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sometimes and are
If his dancers are sometimes made to look as if they might be creatures from Mars, this is consistent with his intention of placing them in the orbit of another world, a world in which they are freed of their pedestrian identities.
We are also struck by the fact that this story of a boy's love for his mother does not offend, while the incestuous love of the man, Paul Morel, sometimes repels.
The problem is rather to find out what is actually happening, and this is especially difficult for the reason that `` we are busily being defended from a knowledge of the present, sometimes by the very agencies -- our educational system, our mass media, our statesmen -- on which we have had to rely most heavily for understanding of ourselves ''.
He explains that there are sometimes honorable courtiers, but that too often a man who succeeds at court does not hesitate to sacrifice his Sovereign and nation to his own avarice and ambition.
One is that there sometimes are real although inadequate compensations in growing old.
Americans are a nation of joiners, a quality which our friends find endearing and sometimes amusing.
In the fevered, intoxicating, breathless state of being in love the usual signposts that guide you to lasting and satisfying relationships are sometimes obscured.
Although they are forbidden to sit with the customers, the dancers are sometimes proffered drinks, and most of them can bolt one down in mid-shimmy.
His people ( see color ) are angular and knobby-knuckled, sometimes painfully stretched, sometimes grotesquely foreshortened.
By such innocent actions are human tragedies sometimes set in motion.
Such ambiguous exercises compound confusion by making it worse compounded, and they are sometimes expanded until the cream of the jest sours.
Data on the former are scanty, but there can be little doubt that the latter is sometimes born at a length greater than that of any of the others, thereby lending support to the belief that the anaconda does, indeed, attain the greatest length.
Experiments are often composed of several identical trials, and sometimes experiments themselves are repeated.
Binomial distributions were treated by James Bernoulli about 1700, and for this reason binomial trials are sometimes called Bernoulli trials.
Some phonetic features, for example glottal catch or murmur, are sometimes to be assigned to segmental phonemics and sometimes to accentual systems.
but sometimes arrangements also are made for high school students to attend, and evening extension courses also may be conducted.
While costs on this order are sometimes separately charged for in residential and commercial rates, in the form of a mere `` service charge '', they are more frequently wholly or partly covered by a minimum charge which entitles the consumer to a very small amount of gas or electricity with no further payment.
In later collages of both masters, a variety of extraneous materials are used, sometimes in the same work, and almost always in conjunction with every other eye-deceiving and eye-undeceiving device they can think of.
the language, however, is a proper object of scrutiny, and the effects of the language are palpable even if sometimes inevitable.

sometimes and assigned
The earlier date, 293, is sometimes assigned and apparently supported by the authority of a " Coptic Fragment " ( published by Dr. O. von Lemm among the Mémoires de l ' académie impériale des sciences de S. Péterbourg, 1888 ) and corroborated by the maturity revealed in his two earliest treatises Contra Gentes ( Against the Heathens ) and De Incarnatione ( On the Incarnation ), which were admittedly written about the year 318 before Arianism had begun to make itself felt, as those writings do not show an awareness of Arianism.
Bayer did not always follow this rule ; he sometimes assigned letters to stars according to their location within a constellation ( for example: the northern, southern, eastern, or western part of a constellation ), according to either the order in which they rise in the east, to historical or mythological information on specific stars within a constellation, or to his own random choosing.
The process for running a board, sometimes called the board process, includes the selection of board members, the setting of clear board objectives, the dissemination of documents or board package to the board members, the collaborative creation of an agenda for the meeting, the creation and follow-up of assigned action items, and the assessment of the board process through standardized assessments of board members, owners, and CEOs.
They formerly were assigned to the genus Hyracotherium ( sometimes known as Eohippus ), but the type species of that genus now is regarded to be not a member of this family ( see Hyracotherium ).
They are typically assigned Roman numerals from 1 to 12, although cranial nerve zero is sometimes included.
The Discourse of Wit ( 1685 ), sometimes assigned to him, belongs to Dr David Abercromby ( q. v.
Spenser was a former State trooper assigned to the Suffolk County DA's Office ( although some novels state that he also worked out of the Middlesex County DA's Office, for example in Walking Shadow and the pilot episode of Spenser: For Hire said he was a Boston Police detective ), and regularly seeks help from ( or sometimes butts heads with ) Martin Quirk ( originally a lieutenant, later a captain ) of the Boston Police Department.
The torr is sometimes improperly assigned the symbol " T " which is reserved for the SI unit for tesla.
In modern performance practice, Cherubino is usually assigned to a mezzo-soprano ( sometimes also Marcellina ), Count Almaviva to a baritone, and Figaro to a bass-baritone.
In some cases the Chinese reading is the inferred Chinese reading, interpreting the character as a phono-semantic compound ( as in how on readings are sometimes assigned to these characters in Chinese ), while in other cases ( such as 働 ), the Japanese on reading is borrowed ( in general this differs from the modern Chinese pronunciation of this phonetic ).
In the United States, the word " seal " is sometimes assigned to a facsimile of the seal design ( in monochrome or color ), which may be used in a variety of contexts including architectural settings, on flags, or on official letterheads.
Larger eparchies, exarchates, and autonomous Churches are governed by a Metropolitan archbishop and sometimes also have one or more bishops assigned to them.
Employers sometimes require employees to use assigned names to help sell products: for example, a company that does business mostly in one country but locates a call center in another country may require its employees to assume names common in the former country to try to draw a more positive or less negative reaction from current and / or prospective customers.
The coucals and anis are sometimes considered subfamilies of the Cuculidae, or otherwise assigned to families of their own, the Centropodidae and Crotophagidae respectively.
Although postal codes are usually assigned to geographical areas, special codes are sometimes assigned to individual addresses or to institutions that receive large volumes of mail, such as government agencies and large commercial companies.
St. Thomas Aquinas, a prominent Doctor of the Catholic Church, divided miracles into three types in his Summa contra Gentiles: These works that are sometimes done by God outside the usual order assigned to things are wont to be called miracles: because we are astonished ( admiramur ) at a thing when we see an effect without knowing the cause.
Even then, ethnonyms were sometimes assigned by geographic location or surrounding features, rather than by any features of the people themselves, and often carried little distinction of who the Han Chinese authors considered Chinese and non-Chinese for differences such as lifestyle, language, or governance.
But, many state courts that handle criminal cases have separate divisions or judges assigned to handle certain types of crimes such as a drug court, sometimes also known as a " problem solving court.
Often contrasted with auteur directors such as Stanley Kubrick, who tended to bring a distinctive directorial " look " to a particular genre, Wise is famously viewed to have allowed his ( sometimes studio assigned ) story to dictate style.
Some older fossils are sometimes assigned to the Gaviiformes.
Most public roads in most countries have a legally assigned numerical maximum speed limit which applies on all roads unless otherwise stated ; lower speed limits are often shown on a sign at the start of the restricted section, although the presence of streetlights or the physical arrangement of the road may sometimes also be used instead.

sometimes and feminine
A drag queen is usually a male-bodied person who performs as an exaggeratedly feminine character, in heightened costuming sometimes consisting of a showy dress, high-heeled shoes, obvious makeup, and wig.
It is sometimes called the feminine order because it is on the top level of the Colosseum and holding up the least weight, and also has the slenderest ratio of thickness to height.
" Film critics sometimes use the term " pejoratively to connote an unrealistic, pathos-filled, campy tale of romance or domestic situations with stereotypical characters ( often including a central female character ) that would directly appeal to feminine audiences.
The goddess Dione ( in her name simply the " Goddess ") is sometimes taken by later mythographers as a mere feminine form of Zeus ( see entry Dodona ): if this were so, she would not have assembled here.
For example, the stress in a foot may be inverted, a caesura ( or pause ) may be added ( sometimes in place of a foot or stress ), or the final foot in a line may be given a feminine ending to soften it or be replaced by a spondee to emphasize it and create a hard stop.
By the late Roman Republic, women sometimes also adopted the feminine of their father's cognomen.
Some of them use an archaic form of the feminine adjective that lacks the final-e and sometimes show an apostrophe instead of a hyphen, such as grand ' route (" main country road "; distinct from grande route, " long way ") and grand-mère (" grandmother "; distinct from grande mère, " tall mother ").
The grammatically correct Hebrew feminine parallel to the masculine title rabbi is rabbanit ( רבנית ) sometimes used for women in this role.
The masculine and feminine forms of other adjectives derived from Portuguese are sometimes used with Portuguese loanwords, particularly by Portuguese-educated speakers of Tetum.
In the Septuagint the Hebrew term " sin " is sometimes directly translated as " sin "-either by the Greek feminine noun hamartia (" sin " ἁμαρτία ), or less commonly by the neuter noun hamartemata (" result of sin ," " sinful thing " ἁμάρτημα ) thereby duplicating the metonymy in the Hebrew text.
Later scribes sometimes renamed her Bastet, a variation on Bast consisting of an additional feminine suffix to the one already present, thought to have been added to emphasize pronunciation ; perhaps it is a diminutive name applied as she receded in the ascendancy of Sekhmet in the Egyptian pantheon.
Adi Shakti is the concept, or personification, of divine feminine creative power, sometimes referred to as ' The Great Divine Mother ' in Hinduism.
A presenter, or host ( sometimes hostess when a feminine person ), is a person or organization responsible for running a public event.
Almost all can be classified as bishōnen, exhibiting the same physically feminine features combined with a sometimes deliberately ambivalent sexuality or at the very least, a lack of any hint of a relationship in order to maintain their popular availability.
In fiction, an antihero ( sometimes antiheroine as the feminine ) is generally considered to be a protagonist whose personality can be perceived as being villainous and heroic together, in contrast to the more perpetually noble characteristics of an archetypal hero or the perpetually immoral characteristics of an archetypal villain.
The growth in the male pantyhose market ( sometimes termed, " mantyhose ", a term coined by the media coverage of this emerging trend ), has been chronicled in a number of popular blogs that have arisen as men have become more open in their wearing of this once only feminine garment.
The plural form is either virtuosi or the Anglicisation, virtuosos, and the feminine form sometimes used is virtuosa.
Butch and femme can sometimes be used to categorize identities of gay or lesbian individuals in terms that are recognized as analogous to ( though not derivative from ) heterosexual gender roles, with butch representing the traditionally masculine counterpart ( the male role in heterosexual couples ) and femme the traditionally feminine role ( the female role in heterosexual couples ).
" Femmes are sometimes confused with " lipstick lesbians " which generally are understood to be feminine lesbians who are attracted to and partner with other feminine women.
The terms femiphobia, effeminophobia, and sissyphobia are sometimes used to describe a generally negative attitude displayed in many societies towards feminine men.
Feminine praenomina were generally abbreviated, if at all, in the same manner as masculine praenomina, but those abbreviated with a single letter were sometimes abbreviated by writing the letter upside-down, to indicate that the feminine form of the name was intended.
Film critics sometimes use the term " pejoratively to connote an unrealistic, pathos-filled, campy tale of romance or domestic situations with stereotypical characters ( often including a central female character ) that would directly appeal to feminine audiences.
The first set of names also sometimes appears in feminine form as " Ankhetkheprure Neferneferuaten " and sometimes the epithet for the nomen is then replaced by " beneficial to her husband ".

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