Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "On the Origin of Species" ¶ 67
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

cited and Richard
A young mountain bongo grazes. One of the reasons often cited for the popularity of the bongo as a prized hunting target was a highly-publicized hunting trip taken by Maurice Stans, an official in Richard Nixon's cabinet, to Uganda.
A clerihew much appreciated by chemists is cited in Dark Sun by Richard Rhodes regarding the inventor of the thermos bottle ( or Dewar flask ):
Among his earliest influences, Simon has cited Richard Ely ’ s economics textbook, Norman Angell ’ s The Great Illusion, and Henry George ’ s Progress and Poverty.
Richard Dawkins cited Jaynes ' ideas in his book The God Delusion, stating " It is one of those books that is either complete rubbish or a work of consummate genius, nothing in between ...".
Richard Alan Nelson's ( 2004 ) study cited above on Tracking Propaganda to the Source: Tools for Analyzing Media Bias reports there are at least 12 methods used to analyze the existence of and quantify bias:
* September 3 – Evidence cited by Alison Weir in " The Princes of the Tower " ( p. 157 ) indicate that Edward V and his brother, Richard, Duke of York were murdered this night.
His lines ( quoted left ) have been cited as among the most memorable in cinematic history and are regarded by firearms historians, such as Garry James and Richard Venola, as the force which catapulted the ownership of. 44 Magnum pistols to unprecedented heights in the United States ; specifically the Smith & Wesson Model 29 carried by Harry Callahan.
Eastwood has cited Bronco Billy as being one of the most relaxed shoots of his career and biographer Richard Schickel has argued that Bronco Billy is Eastwood's most self-referential character.
In 1976, Richard Schickel cited his performance in Pitfall ( 1948 ) as a prototype of film noir in contrast with the appealing television characters for which Burr later became famous.
" However, he praised Dreyfuss and cited his Richard III scenes as " the funniest in a movie since Mel Brooks staged Springtime for Hitler.
Philip Oakey of the Human League and Richard H. Kirk of Cabaret Voltaire as well as music journalist Simon Reynolds has cited the soundtrack as an inspiration.
By the end of the 16th century, the celebrated English poet and playwright, William Shakespeare, cited the important export and notoriety of the Madeiran Malvasia castes: in Richard III the Duke of Clarence, the brother of King Edward IV selected a death by drowning in a barrel of Madeira.
The phrase democratic deficit is cited as first being used by the Young European Federalists in their Manifesto in 1977, which was drafted by Richard Corbett.
He was a contemporary of William of Auvergne, Bishop of Paris, and his works are cited by Richard de Fournival, Gerard of Abbeville and Thomas Aquinas.
The political philosophies and positions of Jackson, a Cold War anti-Communist Democrat, have been cited as an influence on a number of key figures associated with neoconservatism, including Paul Wolfowitz and Richard Perle.
Myers is sometimes cited as the youngest-ever White House Press Secretary, however Ron Ziegler, Richard Nixon's press secretary, was 29 when he assumed the role in January 1969.
Van Zandt also cited such varied artists as Guy Clark, Muddy Waters, Mozart, The Rolling Stones, Blind Willie McTell, Tchaikovsky, Richard Dobson, and Jefferson Airplane as influences.
She had such works read to her as the Incendium Amoris by Richard Rolle ; Walter Hilton has been cited as another possible influence on Kempe.
A traditional use of morning glory seeds by Mexican Native Americans was first described by Richard Schultes in 1941 in a short report documenting their use going back to Aztec times ( cited in TiHKAL by Alexander Shulgin ).
" He cited as support for this the 1992 Heidelberg Appeal and the 1999 Oregon Petition, as well the opinions of individual scientists that he named including John Christy, Fred Singer, Richard Lindzen, Willie Soon and Sallie Baliunas.
Stone contributed up to $ 10 million to President Richard Nixon's election campaigns in 1968 and 1972 ; these were cited in Congressional debates after Watergate to institute campaign spending limits.
Regardless, through this interesting turn of events Helaman left the Anti-Nephi-Lehies marching at the head of an army of two thousand soldiers. LDS leader Richard J. Maynes cited this entire episode in a General Conference as containing good examples of covenant-keeping behavior.
Sylvan was born Francis Richard Routley in Levin, New Zealand, and his early work is cited with this surname.
In his book Designing Virtual Worlds, Richard Bartle ( co-creator of the original MUD ) cited DikuMUD as one of the five " major codebases used for ( textual ) virtual worlds ".

cited and findings
Arens ' findings are controversial, and have been cited as an example of postcolonial revisionism.
However, certain conditions must be met before the replication of the experiment is commenced: the original research question has been published in a peer-reviewed journal or widely cited, the researcher is independent of the original experiment, the researcher must first try to replicate the original findings using the original data, and the write-up should state that the study conducted is a replication study that tried to follow the original study as strictly as possible.
" To support these findings, the assembled judges ( as reported by Coke, who was one of them ) cited as authorities Aristotle, Cicero, and the Apostle Paul ; as well as Bracton, Fortescue, and St. Germain.
The committee, suspecting that the results might have been an artifact, withheld its findings for a further eight years, then cited unspecified “ demographic errors ” in its findings.
The CDC cited three findings that relate to African-American men who operate on the down-low ( engage in MSM activity but don't disclose to others ):
In its ongoing negotiations with the BOT, Caledonian cited these findings as evidence that there was no suitable British alternative to the 707 for the envisaged role.
An engineering geologic report describes the objectives, methodology, references cited, tests performed, findings and recommendations for development.
In 1964, the U. S. Supreme Court, in Grove Press, Inc. v. Gerstein, cited Jacobellis v. Ohio ( which was decided the same day ) and overruled state court findings that Tropic of Cancer was obscene.
Based on these and other findings, he proposed a model of the development of ‘ mindreading ’ in his widely cited monograph ( Mindblindness, 1995 MIT Press ).
The findings were received by academia with strong skepticism, and the results and their publicizing has been cited as being driven by a combination of nationalist and regional interests.
Brock Kilbourne challenged findings in a 1982 Conway and Siegelman paper cited in the 2nd edition of the book.
In a report on the findings for The New York Times, journalist John Tierney called Sailer " a veteran student of presidential IQ's ", and cited the judgement of Professor Linda Gottfredson, an IQ expert at the University of Delaware, that Sailer's study was a " creditable analysis ".
One of the interesting findings that is cited as an objective for post-graduate education is the belief that " in the graduate school there are no ultimate authorities, no orthodoxies to which the pupil must subscribe.
Although many examples ( like Japanese cars ) can be cited where a ' protected ' industry subsequently grew to world status, regressions on the outcomes of such " industrial policies " ( which include failures ) have been less conclusive ; some findings suggest that sectors targeted by Japanese industrial policy had decreasing returns to scale and did not experience productivity gains.
However, a subsequent enhancement of the tape showed that the epithet cited in the court records was simply " an aural illusion ", Eichenwald wrote in a story disclosing the findings.

cited and earliest
The earliest form cited in the Oxford English Dictionary ( from 1842 ) is " chipmonk ," but " chipmunk " appears in several books from the 1820s and 1830s.
She is often cited as one of the earliest dominatrices, although she herself used the title of " Governess ".
The earliest cited English usage in connection with marital status is from a manuscript of c. 1200, when Mary ( mother of Jesus ) is described as “ handfast ( to ) a good man called Joseph ”.
A general procedure ( the chakravala, or " cyclic method ") for solving Pell's equation was finally found by Jayadeva ( cited in the eleventh century ; his work is otherwise lost ); the earliest surviving exposition appears in Bhāskara II's Bīja-gaṇita ( twelfth century ).
The Assize of Arms of 1252, which required the appointment of constables to summon men to arms, quell breaches of the peace, and to deliver offenders to the sheriffs or reeves, is cited as one of the earliest creation of the English police.
Arwad has been cited as one of the earliest known examples of a republic, in which the people, rather than a monarch, are described as sovereign.
The earliest use cited by the Oxford English Dictionary is in a 1987 article titled " Virtual reality ", but the article is not about VR technology.
Another related term is moresque, meaning " Moorish "; Randle Cotgrave's A Dictionarie of the French and English Tongues of 1611 defines this as: " a rude or anticke painting, or carving, wherin the feet and tayles of beasts, & c, are intermingled with, or made to resemble, a kind of wild leaves, & c ." and " arabesque ", in its earliest use cited in the OED ( but as a French word ), as " Rebeske work ; a small and curious flourishing ".
Other reviews by publication year and earliest available cited works those in 1970 / 1937, 1972 / 1933, 1974, 1987 / 7 from 1968 on, 3 from 1937 to 1956, and 2009 / c.
The earliest reference to " Robin Goodfellow " cited by the Oxford English Dictionary is from 1531.
However, in the same article cited above, Bailey contends that free improvisation must have been the earliest musical style, because " mankind's first musical performance couldn't have been anything other than a free improvisation.
Thomas Nashe's novel The Unfortunate Traveller is often cited as one of the earliest examples of an English picaresque novel.
Rush songs such as " Bastille Day ", " Anthem ", " By-Tor and Snow Dog ", " 2112 ", " The Fountain of Lamneth " and " Something for Nothing " have been cited as some of the earliest examples of progressive metal.
The earliest use in English cited by the Oxford English Dictionary is a 1599 Spanish-English dictionary and grammar.
The earliest English usage of the word cited in the Oxford English Dictionary is from 1630.
" Flutist " is the earlier term in the English language, dating from at least 1603 ( the earliest quote cited by the Oxford English Dictionary ), while " flautist " is not recorded before 1860, when it was used by Nathaniel Hawthorne in The Marble Faun.
Andrew Wyntoun is most famous for his completion of an eight-syllabled metre entitled, Orygynale Cronykil of Scotland, which contains an early mention of Robin Hood ; it is also cited by the Oxford English Dictionary as the earliest work in English to use the word " Catholic ": modernized " He was a constant Catholic ;/ All Lollard he hated and heretic.
According to the earliest English-language source cited in the Oxford English Dictionary, Tobago bore a name that has become the English word tobacco.
The chicory plant is one of the earliest cited in recorded literature.
" Little Deuce Coupe " has been cited as one of the earliest forms of hard rock with its series of buzzing beats.
Caligari has been cited as an influence on Film noir, one of the earliest horror films, and a model for directors for many decades.
The Last Poets have been cited as one of the earliest influences on hip-hop music.
Later published by Alfred A. Knopf as a book, Hersey's work is often cited as one of the earliest examples of New Journalism in its melding of elements of non-fiction reportage with the pace and devices of the novel.

0.967 seconds.