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From and name
From his blood sprang a red flower, as at the death of Hyacinthus, which bore on its leaves the initial letters of his name Ai, also expressive of lament.
From the Early Modern period, their name has become a term for female warriors in general.
AA's name derived from its first book, informally called " The Big Book ", originally titled Alcoholics Anonymous: The Story of How More Than One Hundred Men Have Recovered From Alcoholism
From the start of the war, Massoud's mujahideen proved to be a thorn in the side for the occupying Soviet forces by ambushing Soviet and Afghan communist convoys travelling through the Salang Pass, resulting in fuel shortages in Kabul .< ref name =" Iyer ">
From the early Middle Ages until after the Second Vatican Council the sacrament was administered, within the Latin Church, only when death was approaching and, in practice, bodily recovery was not ordinarily looked for, giving rise, as mentioned above to the name " Extreme Unction " ( i. e. final anointing ).
From this appearance it takes its name.
From 2008, the BBC gradually began to drop the BBCi name from its digital interactive TV services also, replacing it with the name BBC Red Button.
From listening to their recordings, one had difficulty determining if the Crickets, the name of Buddy's band, were white or black singers.
From the 19th century and much of the late 20th century, " Boadicea " was the most common version of the name, which is probably derived from a mistranscription when a manuscript of Tacitus was copied in the Middle Ages.
From 1925-52 the name was All-Union Communist Party ( bolsheviks ), and from 1952-91 Communist Party of the Soviet Union.
From 1923 to 1925, the company produced light cars and trucks under the name of Lila.
From 1966 to 1971, Jones was a member of The Monkees, a pop-rock group formed expressly for a television show of the same name.
From the early nineteenth century to the mid 1950s, Izalco erupted with a regularity that earned it the name " Lighthouse of the Pacific.
From the time when letters began to be forged in his name ( 2 Thess 2: 2 ; 3: 17 ) it seems to have been his practice to close with a few words in his own handwriting, as a precaution against such forgeries ...
In 1978, Rhode Island College dedicated its Art Gallery in Bannister's name with the exhibition: " Four From Providence ~ Alston, Bannister, Jennings & Prophet ".
From 1972 to 1999, Exxon was the corporate name of the company previously known as Standard Oil Company of New Jersey or Jersey Standard.
From this body of water the island group later took its collective name.
From the eighteenth century, Spanish sources reported that immediately after the takeover of the city, Sir George Rooke, the British admiral, on his own initiative caused the British flag to be hoisted, and took possession of the Rock in name of Anne, Queen of Great Britain, whose government ratified the occupation.
From 1954 to 1990, the 17th of June was an official holiday in West Germany to commemorate the Uprising of 1953 in East Germany, even with the name " Day of the German Unity ".
From the oldest and most famous of the Greek colonies the fertile coastal plain took the name of Cyrenaica.
From this mix of monism, monotheism and naturalist polytheism Max Müller decided to name the early Vedic religion henotheistic.
From 1405 to 1433, Admiral Zheng He led large fleets of the Ming Dynasty on several voyages to the Western Ocean ( Chinese name for the Indian Ocean ) and reached the coastal country of East Africa ( see Zheng He for reference ).
From 1992, she began to combine her experience in business and finance with meditation, selling access to workshops and seminars on the topic and, by deed poll, changed her conventional, two-word name for the more esoteric Jasmuheen.

From and derives
From Weierstrass he derives the idea that we generate the concept of number by counting a certain collection of objects.
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.
Many new words can be derived simply by changing these suffixes, just as-ly derives adverbs from adjectives in English: From vidi ( to see ), we get vida ( visual ), vide ( visually ), and vido ( sight ).
From this derives the Rent-gap Theory describing the disparity between " the actual capitalized ground rent ( land price ) of a plot of land given its present use, and the potential ground rent that might be gleaned under a ' higher and better ' use ".
From its main ingredient ginger tea derives a flavor that is spicy and stimulating.
From George Perkins Marsh a very different book, Man and Nature, later subtitled " The Earth as Modified by Human Action ", catalogued his observations of man exhausting and altering the land from which his sustenance derives.
From these postulates, it derives a body of practices, which are commonly: an active industrial policy to subsidize and orchestrate production of strategic substitutes, protective barriers to trade ( such as tariffs ), an overvalued currency to help manufacturers import capital goods ( heavy machinery ), and discouragement of foreign direct investment.
From this ancient custom derives the French word baccalauréat ( from the Latin bacca, a berry, and laureus, of the bay laurel ), and, by modification, the term " bachelor " in referring to one who holds a university degree.
From this derives the name borne by the county ( xian ) since the late 6th century BC — Guancheng ( City of the Guan ).
From this form the present name of the city derives.
From the underlying idea of partially specified results as representing incomplete knowledge, one derives another desirable property: the existence of a least element.
From there, it derives its other meanings, and can also refer to:
From the third root principle, the belief in divine justice, he derives one secondary radical: the belief in bodily resurrection.
From the negative connotations of such rule, mainly in the Orient, derives its generalized use for the head of any totalitarian and / or abusive regime, as a synonym for despot, dictator, or tyrant ( all three in the modern, derogatory sense, contrary to a rather lofty historical origin ), also at a sub-state level, or even a big boss in private life.
From this derives the right to a society which makes life more truly human: religious liberty, decent work, housing, health care, freedom of speech, education, and the right to raise and provide for a family "( section 37 ). Having the right to life must mean that everyone else has a responsibility towards me.
From him derives the town's name, which means " Bodo's Eyot ".
The lemma derives from considering the Taylor expansion of f around r. From, we see that s has to be of the form s
From 1928 to 1943, the tower was the seat of the editorship and publishing house of the Stuttgarter Neues Tagblatt, a local newspaper ; the building derives its name from this original tenant.
From this, it derives its name.
* From this sense of cohors derives the Italian corte '( a princely etc.
From these equations, inverse dynamics derives the torque ( moment ) level at each joint based on the movement of the attached limb or limbs affected by the joint.
From Anirud-dha derives Brahma, who then creates the physical universe.
From Vasudeva on down, each of the phases or forms of the godhead derives from the previous form.

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