhood love of such things as trees, fishes, butterflies and-toads, one makes a peaceful and decent future a little more probable ".
Clapham is famous as the home of Holy Trinity Clapham the Georgian Church on Clapham Common, from where The Clapham Sect led by William Wilberforce and a group of upper class evangelical Christians campaigned for the abolition of the slave trade in the 19th century.
In 1824, St. Mark's Church was built to the south of Kennington Common, where once there had been gallows.
The Common was also where the Chartists gathered for their biggest demonstration in 1848.

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