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gave and name
Ralph Gabriel gave it the name of Protestant philosophy of Progress.
Such was the impromptu that Voltaire gave to howls of laughter at Sans Souci and that was soon circulated in manuscript throughout the literary circles of Europe, to be printed sometime later, but with the name of Timon of Athens, the famous misanthrope, substituted for that of Rousseau.
Hereford cattle were often called `` white faces '', or `` open-face cattle '', and the old-time cowman gave the name of `` hothouse stock '' to them newly introduced cattle.
The northern cowboy called all the red Mexican cattle which went up the trail `` Sonora reds '', while they called all cattle drove up from Mexico `` yaks '', because they came from the Yaqui Injun country, or gave 'em the name of `` Mexican buckskins ''.
When he finally got the coughing under control, he realized that Pete ( all he gave was his first name ) was still waiting for an answer -- he didn't even seem to wink as he continued to stare.
`` God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life '', and `` as many as received him, to them gave He power to become the sons of God, even to them that believe on His name ''.
`` As many as received Him ( Jesus ), to them gave He power to become the sons of God, even to them that believe on his name ''.
There is Mijbil, an otter who travelled with Maxwell -- and gave Maxwell's name to a new species -- from the Tigris marshes to his London flat.
Her name was Sabella, and the strip of seaweed around her neck was an emerald necklace the King gave her as a token of his undying love.
The Greeks gave to him the name αγυιεύς agyieus as the protector god of public places and houses who wards off evil, and his symbol was a tapered stone or column.
The European sailors and merchants gave the name Levant to the west and south coasts of Asia Minor, including Syria.
Actinium gave the name to the actinide series, a group of 15 similar elements between actinium and lawrencium in the periodic table.
The first element of the actinides, actinium gave the group its name, much as lanthanum had done for the lanthanides.
Diodorus uses ēlektron, the Greek word for amber, the object that gave its name to electricity through its ability to acquire a charge.
Abbotsford gave its name to the " Abbotsford Club ", a successor of the Bannatyne and Maitland clubs, founded by William Barclay Turnbull in 1834 in Scott's honour, for printing and publishing historical works connected with his writings.
Walafrid Strabo, a monk of the Abbey of St. Gall writing in the 9th century, remarked, in discussing the people of Switzerland and the surrounding regions, that only foreigners called them the Alemanni, but that they gave themselves the name of Suevi.
According to an interview she gave to an Egyptian journalist, her first name was Yvonne, though she is referred to as Yvette in most published references.
The last of Alfred's works is one to which he gave the name Blostman, i. e., " Blooms " or Anthology.
* Cyme, who gave her name to the city of Cyme ( Aeolis )
* Smyrna, who obtained possession of Ephesus and gave her name to a quarter in this city, as well as to the city of Smyrna
Algoritmi, the translator's rendition of the author's name, gave rise to the word algorithm ( Latin algorithmus, " calculation method ").
Carnegie once gave $ 25, 000 to Speaker of the House David B. Henderson to erect a library on the campus of Upper Iowa University in his name.
" They gave my name and my date of birth, but I am not a suicide bomber.
Also vexatious were the Saxons, the name Roman writers gave to the peoples who lived in the northern part of what is now Germany and the southern part of the Jutland peninsula.

gave and indirectly
English scholar Russell Martineau, who had studied under Bopp, gave the following tribute: “ Bopp must, more or less, directly or indirectly, be the teacher of all who at the present day study, not this language or that language, but language itself — study it either as a universal function of man, subjected, like his other mental or physical functions, to law and order, or else as an historical development, worked out by a never ceasing course of education from one form into another .”
There is a theory that it was Stephenson who indirectly gave the name of Geordies to the people of the North East of England.
Magica's interference would also indirectly result in the conception of John D. Rockerduck, as Howard gave up on Scottish girls and instead focused his attention towards England in the hopes of finding a bride, to which he would ultimately be successful.
In his presidential address to the British Association in 1871, Lord Kelvin stated his belief that the application of the prismatic analysis of light to solar and stellar chemistry had never been suggested directly or indirectly by anyone else when Stokes taught it to him at Cambridge University some time prior to the summer of 1852, and he set forth the conclusions, theoretical and practical, which he learnt from Stokes at that time, and which he afterwards gave regularly in his public lectures at Glasgow. Kirchhoff These statements, containing as they do the physical basis on which spectroscopy rests, and the way in which it is applicable to the identification of substances existing in the sun and stars, make it appear that Stokes anticipated Kirchhoff by at least seven or eight years.
Soane designed the sky lights to illuminate the paintings indirectly, and gave us one the great small galleries in which to look at oil paintings.
In this theory he not only gave important insights into the field of critical statics and dynamics in statistical physics, but also indirectly helped to answer basic questions like: " What is quantum field theory?
Nickell observes, however, that Smith failed a lie detector test, gave conflicting accounts of her " vision " and could have learned the location indirectly: as it happened, the killers were eventually caught because one of them had boasted about the crime in his neighborhood
Rugova's personal confessor indirectly admitted that he gave confession to the converted former president of Kosovo prior to his death.
In 1987 he gave the first of his infamous " snake oil speeches ", taken by some to be referring indirectly to the " Unix Conspiracy ".
< font color =" orange "> The number < font face =" serif ">+ 1 </ font > is distinguished from the number < font face =" serif ">- 1 </ font > by some purely algebraic property ( for example, it is equal to its square ), while there is no analogous property, described entirely in terms of addition and multiplication, that distinguishes < font face =" serif ">+ i </ font > from < font face =" serif ">- i </ font > and yet does not, either directly or indirectly, make use of the names we gave to them .</ font >
His situation was discussed in the U. S. Senate Committee on Foreign Relations, which led indirectly to his appointment to be assistant pastor in Timişoara, where he gave sermons that opposed the Romanian national government's program of systematization, which proposed radical restructuring of the infrastructure of Romanian towns and villages.
Though he was certainly not the creator of the Occitan lyric poetry, William, count of Poitiers, by personally cultivating it gave it a position of honor, and indirectly contributed in a very powerful degree to ensure its development and preservation.
The proceedings and negotiations to which this mission gave rise necessarily brought Dumont into connection with most of the leading men in the Constituent Assembly, and made him an interested spectator, sometimes even a participator, indirectly, in the events of the French Revolution.
: The terror suspect, who is being held at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, reportedly gave up information that indirectly led to the 2003 raid in Pakistan yielding the arrest of Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, an alleged planner of the September 11, 2001, attacks, Kiriakou said.
Through extra-constitutional decrees dubbed " Institutional Acts " ( Portuguese: " Ato Institucional " or " AI "), Castello Branco gave the executive the unchecked ability to change the constitution and remove anyone from office (" AI-1 ") as well as to have the presidency elected indirectly through a bipartisan system of a government-backed National Renewal Alliance Party ( ARENA ) and an opposition Brazilian Democratic Movement ( MDB ) party (" AI-2 ").
The CIA gave the DOJ an affidavit stating that after his retirement he had not been employed directly or indirectly by the agency.
Though Madison Cottage itself was razed in 1853 to make room for first Franconi's Roman Hippodrome and then the Fifth Avenue Hotel, Madison Cottage ultimately gave rise to the names for the adjacent avenue ( Madison Avenue ) and park, which are therefore only indirectly named after President James Madison.
His demonstration during the Great War of the principles of building homes rapidly and economically whilst maintaining satisfactory standards for gardens, family privacy and internal spaces, gave him great influence over the Tudor Walters Committee and hence, indirectly, over much inter-war public housing.
In this episode one learns more of what is there, and how Mendoza's lovers, and indirectly the " New Inklings ," played a part in its initial discovery, which gave rise to the Company itself.
However, after extensive pre-production Warner Brothers instead gave the work to ESC Entertainment ( which was funded indirectly by Warner Bros .) in an effort to save money on the production.

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