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For and every
For a time the President received hundreds of them every day, most of them worthless.
For every rude word of Mr. Banks's the family had five in apology.
For every person on Taiwan, there are sixty in Mainland China.
For added strength, I also fastened a small block on each side of every frame and batten joint.
For those who put their trust in Him He still says every day again: `` Let there be light ''!!
For every criterion which defines what something is, at the same time proclaims -- implicitly if not openly -- what that something is not.
For new galaxies to be created, Professor Bondi declares, it would only be necessary for a single hydrogen atom to be created in an area the size of your living room once every few million years.
For some reason, this ellipsis in the conversation spread until it swallowed up every other topic.
For example, " biweekly " can mean " fortnightly " ( once every two weeks – 26 times a year ), or " twice a week " ( 104 times a year ).
** Tarski's theorem: For every infinite set A, there is a bijective map between the sets A and A × A.
** For every non-empty set S there is a binary operation defined on S that makes it a group.
For example, if we abbreviate by BP the claim that every set of real numbers has the property of Baire, then BP is stronger than ¬ AC, which asserts the nonexistence of any choice function on perhaps only a single set of nonempty sets.
For Tarrou, plague is the destructive impulse within every person, the will and the capacity to do harm, and it is everyone's duty to be on guard against this tendency within themselves, lest they infect someone else with it.
For every group G there is a natural group homomorphism G → Aut ( G ) whose image is the group Inn ( G ) of inner automorphisms and whose kernel is the center of G. Thus, if G has trivial center it can be embedded into its own automorphism group.
For Hume, every effect only follows its cause arbitrarily they are entirely distinct from one another.
Professor Henry Higgins sings, " Look at her, a prisoner of the gutters / Condemned by every syllable she utters / By right she should be taken out and hung / For the cold-blooded murder of the English tongue.
For every 100 females there were 91. 4 males.
For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 87. 4 males.
For every 100 females there were 105. 6 males.
For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 97. 5 males.
For example, the division example above is surjective ( or onto ) because every rational number may be expressed as a quotient of an integer and a natural number.
For example, the BBC website, which had previously been called BBC Online, took on the BBCi brand from 2001, displaying an i-bar across the top of every page, offering a category-based navigation: Categories, TV, Radio, Communicate, Where I Live, A-Z Index, and a search.
For every 100 females there are 95. 6 males.
For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 94. 7 males.
For example, in the Schrödinger picture, there is a linear operator U with the property that if an electron is in state right now, then in one minute it will be in the state, the same U for every possible.

For and
For Euclid s method to succeed, the starting lengths must satisfy two requirements: ( i ) the lengths must not be 0, AND ( ii ) the subtraction must be proper ”, a test must guarantee that the smaller of the two numbers is subtracted from the larger ( alternately, the two can be equal so their subtraction yields 0 ).
For example Darrell Schweitzer writing to the New York Review of Science Fiction in 1999 quoted a passage from the original van Vogt novelette The Mixed Men ”, which he was then reading, and remarked:
Also, supporters of this view would characterize Luke s portrayal of the Roman Empire as positive because they believe Luke glosses over negative aspects of the empire and presents imperial power positively .” For example, when Paul is before the council defending himself, Paul says that he is on trial concerning the hope of the resurrection of the dead ( Acts 23: 6 ).
Many who side with this view disagree that Luke portrays Christianity or the Roman Empire as harmless and thus reject the apologetic view because Acts does not present Christians as politically harmless or law abiding for there are a large number of public controversies concerning Christianity, particularly featuring Paul .” For example, to support this view Cassidy references how Paul is accused of going against the Emperor because he is saying that there is another king named Jesus .” ( Acts 17: 7 ) Furthermore, there are multiple examples of Paul s preaching causing uprisings in various cities ( Acts 14: 2 ; 14: 19 ; 16: 19-23 ; 17: 5 ; 17: 13-14 ; 19: 28-40 ; 21: 27 ).
For Immanuel Kant the aesthetic experience of beauty is a judgment of a subjective but similar human truth, since all people should agree that this rose is beautiful if it in fact is.
For this last case, the cohesive fracture can be said to be cohesive near the interface ”.
Likewise, Jeremiah s exclamation For I hear the whispering of many: Terror is all around !” ( Jer.
In Chapter nine, Job recognizes the chasm that exists between him and God: For he is not a man, as I am, that I might answer him, that we should come to trial together .” Job s regret is that he has no arbiter to act as a go-between ; that Job cannot reconcile himself with God anticipates the need for the Messiah to become incarnate.
For she said, I will go after my lovers ...” ( Hosea 2: 5 ).
For the day of the Lord upon all the nations is near … But on Mount Zion there shall be deliverance
For example, the inhabitants of Beth-le-aphrah (“ house of dust ”) are told to roll yourselves in the dust .” 1: 14.
For instance, in 1962, Bob Jones, Sr. warned the Greenville City Council that he had four hundred votes in his pocket and in any election he would have control over who would be elected .”
For decades, medical personnel and others have fought, and continue to fight, to define the circumstances for which a patient is dead ”.
For example, although a patient may be brain dead ”, they may still be considered alive because they can still grow and even reproduce.
For an atemporal interpretation that makes no attempt to give a ‘ local account on the level of determinate particles ”, the conjugate wavefunction, (" advanced " or time-reversed ) of the relativistic version of the wavefunction, and the so-called " retarded " or time-forward version are both regarded as real and the transactional interpretation results.
For instance, a professor of formal logic called Chin Yueh-lin – who was then regarded as China s leading authority on his subject – was induced to write: The new philosophy Marxism-Leninism, being scientific, is the supreme truth ”.
For example, it has been suggested that, in the early 20th century Shanghai, Western food, and in particular identifiably nourishing items like milk, became a symbol of a neo-traditional Chinese notion of family .”
Nonetheless, Wilson believed that, in all cases, corporations should be erected with caution, and inspected with care .” The actions of corporations were clearly circumscribed: To every corporation a name must be assigned ; and by that name alone it can perform legal acts .” For non-binding external actions or transactions, corporations enjoyed the same latitude as private individuals ; but it was with an eye to internal affairs that many saw principal advantage in incorporation.
For example in the mid 350 s the city of Jerusalem was hit with drastic food shortages at which point church historians Sozomen and Theodoret reported Cyril secretly sold sacramental ornaments of the church and a valuable holy robe, fashioned with gold thread that the emperor Constantine had once donated for the bishop to wear when he performed the rite of Baptism ”.
For example Cyril writes I gave my back to those who beat me and my cheeks to blows ; and my face I did not shield from the shame of spitting ”.
For instance, there is no instruction to load an arbitrary immediate value into an accumulator ( although memory reference instructions do encode such a value to form an effective address ).
For this, and other, reasons mathematical historian Kurt Vogel writes: Diophantus was not, as he has often been called, the father of algebra.

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