Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Henry Bergman" ¶ 1
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

For and rest
For roasts, insert meat thermometer diagonally so it does not rest on bone.
For the first time in his life he forgot the lyrics midway through and had to cover up by humming the rest.
For many years people lived in the village and then in 1845 Famine struck in Achill as it did in the rest of Ireland.
For the rest of the two spacecrafts ' pass over the near side of the Moon, Mattingly prepared to shift Casper to a circular orbit while Young and Duke prepared Orion for the descent to the lunar surface.
For David Hume, delicacy of taste is not merely " the ability to detect all the ingredients in a composition ", but also our sensitivity " to pains as well as pleasures, which escape the rest of mankind.
For example James's will might say: " I give all the rest, residue and remainder of my estate to my daughter Lilly.
* For the rest of Solomon's reign the text names its source as " the book of the acts of Solomon ", but other sources were employed, and much was added by the redactor.
For a girl in puberty, during thelarche ( the breast-development stage ), the female sex hormones ( principally estrogens ) promote the sprouting, growth, and development of the breasts, in the course of which, as mammary glands, they grow in size and volume, and usually rest on her chest ; these development stages of secondary sex characteristics ( breasts, pubic hair, etc.
For many years, the U. S. has borrowed and bought while in general, the rest of the world has lent and sold.
For example, the membrane around peroxisomes shields the rest of the cell from peroxides, and the cell membrane separates a cell from its surrounding medium.
* The elements Elemental correspondences from Wicca: For the rest of us.
For example, Nottingham is administered by a unitary authority entirely separate from the rest of Nottinghamshire.
For the rest of the country, the rain season is from May to November.
For example, the yagura ( raised platform ) that both the odaiko soloist and odaiko rest upon is similar to the one see in the movie.
For example, in the early 20th century, many Americans feared polio, a disease that cripples the body part it affects, leaving that body part immobilized for the rest of one's life.
For Capra, the journey, which took 13 days, remained in his mind for the rest of his life as one of his worst experiences:
The Southern belle was bred to conform to a subspecies of the nineteenth-century " lady "... For Scarlett, the ideal is embodied in her adored mother, the saintly Ellen, whose back is never seen to rest against the back of any chair on which she sits, whose broken spirit everywhere is mistaken for righteous calm ...
For instance, reptiles often rest on sun-heated rocks in the morning to raise their body temperature.
For the rest, he spoke of a " mono-ideodynamic " principle to emphasise that the eye-fixation induction technique worked by narrowing the subject's attention to a single idea or train of thought (" monoideism "), which amplified the effect of the consequent " dominant idea " upon the subject's body by means of the ideo-dynamic principle.
For example, suppose a free body ( one having no external forces on it ) is at rest at some instant.
For the rest of Major's premiership the main argument was over whether Britain would join the planned European Single Currency.
I had to console them with feeble excuses such as that His Excellency was not very well, or engaged in an urgent state call to Berlin ... For the rest of the morning he listened to reports from members of the Embassy staff, unless I had to accompany him to the Foreign Office ... When Ribbentrop strutted through the Office corridors like a peacock, his head thrown back, it was a miracle that he did not fall over.
For a single particle, this quantity is the rest mass ; for a system of bound or unbound particles, this quantity is the invariant mass.
For example ancient people knew that " lodestones ," when suspended from a string and allowed to freely rotate, come to rest horizontally in the North-South direction.
For example, when a string is coerced, the parser turns as much of the string ( starting from the left ) into a number as it can, then discards the rest.

For and career
For one thing, it put paid to his idea of taking up medicine as a career ... His uniqueness lay in his universalism.
* For a new understanding of his early career, based on a newly discovered text, see also: Michot, Yahya, Ibn Sînâ: Lettre au vizir Abû Sa'd.
For Oscar Wilde the contemplation of beauty for beauty's sake was not only the foundation for much of his literary career but was quoted as saying " Aestheticism is a search after the signs of the beautiful.
For his part, Merkle was doomed to endless criticism and vilification throughout his career for this lapse, which went down in history as " Merkle's Boner ".
For most fighters, an amateur career, especially at the Olympics, serves to develop skills and gain experience in preparation for a professional career.
For instance, basketball legend, Michael Jordan became an active entrepreneur involved with many sports related ventures including investing a minority stake in the Charlotte Bobcats, Paul Newman started his own salad dressing business after leaving behind a distinguished acting career, or rap musician, Birdman started his own record label, clothing line, and an oil business.
( For more information, see Military career of Simón Bolívar.
Jones, whose work had been nominated eight times over his career for an Oscar ( winning thrice: For Scent-imental Reasons, So Much for So Little, and The Dot and the Line ), received an Honorary Academy Award in 1996 by the Board of Governors of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, for " the creation of classic cartoons and cartoon characters whose animated lives have brought joy to our real ones for more than half a century.
For this reason, he considered it a work of art, not science, but insisted that it was still true and considered it to be his career masterpiece.
For most of his career, Giger has worked predominantly in airbrush, creating monochromatic canvasses depicting surreal, nightmarish dreamscapes.
For the remainder of his cricket-playing career, Botham refused to acknowledge MCC members in the pavilion when playing at Lord's.
( For most of Weissmüller's career, show business biographies incorrectly listed him as having been born in Pennsylvania.
For the last three seasons of his career, Bench caught only 13 games and played mostly first base or third base.
For the next several years he chose films that cast him against either type and experienced, by his own estimation, a career slump.
For this career, he used his real name,, and maintained the two professional identities separately for many years.
His career revival began when the young Italian director Sergio Leone boldly cast Van Cleef, whose career was still in the doldrums, as one of the two protagonists, alongside Clint Eastwood, in Leone's second western, For a Few Dollars More.
For his career, McGwire averaged a home run once every 10. 61 at bats, the lowest at bats per home run ratio in baseball history ( Babe Ruth is second at 11. 76 ).< ref >
There has been speculation that Heinlein's intense obsession with his privacy was due at least in part to the apparent contradiction between his unconventional private life and his career as an author of books for children, but For Us, The Living also explicitly discusses the political importance Heinlein attached to privacy as a matter of principle.
For example, he ( as well as King Abdullah ) has spoken in favor of women having the right to vote, to follow the career path they wish and to be able to drive a car.
For much of her career, Dean's political base was the very active network of Berkeley neighborhood organizations, however many of her critics and rivals found her to be too conservative.
For most of their career, TMBG have made innovative use of the Internet.
" For 19th century readers, his career seemed to decline afterward, but during the early 20th century it was seen as the beginning of a career that peaked with Moby-Dick ( 1851 ).

0.166 seconds.