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Page "Cabinet of the United Kingdom" ¶ 15
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Some Related Sentences

Equally and some
Equally significant, Pope John has said that Catholics themselves bear some responsibility for Christian disunity.
Equally, there are some cities where the local government district is in fact smaller than the historical or natural boundaries of the city.
Equally valid terms for the Orient still exist in the English language in such collocations as Oriental studies ( now Asian Studies in some countries ).
Equally interesting are those perceptual processes that differ from, or go beyond those found in humans, such as echolocation in bats and dolphins, motion detection by skin receptors in fish, and extraordinary visual acuity, motion sensitivity and ability to see ultraviolet light in some birds.
Equally, these technologies are bellwethers of some of the issues associated with the territory, such as the inability to sustain new initiatives or protect against identity theft, information overload and vandalism.
Equally, there is a certain level of humiliation inherent in the devices, by which some people are sexually aroused.
Equally important, Stieglitz used this space to introduce to the United States some of the most avant-garde European artists of the time, including Henri Matisse, Auguste Rodin, Henri Rousseau, Paul Cézanne, Pablo Picasso, Constantin Brâncuşi, Francis Picabia and Marcel Duchamp.
Equally, Ptolemy's narrative was drawn upon by later philosophers and astronomers, such as Johannes Kepler who used similar examples and the same order of arguments to explain the physical foundation of some astrological claims.

Equally and level
Equally unusual at the time was the decision to locate the engine behind the rear axle ; though the rear mounted engine configuration is another Kässbohrer-Setra innovation which subsequently became mainstream, simplifying the production process and creating a range of passenger focused possibilities both as to the level of the floor area in the passenger and driver / crew sections, and, where high floor layouts are specified, of the uses available for the underfloor area.
: Equally spaced around the periphery of the piston deck are the connections to which the level weight ropes are fixed.
Equally, and on a more personal level, the novel is about the ephemerality of all life.
Equally, a solution may be constrained to specific technologies and standards that are defined at the enterprise level.

Equally and may
Equally, Malcolm's raids in Northumbria may have been related to the disputed " Kingdom of the Cumbrians ", reestablished by Earl Siward in 1054, which was under Malcolm's control by 1070.
Equally they may have believed that the British had become overstretched by fighting a global war and decided to try to seize British possessions such as Jamaica.
Equally, those able to do so may manipulate statistics to inflate the number beneficiaries and siphon off additional assistance.
Equally interesting is their likely effect on structure formation over cosmological time: it is thought that they may provide a feedback mechanism to slow the formation of the most massive objects.
Equally, evolution may be employed as a mechanism for generating a dynamic world of adaptive individuals, in which the selection pressure is imposed by the program, and the viewer plays no role in selection, as in the Black Shoals project.
Equally masks may disguise a penitent or preside over important ceremonies ; they may help mediate with spirits, or offer a protective role to the society who utilise their powers.
Equally, the emission from a particular state may be selectively monitored, providing a measure of the population of that state.
Equally two subdomains of the same domain may be hosted together for example a blog server may host blog1. example. com and blog2. example. com
Equally, a specialist batsmen may be termed a " useful change bowler " and a good example of this type is Allan Border who once took 11 wickets in a Test match in 1989 when conditions suited his occasionally used left arm spin.
Equally, several runs are needed to confirm the results of a study – a GC analysis of a single sample may simply yield a result per chance ( see statistical significance ).
Equally, a referee may warn teams about technical infringements ( especially at the scrum and ruck ) before penalising them.
Equally, the receiving country may express displeasure by declining to receive an ambassador, but maintain diplomatic relations by accepting a chargé.
Equally, a given user may have used multiple IP addresses and / or usernames ( which may well be illegitimate use of multiple accounts, or " sockpuppetry ").
Equally shocking is the implication that Himiko herself may have vampiric characteristics from that same encounter with Miyu, which have yet to manifest ; apparently, Himiko is the first human who exchanged blood with Miyu, right after she became the Guardian.
Equally, although individual right wing Australians may have served with the Nationalist rebels, they received no public support.
Equally, if the employer complains that the employee has taken to working away from the office, the employee may argue that the employer has acquiesced.
Equally, the joints may be packed out with aluminium sheet cut from drinks cans ; this method facilities disassembly.

Equally and be
Equally an electric guitar can be added to an old song.
Equally, although first-class matches must now be scheduled to have at least three days ' duration, there have historically been exceptions.
Equally, centripetal tendencies amongst city states has meant that central authority over the whole region, when imposed, has tended to be ephemeral, and localism has fragmented power into tribal or smaller regional units.
Equally, although the army has no history of peace support contributions, its involvement in RAMSI has proven a catalyst to determine how it could train for and be used in UN operations.
The resulting economic development would in addition, so it was believed, make social expenditures largely superfluous ... Equally important was it ... to raise the revenue that would still have to be raised in such a way as to deflect economic behaviour as little as possible from what it would have been in the absence of all taxation (' taxation for revenue only ').
Equally inevitably, such a model would be doomed at referendum.
Equally, 665 would be a year when, as Bede writes, " that Easter was kept twice in one year, so that when the King had ended Lent and was keeping Easter, the Queen and her attendants were still fasting and keeping Palm Sunday ".
Equally, the two goddesses are not known to be Roman.
Royal Family guidelines and procedures relating to gifts drafted in 2003 state that " before accepting any gift, careful consideration should always be given, wherever practicable, to the donor, the reason for and occasion of the gift and the nature of the gift itself (..) Equally, before declining the offer of a gift, careful consideration should be given to any offence that might be caused by such action.
Equally, there tends to be in naturalist novels and stories a strong sense that nature is indifferent to human struggle.
Equally unsupported in the literature is the notion that the prolonged activation of these reflexes will manifest into pathological state of tissues, and most relevantly, that the application of spinal manipulative therapy can alter the prolonged reflex discharge or be associated with a reversal of the pathological degeneration of the affected reflexes or tissues.
Equally, Madame Giselle had an estranged daughter who inherits her considerable estate: could one of the female passengers be this heiress?
Equally, it could be argued that the questionable morality of the Cold War threat of mutually assured nuclear destruction again vindicated the FoR philosophy.
Equally, he could turn from the world of magic completely and be lost to either side.
* Equally, x, y, and z is unambiguous if y cannot be read as in apposition to x.
Equally Hamm could be short for Hammer and Clov be " clove ", hammer and nail representing one aspect of their relationship.
America ’ s “ betrayal ” of the League of Nations was only the first in a series of US actions — over war debts, naval rivalry, the 1931-2 Manchurian crisis and the Depression — that convinced British leaders that the United States could not be relied on .’ Equally, as President Truman's secretary of state, Dean Acheson, recalled: ' Of course a unique relation existed between Britain and America — our common language and history ensured that.

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