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Page "Philo's view of God" ¶ 12
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From and borrowed
From early 20th century Shanghainese, many English words are borrowed, such as 高尔夫 / 高爾夫 gāoěrfū " golf " and the above-mentioned 沙发 / 沙發 shāfā " sofa ".
From these people they borrowed a long-lived custom once of religious symbolism.
From the beginning of his career, Ingres freely borrowed from earlier art, adopting the historical style appropriate to his subject, leading critics to charge him with plundering the past.
From this use, countless other fantasy games and works of fiction have borrowed the concept of the orc.
From a similar or somewhat later form were also borrowed Greek Iernē and Iouernia ; the latter form was converted into Latin Hibernia.
From 1841, Millerite evangelists appeared in Great Britain, also, though he never travelled there himself. In addition to the nearly $ 1000 that Miller and Himes spent supplying literature to enquirers and evangelists in Great Britain ; “ there is evidence that Liverpool, Bristol, and other ports local Millerite pioneers borrowed copies of Miller ’ s works and Adventist magazines from visiting American sea captains and merchants .” As well as utilizing imported American literature, two Millerite papers were published locally in Great Britain: the Second Advent Harbinger in Bristol, and the British Midnight Cry in Liverpool.
From Alexandrian theology Philo borrowed the idea of wisdom as the mediator ; he thereby somewhat confused his doctrine of the Logos, regarding wisdom as the higher principle from which the Logos proceeds, and again coordinating it with the latter.
From Greek, the name was borrowed into Turkish as Kesriye.
Knowing then, brethren, of what kind of heresy was Marcion ... From others who used this very gospel — I mean from the successors of those who started it, whom we call Docetae, for most of its ideas are of their school — from them, I say, I borrowed it, and was able to go through it, and to find that most of it belonged to the right teaching of the Saviour, but some things were additions.
From this expression, the word tundra is borrowed, as well.
From the turn of the 20th century, Western Carnies borrowed many of their sideshow tricks from fakirs bringing to American and European audiences their first glimpses of tongue piercing.
* From 1958 until 1991 ( simplified version of the alphabet defined using the Cyrillic script, and digraphs formed with Јј borrowed from Latin, removing unnecessary distinctions between the soft and hard sign that did not exit in the original Latin script and in the language ):
From the Malay building tradition, elaborate woodwork has been borrowed in the form of carved panels.
From Baroque bell-shaped skirts to delicate oriental patterns borrowed from Turkish invaders, these folk costumes show the complex growth of the Czech and the Slovak traditions.
From those actors Ayrer learned how to enliven his dramas with sensational incidents and spectacular effects, and from them he borrowed the character of the clown.
From November 2008, Five began to transmit free to air for the first time on Astra 2D, using borrowed space on a BBC transponders, allowing the channel to join Freesat.
From January 21 to March 21, 2010, a free demonstration service called the " Olympic Line " ( named for the 2010 Winter Olympics ) ran on the Downtown Historic Railway, using two modern Bombardier Flexity Outlook streetcars borrowed from the Brussels tramway.

From and conception
From the viewpoint of the ancient Greeks, a person's public life was not separated from their private life, and Greeks did not distinguish between the two worlds according to the modern western conception.
From this material context men and women develop certain ideas about their world, thereby leading to the core materialist conception that social being determines social consciousness.
From this criticism to psychologism, the distinction between psychological acts and their intentional objects, and the difference between the normative side of logic and the theoretical side, derives from a platonist conception of logic.
From this has evolved the modern conception of property as a right enforced by positive law, in the expectation that this will produce more wealth and better standards of living.
From its conception until 1965, the bank undertook a relatively low level of lending.
From conception until sexual differentiation, all mammalian fetuses within the same species look the same, regardless of sex.
From 1939 to 1970 Victor Michel improved toy-piano conception.
From the conception of a universal order in the universe he reasons to a Supreme Being, who has created it and who has conferred upon every man in harmony with it the aim of his existence, leading to his highest good.
From the conception of the modern bodyboard in 1971, bodyboarding has experienced spurts of rapid growth both as an industry and extreme sport.
From the notion of absolute unity results the conception of the uniqueness of God ; for if two beings of this kind could exist, the unity of God would be nullified, since to one, at least, of the units a special character must be attributed so as to distinguish it from the other ( ib .).
From this time he showed himself the Italian Béranger, and even surpassed the Frenchman in richness of language, refinement of humour and depth of satirical conception.
From its conception at the change of the twentieth century, jazz was music intended for dancing.
From early on in its conception, Accum had been concerned with the byproducts of coal gas production, which included tar and sulphur compounds.
From their first conception during the First World War, many portable missiles have been used to give infantry a weapon effective against armored vehicles and fortified structures.
From that time on, symptoms ceased to be made up into more or less conventional groups, each of which was a disease ; on the other hand, they began to be viewed as the cry of the suffering organs, and it became possible to develop Thomas Sydenham's grand conception of a natural history of disease in a catholic or scientific spirit.
From its conception in 1926 to its destruction in the Blitzkrieg in May 1940, the company remained the Netherlands ' second major aircraft manufacturer ( after Fokker ).
From conception, the female Cape fox has a gestation period of 51 to 53 days, and she gives birth to a litter size of one to six cubs ( or kits ).
From the thirteenth century their use began to decline, as a new conception of Christ in Majesty, showing the wounds of the Passion, began to be used.
From its conception, The Living Theatre was dedicated to transforming the organization of power within society from a competitive, hierarchical structure to cooperative and communal expression.
From their conception, large chemical, refining, power generation, and other processing plants required the use of a control system to keep the process operating successfully and producing products.
From the beginning of the 16th century the traditional Catholic conception of man and of his relation to God and to the world had been assaulted by the rise of humanism, by the Protestant Reformation and by the new geographical discoveries and their consequences.
From conception he has been told lies, from how is mother died to being a clone.
From 1874 to the close of his life Pringsheim's activity was chiefly directed to physiological questions: he published, in a long series of memoirs, a theory of the carbon-assimilation of green plants, the central point of which is the conception of the chlorophyll-pigment as a screen, with the main function of protecting the protoplasm from light-rays which would neutralize its assimilative activity by stimulating too active respiration.
From its conception during the baroque period to the maturity of the romantic period, it was the medium through which tales and myths were revisited, history was retold and imagination was stimulated.

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