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For and vivid
For " vivid and affectionate portraits of our country ," Rockwell received the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the United States of America's highest civilian honor, in 1977.
For the first time I realized music isn't all the same, it had become an entirely new set of sounds …" " I tried to explain Bix to the gang ," Carmichael wrote, but "… t was no good, like the telling of a vivid, personal dream … the emotion couldn't be transmitted.
He added " Blake's 7s triumph lay in its vivid characters, its tight, pacey plots and its satisfying realism ... For arguably the first time since the 1950s Quatermass serials, the BBC had created a popular sci-fi / fantasy show along adult lines.
For the most part his work was improvisation, noted for its light and vivid style.
For example, Pesisir batik utilizes vivid colors and Chinese motifs such as clouds, phoenix, dragon, qilin, lotus, peony, and floral patterns.
For instance, someone who claims to have had an encounter with a supernatural being or alien may present a very vivid story, but this is not falsifiable.
The dialect has many characteristics. For example, the dialect is very simple and guileless with strong generility and symbolic. If people in Liyang say something like " dessert " in pronunciation, they refer to the lunch or afternoon. In addition, the dialect is vivid and accurate, which makes the behavior and pesonalities more meticulous. Parable and exaggeration are always used in it that makes listener experience what people said more deeper. Another funny thing is that many people in other regions say the dialect in Liyang is similar to Japanese.
For the rest of the season, Ranjitsinhji made a vivid impression wherever he played.
For a complete biography, Bhikkhu Ñanamoli ’ s The Life of the Buddha is unique: a vivid and moving portrait of the Enlightened One composed almost entirely from texts of the Pali Canon.

For and descriptive
For example, the shooting percentage in basketball is a descriptive statistic that summarizes the performance of a player or a team.
For Robert Price " docetism ", together with " encratism ", " Gnosticism ", and " adoptionism " has been employed " far beyond what historically descriptive usage would allow ".
For descriptive purposes this plexus is usually divided into three parts:
For example, one speaks of " White's f-pawn " or " Black's b-pawn ", or less commonly ( using descriptive notation ), " White's king's bishop pawn " or " Black's queen's knight pawn ".
For example, a descriptive system widely adopted in Australia is based on structural characteristics based on life-form, plus the height and amount of foliage cover of the tallest layer or dominant species.
For example, terms such as " Asian ", " incorrect ", " drunk ", or " full-cheeked " are often interpreted as derogatory, when in fact they may be neutral descriptive terms or factual statements, which, at worst, would be simply inaccurate or incorrect rather than insulting.
For example, descriptive linguists seem to claim unhesitatingly that there were no scientifically based language teaching methods before their work ( which led to the audio-lingual method developed for the U. S. Army in World War II ).
For example in some tonal languages with few tones, whistled messages typically consist of stereotyped or otherwise standardized expressions, are elaborately descriptive, and often have to be repeated.
For the audio part, MTS uses subcarriers on the video that can also carry three audio channels, including one for stereo ( same left-minus-right method as for FM ), another for second audio programs ( such as descriptive video service for the vision-impaired, and bilingual programs ), and yet a third hidden one for the studio to communicate with reporters or technicians in the field ( or for a technician or broadcast engineer at a remote transmitter site to talk back to the studio ), or any other use a TV station might see fit.
For example, Britt Hagarty writes of the “ many descriptive passages worthy of quotation ” ( G6 ).
For several years the Democratic Party fought an ongoing battle against the new bars and restaurants in the area, and also against formal adoption of the name " Soho ", preferring instead the descriptive " Staunton / Elgin Street Themed Dining Area " so as not to associate the area with alcohol consumption.
For this product, the descriptive terms " chimeric " and " humanised " monoclonal antibody have been used to reflect the combination of mouse and human DNA sources used in the recombinant process.
For example, tracking the decline of the popularity of slavery across cultures is the work of descriptive ethics, while advising that slavery be avoided is normative.
For most of them the word has become a descriptive category or a generic definition.
For comparison, the pelagic zone is the descriptive term for the ecological region above the benthos, including the water-column up to the surface.
For makeshift and recreational buildings in the Czech Republic, " registration number " ( evidenční číslo ) from a separate number series is used instead of the descriptive number.
For instance, a sentence of the form " All Ravens are Black " could on one account be taken as descriptive, in which case an instance of a white raven would contradict it, or alternatively " All Ravens are Black " could be interpreted as a norm, in which case it stands as a principle and definition, so ' a white raven ' would then not be a raven.
For example, two authors who happen to have published under the same name can be distinguished from each other by adding middle initials, birth and / or death ( or flourished, if these are unknown ) dates, or a descriptive epithet to the heading of one ( or both ) authors.
* For another descriptive example see http :// chrishecker. com / Rigid_Body_Dynamics # Physics_Articles, Chris Hecker, physics section, part 4.
For personal and lyric essays, narratives, and descriptive writing, invention techniques help writers draw from their memory and observation for the kinds of details that will add depth to their essays ( Glenn and Goldthwaite 151 ).
For example, a species may use a putative threat display, which in the ethogram is given a descriptive name such as " head forward " or " bracing display ", and not " head forward threat " or " bracing threat ".
For others, he merely provides descriptive narration.
For some time he was surgeon to the Ophthalmic Institution, and lectured on surgery and descriptive anatomy at the Alders-gate school of medicine.
For instance, to explain the relationships and constants in Euler's identity by way of reference to motion and perception, e. g. pi as descriptive of the space swept out by an arm.

For and history
For paradigmatic history `` breaks '' rather than unfolds precisely when the movement is from order to disorder, and not from one order to a new order.
For the first time in history the entire world is dominated by two large, powerful nations armed with murderous nuclear weapons that make conventional warfare of the past a nullity.
For the first time in history, the U.S. has produced a society in which less than one-tenth of the people turn out so much food that the Government's most embarrassing problem is how to dispose inconspicuously of 100 million tons of surplus farm produce.
For much of its history, ASL was not written.
For example, Alfonso halted his army in pious respect before the birthplace of a Latin writer, carried Livy or Caesar on his campaigns with him, and his panegyrist Panormita even stated that the king was cured of an illness when a few pages of Quintus Curtius Rufus ' history of Alexander the Great were read to him.
For much of the history of the series ( Volumes 4 through 29 ), settings in Gaul and abroad alternated, with even-numbered volumes set abroad and odd-numbered volumes set in Gaul, mostly in the village.
For much of military history the manufacture of metal armour in Europe has dominated the technology and employment of armour.
For much of artillery's history during the Middle Ages and the Early modern period, artillery pieces on land were moved with the assistance of horse teams.
For much of its history Aberdour was two villages, Wester Aberdour and Easter Aberdour, on either side of the Dour Burn.
For most of human history, pearls were the ultimate precious beads of natural origin because of their rarity, although the pearl-culturing process has now made them far more common.
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 of the history of bicycles ' popularity women have worn long skirts, and the lower frame accommodated these better than the top-tube.
For many years, early Anglo-Saxon history was essentially a retelling of the Historia, but recent scholarship has focused as much on what Bede did not write as what he did.
For instance, John Stuart Mill famously suggested that " the Battle of Marathon, even as an event in British history, is more important than the Battle of Hastings ".
For most of Bodmin's history, the tin industry was a mainstay of the economy.
For more information on history before the Great Trek, see Afrikaner.
For almost the next 1, 000 years, these states, their relations with each other, and their effects on the peoples who lived in stateless societies along their peripheries dominated Chad's political history.
For most of human history, it was a branch of metaphysics and religion.
For in At the Mountains of Madness we find the history of a conflict between two interstellar races ( among others ): the Elder Ones and the Cthulhu-spawn.
For the history of the native sultanates on several of the major islands, see Sultans on the Comoros.
For a narrative explaining the overall developments, see the related history of computing hardware and history of computer science.
For this reason, the history of Cairo during Ottoman times is often described as inconsequential, especially in comparison to other time periods.
For example, the 14th Dalai Lama, long insistent on Tibet's history being separate from that of China's, conceded in 2005 that Tibet " is a part " of China's " 5000-year history " as part of a new proposal for Tibetan autonomy.

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