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Some Related Sentences

For and future
For change is dependent on the possibilities that individual men glimpse for the future.
For the use of students and future restorers, a full, day-by-day record was kept of all three undertakings, complete technical reports on what we found and what we did.
`` For the future.
" For Sakharov the indeterminacy of the future supported his belief that he could, and should, take personal responsibility for it.
For example, if inflation has been higher than expected in the past, people would revise expectations for the future.
For example, they played Rhodesia ( the future Zimbabwe ) in 1910, 1924, 1938, 1955, 1962, 1968 & 1974 during their tours to South Africa.
For example, in most jurisdictions, decisions by appellate courts are binding on lower courts in the same jurisdiction and on future decisions of the same appellate court, but decisions of lower courts are only non-binding persuasive authority.
For example, extra costs, repair or replacement of damaged property, lost earnings ( both historically and in the future ), loss of irreplaceable items, additional domestic costs, and so on.
For example, a wheat farmer and a miller could sign a futures contract to exchange a specified amount of cash for a specified amount of wheat in the future.
For all his cocky predictions to the press about his future plans, Davy fell into a directionless heap when left to his own devices.
It appeared an unworthy thing that in the celebration of this most holy feast we should follow the practice of the Jews ... For we have it in our power, if we abandon their custom, to prolong the due observance of this ordinance to future ages by a truer order ... For their boast is absurd indeed, that it is not in our power without instruction from them to observe these things .... Being altogether ignorant of the true adjustment of this question, they sometimes celebrate Passover twice in the same year.
For those gases, the relative radiative forcing will depend upon abundance and hence upon the future scenario adopted.
For example, two-tense languages such as English and Japanese express past and non-past, this latter covering both present and future in one verb form.
For the purposes of this article, history is taken to mean written history recorded in a narrative format for the purpose of informing future generations about events.
For future editions of the book, in 1917 Conrad wrote an " Author's Note " where he discusses each of the three stories, and makes light commentary on the character Marlow-the narrator of the tales within the first two stories.
According to Nicholas de Lange, Judaism offers no clear teaching about the destiny which lies in wait for the individual after death and its attitude to life after death has been expressed as follows: " For the future is inscrutable, and the accepted sources of knowledge, whether experience, or reason, or revelation, offer no clear guidance about what is to come.
For example: A fertile couple may have intercourse while using contraception to experience sexual pleasure ( recreational ) and also as a means of emotional intimacy ( relational ), thus deepening their bonding, making their relationship more stable and more capable of sustaining children in the future ( deferred reproductive ).
For this reason, the Jewish commentators interpret many elements of his story as being symbolic of the future difficulties and struggles the Jewish people would undergo.
For the near future Poland gave Lithuanians a valuable ally against increasing threats from the Teutonic Knights and Muscovy.
For two years he tried to raise funds to publish a booklet describing the language until he received the financial help from his future wife's father.
For fifty years he trained two generations of future Conservative rabbis.
For instance, amillennial and postmillennial Christians do not believe in the same timeline of the Second Coming as premillennialists, while preterist Christians do not interpret the Book of Revelation to predict future events at all.
For the future, some means has to be found for MNT design evolution at the nanoscale which mimics the process of biological evolution at the molecular scale.
For many years Robinson also worked as legal advisor for the Campaign for Homosexual Law Reform with future Trinity College senator David Norris.

For and competition
For some squads the level of competition on the weekends can equal that of an all-star squad.
For the first time this placed the Maritime manufacturers in direct competition with those of Central Canada.
: For a complete list of Ferrari racing cars, see List of Ferrari competition cars.
For more than one hundred years, English and French trading companies had fought one another for supremacy, and by the middle of the 18th century competition between the British and the French had heated up.
For a time, Boniface served as Pope in competition with the Antipope Dioscorus, who had been elected by most of the priests of Rome.
For instance, when advertisements claim that their product is 37 % more effective than the competition, they are making a logical appeal.
For the entire two months life for many islanders is one big party with a major feature of crop over being the calypso competition.
For example, it has also been said that competition law in the European Union ( EU ) tends to protect the competitors in the marketplace, even at the expense of market efficiencies and consumers.
For example, during a debate over the act in 1890, Representative William Mason said " trusts have made products cheaper, have reduced prices ; but if the price of oil, for instance, were reduced to one cent a barrel, it would not right the wrong done to people of this country by the trusts which have destroyed legitimate competition and driven honest men from legitimate business enterprise.
For a long time, this had been thought to be intermale competition, but closer observation has revealed it is usually a female hitting a male to prevent copulation.
For example, the horse's straightness going across the diagonal may be assessed by judges at M and H. Judges in the United States are licensed by the USEF for different levels of competition, depending on the judge's experience and training.
For example, Darwinian evolution points to the competition of a variety of species, each with heterogeneous members, within a given environment.
For centuries, Taiwan's aboriginal peoples experienced economic competition and military conflict with a series of colonizing peoples.
For centuries, Taiwan's aboriginal peoples experienced economic competition and military conflict with a series of colonizing peoples.
For example, they indicate that investors could diversify their stock investments, efficiently managing the risk of a few catastrophic corporate failures, whether due to fraud or competition.
For example, according to an entry in the Parian Marble, Simonides died in 468 / 7 BC at the age of ninety yet, in another entry, it lists a victory by his grandfather in a poetry competition in Athens in 489 / 8 BC — this grandfather must have been over a hundred years old at that time if the birth dates for Simonides are correct.
Shiva's focus on water has seen her appear in a number of related films: " Ganga from the ground up " a documentary on water issues in the river Ganges ,, Blue Gold: World Water Wars by Sam Bozzo, Irena Salina's documentary Flow: For Love of Water ( in competition at the 2008 Sundance Film Festival ) and the PBS NOW documentary On Thin Ice.
For high scorers on the final competition for the team selection, there also is a summer camp, like that of China.
For example, the British had been fascinated by Edgar Wallace's ( 1875 – 1932 ) crime novels ever since the author set up a competition offering a reward to any reader who could figure out and describe just how the murder in his first book, The Four Just Men ( 1906 ), was committed.
For the tournament's second season in 1961 – 62, UEFA took over the running of all aspects of the competition and this time all the clubs eligible to enter accepted the opportunity.
For example, the annual sporting competition between Lancaster University and the University of York is called the Roses Tournament. This is also carried over into cricket with the cricket matches between Lancashire andvYorkshire cricket clubs which are called ' The War of The Roses '.
For architects, the competition was an important event ; not only was it for one of the largest building projects of its time, but it was only the third opportunity to build an Anglican cathedral in England since the Reformation in the 16th century ( St Paul's Cathedral being the first, rebuilt from scratch after the Great Fire of London in 1666, and Truro Cathedral being the second, begun in the 19th century ).
For 31 years, Imperial Beach played home to the U. S. Open Sand Castle competition, the largest sand castle competition in the United States, drawing in approximately 325, 000 people.
For the first time in the competition, the group-stages were expanded from 24 teams to 32, with eight groups of four.

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