Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "belles_lettres" ¶ 1209
from Brown Corpus
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

For and every
For a time the President received hundreds of them every day, most of them worthless.
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 rude
For this, credit Paul Thomas Anderson ... who ... scores a personal triumph by finding glints of rude life in the ashes that remained after Watergate.
For example, to ask somebody for directions in Bermuda without first saying ' good morning ' or ' good afternoon ' is considered to be abrupt and rude.
* Rolling Stone-3. 5 Stars-Good-"… half of III bumps with a new and improved Cypress Hill sound that marks producer Muggs ' progress .… For all the rude immediacy of its rhymes, III is an album of many musical hues … Cypress Hill still wield an intoxicating power that's all their own …"
For example, if a group of people is eating a meal with the child present and one person says, give me the bread and another responds with, that was rude.
For a droop suggests humility, while if it be thrown back it seems to express arrogance, if inclined to one side it gives an impression of languor, while if it is held too stiffly and rigidly it appears to indicate a rude and savage temper.
For example, Nationalist armies tended to board in civilian houses without permission, tended to be rude and disrespectful towards the civilians, or sometimes even confiscated material from the peasants in order to gain supplies.
For example, the archetypically rude Viktor Korneev ( usually called Vitka ) claims to have left his clone to work in his lab, which Privalov recognizes to be Korneev himself, because clones never sing or show any emotion.

For and word
For example, probably very few people know that the word `` visrhanik '' that is bantered about so much today stems from the verb `` bouanahsha '': to salivate.
For example, the inflected forms of a word can be represented, insofar as regular inflection allows, by a stem and a set of endings to be attached.
For you have been reborn, not from corruptible seed but from incorruptible, through the word of God.
For example, there was sheet music with the word `` jazz '' in the title, to illustrate how a word of uncertain origin took hold.
For example, the spelling of the Thai word for " beer " retains a letter for the final consonant " r " present in the English word it was borrowed from, but silences it.
For instance, the word " bank " has several distinct lexical definitions, including " financial institution " and " edge of a river ".
For example, the word abbreviation can itself be represented by the abbreviation abbr., abbrv.
For example the word learn can be signed two different ways.
For example, the word " Amerika " in German has a one-to-one equivalence to its meaning in modern English: it may denote North America, South America, or both, and in some instances refers to the United States only.
For the country there is the term Usono, cognate with the English word Usonia later popularized by Frank Lloyd Wright.
For example, " piaf " was a Parisian argot word for " sparrow "; after being taken up by the singer Edith Piaf, this meaning became well known in France and worldwide, and no longer serves the purpose of a secret language.
For a long time, scholars believed that the alphorn had been derived from the Roman-Etruscan lituus, because of their resemblance in shape, and because of the word liti, meaning Alphorn in the dialect of Obwalden.
Hobbes said :" The Latines called Accounts of mony Rationes ... and thence it seems to proceed that they extended the word Ratio, to the faculty of Reckoning in all other things .... When a man reasoneth hee does nothing else but conceive a summe totall ... For Reason ... is nothing but Reckoning ... of the consequences of generall names agreed upon, for the marking and signifying of our thoughts ...."
For some time the existence of the word bretwalda in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, which was based in part on the list given by Bede in his Historia Ecclesiastica, led historians to think that there was perhaps a ' title ' held by Anglo-Saxon overlords.
For example, the word " God " which used to be " Cheon-joo " was altered to " ha-nu-nim " according to the Public Christian translation.
For example, the CIA World Factbook uses the word in its " Country name " field to refer to " a wide variety of dependencies, areas of special sovereignty, uninhabited islands, and other entities in addition to the traditional countries or independent states ".< sup id = Note_1 >
For example, the word " weed " can be interpreted as an undesirable plant in a yard, or as a euphemism for marijuana.
For purposes of international communication and trade, the official names of the chemical elements both ancient and more recently recognized are decided by the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry ( IUPAC ), which has decided on a sort of international English language, drawing on traditional English names even when an element's chemical symbol is based on a Latin or other traditional word, for example adopting " gold " rather than " aurum " as the name for the 79th element ( Au ).
For example, he applies the word fides, which traditionally meant faithfulness towards one's political allies, to his relationship with Lesbia and reinterprets it as unconditional faithfulness in love.
( For example, " tiānqì ", literally " sky breath ", is the ordinary Chinese word for " weather ").
For instance, while the Hebrew word chutzpah means " impudence ," its Arabic cognate ḥaṣāfah means " sound judgment ;" even more contradictorily, the English word black and Polish biały, meaning white, both derive from the PIE, meaning, " to burn or shine.

0.516 seconds.