Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Tamang people" ¶ 14
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Even and today
Even today range riders will come upon mummified bodies of men who attempted nothing more difficult than a twenty-mile hike and slowly lost direction, were tortured by the heat, driven mad by the constant and unfulfilled promise of the landscape, and who finally died.
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 Norway, despite daily but limited manifestations against atomic arms in the heart of this northernmost capital of the alliance, is today closer to the NATO line.
Even today, the evaluation of forces is controversial.
Even today, the procedure is credited with ending the devastation caused by the early epidemics, and vaccination, in many ways an updated and modernized form of the procedure, continues to be recommended by the Centers for Disease Control for at-risk populations, such as potential victims of bioterrorism, and research scientists who work with surviving strains of the virus.
Even more than two hundred years later, during the last century, when Western specialists in Chinese, who had by that time created the discipline known as sinology, designed the early forms of numerous transcriptions used today, the first mistakes of enthusiastic missionaries, envoys and business men were not fully eliminated.
" Even today, though these errors have been recognized for more than a century, the general notion that Lao Tzu was Christ's forerunner has lost none of its romantic appeal.
Even today, they are invaluable tools to understanding filter behavior.
Even today, many brass pedagogues take a rigid approach to teaching how a brass player's embouchure should function.
Even today, many films are shot entirely in Cinecittà.
Even today, half a century later, many of the floating-point benchmarks to gauge the performance of new computer processors are still written in Fortran ( e. g., CFP2006, the floating-point component of the SPEC CPU2006 benchmarks ).
Even today, knowledge in the field advances so rapidly that many of the etymologies in contemporary dictionaries are outdated.
Even today these records are consulted prior to marriages.
Even though Spain, the United Kingdom and Gibraltar are all part of the European Union, the border fence is still relevant today since Gibraltar is outside the customs union.
Even though the evangelist as depicted in the New Testament doesn't match the patristic description of Luke, the traditional view is still argued today.
Even today, the various memories and interpretations of this occupation still fuel animosities between Haiti and the Dominican Republic.
Even today the play is rarely performed in its entirety, and has only once been dramatised on film completely, with Kenneth Branagh's 1996 version.
Even today Russia shares many continuities of political culture and social structure with its tsarist and Soviet past.
Even today, IKEA customers in Australia cannot shop online.
Roderick Seeman says: " Even today many Japanese do not understand why this is illegal.
Even today, Id's History page makes a direct reference to Freud.
Even today, about two-thirds of the more than 3 million people in Kuwait are not Kuwaiti citizens.
Even today the KRRC 1st Cadet Battalion still exists.
Even today, the living conditions in such an environment are not particularly favourable.
Even today, Louchébem is still well-known and used among those working at point-of-sale in the meat retail industry.

Even and British
Even this version had room for improvement, leading British Aerospace and the Italian firm Alenia to develop advanced versions of Sparrow with better performance and improved electronics as the BAe Skyflash and Alenia Aspide, respectively.
Even though cadmium and its compounds may be toxic in certain forms and concentrations, the British Pharmaceutical Codex from 1907 states that cadmium iodide was used as a medication to treat " enlarged joints, scrofulous glands, and chilblains ".
Even before he was inaugurated Eisenhower accepted a request from the British government to restore the Shah to power.
Even during French revolutionary wars, British scientists visited the French Academy.
Even if the formal transfer of sovereignty would not take place until the signature of the Treaty of Utrecht, the British Governor and garrison become the de facto rulers of the town.
Even in the height of the depression, he continued to make regular payments on the Honduran debt, adhering strictly to the terms of the arrangement with the British bondholders and also satisfying other creditors.
Even before independence, the Government of British India maintained semi-autonomous diplomatic relations.
Even if the British were serious in their warnings of war, Ribbentrop took the view that since a war with Britain was inevitable, the risk of a war with Britain was an acceptable one and accordingly he argued that Germany should not shy away from such challenges.
Even though Mauritius was a British colony, the British Overseas Airways Corporation ( B. O. A. C ) began to come to Mauritius only from 1962.
Even today, many British police forces are referred to officially by the term " Constabulary " rather than " Police ".
Even as late as 1970, the British Protectorate did not envisage independence for Solomon Islands in the foreseeable future but shortly thereafter, the financial costs of supporting the Protectorate became more trying, as the world economy was hit by the first oil price shock of 1973.
Even after the Banda Black Rio in the 1980s, British disc jockeys began to play the group's work.
Even still, the story was greeted with outrage by British reviewers, some of whom suggested that Wilde should be prosecuted on moral grounds, leading Wilde to defend the novel aggressively in letters to the British press.
Even before the war, there had been talks about merging the two Rhodesias, but the process had been halted by the British authorities, and brought to an absolute stop by the war.
Even the expulsion of Germans from central and eastern Europe after World War II was apparently sanctioned in article 13 of the Potsdam communiqué, although research has shown that both the British and the American delegations at Potsdam strongly objected to the size of the population transfer that had already taken place and was accelerating in the summer of 1945.
Even after British control of the Territory became complete, population infiltration was slow.
Even though World War I was fought far beyond the borders of British Guiana, the war altered Guianese society.
" Even though other political parties had opposed the struggle and the British had employed ruthless means of suppression, the Quit India movement was " by far the most serious rebellion since that of 1857 ," as the viceroy cabled to Winston Churchill.
Even the three authors of the book were chosen from among the small number of people who had seen the map before Mellon bought it — two British Museum curators and Marston.
" Even though their fire was not accurate, it was responsible for five of the seventeen British deaths at Rorke's Drift.
Gobineau's basic concept, as further refined and developed in Nazism, places the black Aboriginal Australians and " African savages " at the bottom of the hierarchy, while the white Northern and Western European Aryans ( consisting of Germans, Finnish, Swedish, Icelanders, Norwegians, Danish, British, French, Northern Italians, Irish and Dutch ) were at the top ; white olive-skinned Southern Europeans ( consisting of the Spanish, Southern Italians, Greeks and Portuguese, i. e. those of what is called the Mediterranean race, which was regarded as another subrace of the Caucasian race ) in the upper middle ranks ; Slavs ( Even though the Slavs are white and of Indo-European ancestry, the Nazis placed them lower on the scale because they were regarded as primarily of the Alpine race rather than the Nordic race, and thus fit only to be peasants.
Even though he became a British citizen later in his life he can be accepted to be the first known Assyrian, Ottoman and Middle Eastern archaeologist.
Even in the UK, he experienced problems: his first British film, The Sleeping Tiger, a 1954 film noir crime thriller, bore the pseudonym Victor Hanbury, rather than his own name, in the credits as director, as the stars of the film, Alexis Smith and Alexander Knox, feared being blacklisted in Hollywood due to working on a film he directed.

0.417 seconds.