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Some Related Sentences

Comparable and Eastern
Comparable to a chancellor position in other state university systems, at the time Toll oversaw UMCP, University of Maryland, Baltimore County, University of Maryland University College, University of Maryland, Eastern Shore, and University of Maryland at Baltimore.

Comparable and are
Comparable visions of life are at work in Antigone and Romeo And Juliet.
Comparable images from Western Christianity are generally not described as " icons ", although " iconic " may be used to describe a static style of devotional image.
Comparable organizations in the English-speaking world are the Boys ' Brigade and the non-militaristic Woodcraft Folk ; however, they never matched the development and growth of Scouting.
For example, in Java ( where protocols are termed interfaces ), the < tt > Comparable </ tt > interface specifies a method < tt > compareTo ()</ tt > which implementing classes should implement.
Comparable community groups based in Ontario, Canada, are called conservation authorities.
Comparable failures in Australia ( HIH, One. Tel ) are associated with the eventual passage of the CLERP 9 reforms.
His more recent books are a part of his Object Trilogy Project The first book of the trilogy, Programming with Objects: A Comparable Presentation of Object-Oriented Programming with C ++ and Java, presents a comparative approach to the teaching and learning of two large object-oriented languages, C ++ and Java.
Comparable abundances are found in taiga forests.
Comparable debit card systems are Maestro and Visa Electron.
Comparable terms are limousine liberal and gauche caviar.
Comparable statements are: " Look at the flower and the flower also looks "; " Guest and host interchange ".
Comparable sites are also known in Brittany and the Channel Islands.
Comparable types of orders are available to divide military retirement pay and Federal civil service retirement plans, and for State, county and municipal retirement plans in most States.
Comparable scales for indicating sucrose content are the degree Plato (° P ), which is widely used by the brewing industry, and the degree Balling, which is the oldest of the three systems and therefore mostly found in older textbooks, but also still in use in some parts of the world.
Sri Lankan food is generally equivalent in terms of spiciness to South Indian cuisine, yet many spicy Sri Lankan preparations are believed to be among the world's hottest in terms of chilli content ( Comparable to Sylhet and Bengal ).
Comparable themes from Classical Antiquity are the Battle of the Lapiths and Centaurs and the theme of Amazonomachy, the battle of Theseus with the Amazons.
He is nicknamed " Comparable to Rengui " as his skills are comparable to those of the Tang Dynasty general Xue Rengui.
Comparable English concepts are Typo Fairy or Typo Demon, but while they are generic and open to interpretation, there is only one Uli.
Comparable with the Anglo-Saxon examples are the Early Welsh gnomic poems.

Comparable and .
Comparable trends can be noted elsewhere.
Comparable pluralistic ( or ' mixed ') legal systems operate in Quebec, Louisiana and South Africa.
Comparable to wolves, and similar to domestic dogs, coyotes have a higher density of sweat glands on their paw pads.
Comparable to the size of viruses or bacteria, their compact parts would allow them to be more complex.
* Comparable performance — average-case performance is as efficient as other trees.
Comparable formats include Sony's Digital Betacam, launched in 1993, and MPEG IMX, launched in 2001.
Comparable devices were not developed in Europe until the 18th century.
Comparable to most people with the disorder, she was arm deficient and developed shortened bones and legs.
Comparable accounts survive, including those by the Church Father, Gregory of Nazianzus and by Jerome in his commentary to Zephaniah written in 392 CE.
Reece led the House Special Committee to Investigate Tax-Exempt Foundations and Comparable Organizations which investigated the use of funds by tax-exempt organizations ( non-profit organizations ) to see if they were being used to support communism.
Comparable discontent manifested itself in the seventeenth century when a number of Wymondham citizens, including Thomas Lincoln, John Beal and others emigrated to Hingham, Norfolk in the wave of religious dissent that swept England in the years preceding Cromwell's Commonwealth.
Comparable to the Roman tradition, the views of Confucianism on " right living " relate very much to the ideal of the ( male ) scholar-leader and his benevolent rule, buttressed by a tradition of filial piety.
Comparable to the views of the nineteenth century moral philosopher Henry Sidgwick, Nagel believes that one needs to conceive of one's good as an impersonal good and one's reasons as objective reasons.
Comparable only to Potsdamer Platz in Berlin, a whole new quarter of the city was constructed in recent years.
Comparable is also Numbers 5: 11ff, where a confirmed adulteress is punished with swelling of the abdomen.
Comparable gas turbine would be the Kawasaki GBP70 at 6639 kW and a fuel consumption of 284 gm / kWhr or about 36 % higher.
Comparable fluid bearings have stiffness of ~ 10 ^ 6 MN / m.

Far and Eastern
Papers on Far Eastern History 16, Australian National University.
From 1937 to 1946, Linebarger held a faculty appointment at Duke University, where he began producing highly regarded works on Far Eastern affairs.
* 1954, Far Eastern Government and Politics: China and Japan ( with Djang Chu and Ardath W. Burks ), Van Nostrand
This may even lead to an institutional variability, as in North Korea, where, after the presidency of party leader Kim Il-Sung, the office was vacant for years, the late president being granted the posthumous title ( akin to some ancient Far Eastern traditions to give posthumous names and titles to royalty ) of " Eternal President " ( while all substantive power, as party leader, itself not formally created for four years, was inherited by his son Kim Jong Il, initially without any formal office ) until it was formally replaced on 5 September 1998, for ceremonial purposes, by the office of Chairman of the Presidium of the Supreme People's Assembly, while the party leader's post as Chairman of the National Defense Commission was simultaneously declared " the highest post of the state ", not unlike Deng Xiaoping earlier in the People's Republic of China.
The outgoing Board designates the ten members who are the most advanced in atomic energy technology and the remaining three most advanced members from any of the following areas that are not represented by the first ten: North America, Latin America, Western Europe, Eastern Europe, Africa, Middle East and South Asia, South East Asia, the Pacific, and the Far East.
His first objective was Malacca, which controlled the narrow strait through which most Far Eastern trade moved.
By this long route, Spain reaped some of the profits of Far Eastern commerce.
One of Ribbentrop's first acts as Foreign Minister was to achieve a total volte-face in Germany's Far Eastern policies.
An area where Ribbentrop enjoyed more success arose in September 1940, when he had the Far Eastern agent of the Dienststelle Ribbentrop, Dr. Heinrich Georg Stahmer, start negotiations with the Japanese foreign minister, Yōsuke Matsuoka, for an anti-American alliance ( the German Ambassador to Japan, General Eugen Ott, was excluded from the talks on Ribbentrop's orders ).
The Mukden Incident, also known as the " Manchurian Incident " or the " Far Eastern Crisis ", was one of the League's major setbacks and acted as the catalyst for Japan's withdrawal from the organization.
The rise in popularity of Far Eastern imports from newly established manufacturers such as Daewoo, Proton, Kia and Hyundai contributed to Lada's demise in the West.
This fundamental characteristic of Christianity ( when compared to Far Eastern religions ) stems originally from ancient Jewish prophecy.
In May 2006, Rostelecom launched a new fiber-optic data transmission line linking Russia's Far Eastern cities of Belogorsk and Blagoveshchensk with the Chinese city of Heihe on the Chinese-Russian border.
Menzies sent the bulk of the army to help the British in the Middle East and Singapore, and told Winston Churchill the Royal Navy should strengthen its Far Eastern forces.
England had close links with India at the time when Wicca first became public in England, so this usage could well have been familiar to English speakers with a knowledge of Far Eastern religions.
In particular, Gerald Gardner, who first popularized Wicca in England, was a noted folklorist with an interest in Far Eastern culture who spent much of his adult life in Ceylon and Burma, so it seems very plausible that he could have been familiar with this Hindu term.
It has numerous uses in Far Eastern recipes, such as fresh turmeric pickle, which contains large chunks of soft turmeric.
Grammata Serica Recensa ( Museum of Far Eastern Antiquities, 1957 ).
To improve their production, Germany and Japan used millions of slave labourers ; Germany used about 12 million people, mostly from Eastern Europe, while Japan pressed more than 18 million people in Far East Asia.
** U. S. President Harry S Truman relieves General Douglas MacArthur of his Far Eastern commands.
* April 6 – The short-lived Far Eastern Republic is declared in eastern Siberia.
Eastern Christianity comprises the Christian traditions and churches that developed in the Balkans, Eastern Europe, Asia Minor, the Middle East, Horn of Africa, India and parts of the Far East over several centuries of religious antiquity.
" Far Eastern Survey.
The monthly journal Far Eastern Economic Review closed in September 2009.

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