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English and entirely
In the modern English `` whodunnit '', this insinuation of latent criminality in the detective himself has almost entirely disappeared.
Modern English, which almost entirely lacks declension in its nouns, does not have an explicitly marked accusative case even in the pronouns.
Controversial Talmud passages previously obscured, omitted entirely or confined to footnotes in English translations like the Soncino Talmud, receive full exposition in the Steinsaltz Talmud.
However, this rule did not allow such suits to bind similarly situated absent parties, which rendered the rule almost entirely useless and was a direct reflection of Story's inability to understand the old English Chancery precedents.
While most of her songs are sung in English, some of Enya's songs are sung entirely in Irish or Latin.
George Orwell wrote in 1944 that " the word ' Fascism ' is almost entirely meaningless ... almost any English person would accept ' bully ' as a synonym for ' Fascist '".
By the later stages of the Eighty Years War the Dutch had switched entirely from the heavier ships still used by the English and Spanish to the lighter frigates, carrying around 40 guns and weighing around 300 tons.
William ordered the compilation of the Domesday Book, a survey of the entire population and their lands and property for tax purposes, which reveals that within twenty years of the conquest the English ruling class had been almost entirely dispossessed and replaced by Norman landholders, who also monopolised all senior positions in the government and the Church.
The first entirely Catholic English language publication published in Buenos Aires, The Southern Cross is an Argentine newspaper founded on January 16, 1875 by Dean Patricio Dillon, an Irish immigrant, a deputy for Buenos Aires Province and president of the Presidential Affairs Commission amongst other positions.
The Income Tax Law of 1928 introducing income tax was the first law drafted entirely in English.
In Grimm's first editions, his Icelandic paradigms are based entirely on Rask's grammar, and in his second edition, he relied almost entirely on Rask for Old English.
English has fairly simple morphology, especially inflectional morphology, and thus it is often possible to ignore this task entirely and simply model all possible forms of a word ( e. g. " open, opens, opened, opening ") as separate words.
It was said in 1703 that the people of Shetland generally spoke English, but that " many among them retain the ancient Danish Language "; while in 1750 Orkney-born James Mackenzie wrote that Norn was not yet entirely extinct, being " retained by old people ", who still spoke it among each other.
The home's title deeds were written entirely in Urdu except for his father's English signature.
Some scenes of the 1987 Wim Wenders movie Der Himmel über Berlin ( English title: Wings of Desire ) were filmed on the old, almost entirely void Potsdamer Platz before the Berlin Wall fell.
While some colleges dropped football entirely, a few, such as the University of California and Stanford University, replaced it with English rugby.
English Salukis ( chiefly descendants of Sarona Kelb ) were exported to many countries, but by the mid-1930s, interest slackened, and with the outbreak of World War II, breeding and show activities almost entirely stopped.
This, in turn, derives from " Lupi spuma ", the name Georg Agricola used for the element in 1546, which translates into English as " wolf's froth " or " cream " ( the etymology is not entirely certain ), and is a reference to the large amounts of tin consumed by the mineral during its extraction.
This movie was entirely in English and featured, among others, Joaquin Phoenix, Claire Danes, and Sean Penn.
The International atmosphere is important to the school and offers one Bachelor program ( International Business program ), all Master's programs, and all doctoral programs entirely in English.
But Harold's claim was not entirely secure ; there were other claimants to the English throne, perhaps including his exiled brother Tostig.
Also another suspension of disbelief is having an episode of a TV show ( or a movie ) set in a foreign country and have all the actors portraying citizens of said country speak another language entirely and fluently ( example: a setting in Germany during the Third Reich where people dressed as German citizens and German officers speak fluent English ).
In his extensively detailed report, Céloron wrote, " All I can say is that the Natives of these localities are very badly disposed towards the French, and are entirely devoted to the English.
The exception to livestock and oak toxicity is the domestic pig, which may be fed entirely on acorns in the right conditions, and has traditionally been pastured in oak woodlands ( such as the Spanish dehesa and the English system of pannage ) for hundreds of years.

English and lacks
It lacks the inflections of English, such as tense and number, and does not use articles such as " the ", but its spatial mode of expression has enabled it to develop an elaborate system of grammatical aspect that is absent from English.
There is no such tort in English common law ; thus, any jurisdiction that lacks a wrongful death statute will not allow a lawsuit for the wrongful death of a loved one.
Newfoundland English lacks Canadian raising.
As the modern English alphabet lacks the eth ( ð ) character, Iðunn is sometimes anglicized as Idun, Idunn or Ithun.
# ( This was a short film produced in 1996 ; it lacks the English language dubbing of the main series.
Standard English lacks negative concord, but it was normal in Old English and Middle English, and some modern dialects do have it ( e. g. African American Vernacular English and Cockney ), although its usage in English is often stigmatized.
* Since Hungarian lacks the phoneme, many Hungarian speakers substitute for when speaking in English.
In the English language, " potato-head " is a slang term used to describe either a person with a potato-like shape to their head, or someone who lacks intelligence.
Due to evolution of English grammar, modern English lacks the Germanic grammatical features that Anglo-Saxon English was filled with.
The play, in spite of its felicity of diction, lacks dramatic interest, and the criticism of Richard Flecknoe ( Short Discourse of the English Stage ), that it seemed " full of flowers, but rather stuck in than growing there ," is not altogether unjustified.
He lacks higher education, and dropped out of high school after failing both Maths and English.
The derivation from the town of Sedan, Ardennes in France, where it was said to have been made or first used, lacks historical evidence, according to Oxford English Dictionary.
Note that the term lacks a medical definition, but it is in common usage and found in most standard English dictionaries.
:" Omichund, his confidential servant, as he thought, told his master of an agreement made between the English and Monsieur Duprée be a mistranscription of Joseph François Dupleix | Dupleix to attack him, and received for that advice a sum of not less than four lacks of rupees.
The term soke (; in Old English: soc, connected ultimately with secan ( to seek )), at the time of the Norman conquest of England generally denoted " jurisdiction ", but due to vague usage probably lacks a single precise definition.
Most of mainland Europe lacks the sound ; however, some " periphery " languages as Gascon, Welsh, English, Danish, Icelandic, Elfdalian, Northern Sami, Mari, Greek, Albanian, Sardinian, some dialects of Basque, and most speakers of the Iberian Romance languages have this sound in their consonant inventories, as phonemes or allophones.
This version features a different English dub and also lacks the English-language song, Save the Earth.

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