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Page "Terence Cuneo" ¶ 4
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Even and some
Even strange names seemed to make them feel closer to some kind of civilization when stumbled across out here in this wilderness.
Even in domains where detailed and predictive understanding is still lacking, but where some explanations are possible, as with lightning and weather and earthquakes, the appropriate kind of human action has been more adequately indicated.
Even the dignified Washington indulged in a game of wickets with some children.
Even if this is some day possible, there remains the 30-minute time of flight of a missile to its overseas target.
Even so, every pool owner, in case of emergency, should have some idea of what makes things work.
Even here there is room for some variation, for metal surfaces vary in smoothness, absorptive capacity, and chemical reactivity.
Even some of the queens will die before the winter is over, falling prey to enemies or disease.
Even though the registers may have an incomplete record of persons present in a particular area or include persons no longer living there, they contain precise information on ages, by date of birth, for some of the persons present ( especially children in relatively stable communities ) and supplementary information ( such as records of marital status ) for many others.
Even today there are some doubts about the value of education for Japanese women, but this University continues to grow and to send its students out into the community.
Even some of the local nightclubs will feature French DJs.
Even some NASA employees doubted whether Kennedy's ambitious goal could be met.
Even after the Norman Conquest, Ealdred still controlled some events in Worcester, and it was Ealdred, not Wulfstan, who opposed Urse d ' Abetot's attempt to extend the castle of Worcester into the cathedral after the Norman Conquest.
Even with a release aid mechanism some of this effect will usually be experienced, since the string always accelerates faster than the retaining part of the mechanism.
Even though the arrow be made with extreme care, the slightest imperfection, or air movement, will cause some unbalanced turbulence in air flow.
Even if arrays are always created with contiguous elements, some array slicing operations may create non-contiguous sub-arrays from them.
Even before the fight began, dissension spread through some of Abd al-Rahman's lines.
Even amorphous materials have some short-range order at the atomic length scale due to the nature of chemical bonding.
Even the most comfortable and technologically advanced autonomous houses may require some differences in behavior.
Even 70 years later, some people still regard themselves bound to remain silent.
Even if one ignores exceptions caused by some kind of injury or illness, there are many unclear cases, including the fact that " normal " humans can crawl on hands and knees.
" Even some complex " medical devices " ( see below ) can reasonably be deemed " biotechnology " depending on the degree to which such elements are central to their principle of operation.
Even earlier examples of this sentiment may be found in Wild Talents by author Charles Fort where he makes the statement: "... a performance that may some day be considered understandable, but that, in these primitive times, so transcends what is said to be the known that it is what I mean by magic.
Even smaller amounts of boron may have been produced in the Big Bang, since it has been observed in some very old stars, while carbon has not.
Even some women of the literate elite, for whom Confucianism was quite explicitly the norm, were able to flourish by living their lives according to that model.
Even the exhaust from the burning of fossil fuels is treated via catalysis: Catalytic converters, typically composed of platinum and rhodium, break down some of the more harmful byproducts of automobile exhaust.

Even and portraits
Even as he approached these portraits with the skill of a highly trained anatomist, what is most noteworthy is the intense psychological presence of his sitters.
Even in 2006 there were still portraits of Habsburg rulers on the wall in the assembly room of the Cieszyn local council.

Even and famous
As historian Vicky Howard writes, " f a bride wore white in the nineteenth century, it was acceptable and likely that she wore her gown again ..." Even Queen Victoria had her famous lace wedding dress re-styled for later use.
Even though his records have been overtaken, " his pre-eminence has not " and he remains " the most famous cricketer of them all ", the one who " elevated the game in public esteem ".
Even before the famous Texas cattle drives after the Civil War, the trail was being used to drive herds of thousands of cattle, horses, sheep, and goats from the midwest to various towns and cities along the trails.
Even now the city is famous for its parks and greenery.
Even some versions of the famous Defense of the Ancients were no longer functioning.
Even Torricelli's teacher, the famous Galileo Galilei had previously been unable to adequately explain the sucking action of a pump.
Even singer Harry Belafonte was dubbed ( by LeVern Hutcherson ), and Dorothy Dandridge was dubbed by Marilyn Horne ( long before Horne became a famous singer ).
Even though most chapters are humorous, wildly fantastic and sometimes absurd, a few relatively serious passages have become famous for descriptions of humanistic ideals of the time.
Even until today, hunters re-enact this famous tribesman's life with the annual festival and Ekaba dance.
Even more famous than SAPPI is the Fagus Werk, rebuilt in 1910-1915 after the blueprints of architect Walter-Gropius, what is said to be trend-setting for modern architecture.
Even more famous than the Altamont concert is Woodstock, which consisted of dozens of the most famous performers in the world at the time, playing together in an atmosphere of peace with nature and love, with many thousands of concert goers ; it is still one of the largest concerts in the history of the world.
Even al-Ghazali, who is famous for his critique of the philosophers, was himself an expert in philosophy and logic.
Even a variation on the famous double-kidney BMW grille was retained.
Even if the first internationally renowned cantautore was Domenico Modugno with his song " Volare " in 1958, currently the most famous cantautore in Italy is Fabrizio De André.
Even though this advertisement was broadcast only once ( aside from occasional appearances in television advertisement compilation specials and one 1 a. m. airing a month before the Super Bowl so that the advertisement could be submitted to award ceremonies for that year ), it has become famous and well-known, to the point where it is considered a classic television moment.
Even a number of famous linguists are monolingual.
Even more important was the attention of her father-in-law Colley Cibber who, recognizing in Susannah the makings of a great tragic actress, trained her for what was to become one of the most famous careers of a tragedienne of the 18th century.
Even Koko, the gorilla made famous for learning American Sign Language has been caught red-handed.
Even after he became a famous physicist, he continued to teach freshman and sophomore physics, saying that the young minds were the most important.
" Even in death, the media was reluctant to disclose his sexuality ; the New York Times would refer only to him as a " famous, deceased millionaire " while reporting on the controversy.
" Even after the formal order to prosecute, an interpellation of Scheurer-Kestner to the Senate ( 7 December ) was necessary to induce General Billot to promise that all the documents, including the famous bordereau, should be produced for examination.
Even since antiquity, Penteli has been famous for its marble, which was used for the construction of the Acropolis and other buildings of ancient Athens.
Even though Kerényi was fiercely defended by famous Hungarian writers like Laszlo Németh and Antal Szerb, it took until the 1980s before his complete moral and scholarly rehabilitation took place.
Even a famous speech, the Rectorial Address to Glasgow University of November 1923, in which Birkenhead told undergraduates that the world still offered " glittering prizes " to those with " stout hearts and sharp swords ", now seemed out of kilter with the less aggressive and more self-consciously moral style of politics advocated by the new generation of Conservative politicians such as Stanley Baldwin and Edward Wood, the future Lord Halifax.

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