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Page "Archibald Alexander Hodge" ¶ 4
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had and mind
In vain his mind groped to reassemble the bones of the relationships he had sought so desperately, but they would not come to life.
She had helped him change his mind.
His mind flicked through the mental pictures he had from the hours of Aircraft Identification.
Anyway, it was evident what he had in mind ''.
Whenever he saw someone lying in the dirt, Ramey wondered what the person had been thinking and he would try out thoughts in his own mind.
But by the time the risk was doubled, events had dismissed from his mind both increased percentages and a previously stated intention of considering carefully anything more serious than a bout of influenza.
But by the time the papers were finally disposed of, the group had informed the world of its purpose, its recommendations, and its belief that Paul Bang-Jensen was not of sound mind.
This was the very sort of legislation that Roosevelt himself had in mind.
But at the touch of Hume and Voltaire the noble or hideous visitations which had haunted the mind since Agamemnon's blood cried out for vengeance, disappeared altogether or took tawdry refuge among the gaslights of melodrama.
For Adams had made up his mind before all the facts were available.
His mind closed on that prospect, as though fog had descended to blot out a valley.
He went on to explain what he had in mind.
A feeling of futility, an enervation of mind greater than any fatigue he had ever known, seeped through him.
They seemed then to have had a single mind and body, a mutuality which had been accepted with the fact of their youth, casually.
In spite of the hundred things he had on his mind, Winston went and put his arm around her waist.
those presents had been on his mind.
Suppose her father had changed his mind and had refused to let her leave??
We have seen good new products shelved because no one had the assignment to develop such facts and plans -- and management couldn't make up its mind.
`` I wrote Bill in my last letter to forget that I had told him that I didn't mean to reconsider my decision not to change my mind -- and he seems to have misunderstood me ''.
`` Never mind '', Arlene had said, after the policeman had left, having pursued the usual unco-operative course of grownups.
Her previous traumatic experiences flashed through her mind as if they had happened yesterday.
He did not mind the Line itself, which Churchill declared in the House of Commons, on February 27, 1945, he had always believed to be `` just and right '', but he did not want it called by a hated name.

had and singular
In `` My Song's Young Virgin Date '', for example, Thompson wrote: `` Yea, she that had my song's young virgin date Not now, alas, that noble singular she, I nobler hold, though marred from her once state, Than others in their best integrity.
At the Hotel Dumont there had, at the time in issue, been twenty-three overnighters, counting couples as singular.
This solution had a peculiar behaviour at what is now called the Schwarzschild radius, where it became singular, meaning that some of the terms in the Einstein equations became infinite.
Robert A. Heinlein originally coined the term grok in his 1961 novel Stranger in a Strange Land as a Martian word that could not be defined in Earthling terms, but can be associated with various literal meanings such as " water ", " to drink ", " life ", or " to live ", and had a much more profound figurative meaning that is hard for terrestrial culture to understand because of its assumption of a singular reality.
Each ibutho had a singular arrangement of headdress and other adornments, so that the Zulu army could be said to have had regimental uniforms ; latterly the ' full-dress ' was only worn on festive occasions.
Likewise, being a decentralized movement, Lollardy neither had nor proposed any singular authority.
Likewise, Tim Goodwin, who conducted the orchestra that backed Orbison in Bulgaria, had been told that Orbison's voice would be a singular experience to hear.
A notable exception to this was relative newcomer Arthur Godfrey who, as late as 1942, was still doing a local morning show in Washington, D. C. Godfrey, who had been a cemetery-lot salesman and a cab driver, pioneered the style of talking directly to the listener as an individual, with a singular " you " rather than phrases like " Now, folks ..." or " Yes, friends ...." His combined shows contributed as much as 12 % of all CBS revenues ; by 1948, he was pulling down a half-million dollars a year.
From his methods on solving the Riemann problem had developed the theory of singular integral equations ( MSC ( 2000 ) 45-Exx ) which was entertained above all by the Russian school at the head of Nikoloz Muskhelishvili ( Николай Иванович Мусхелищвили ) ( 1891 – 1976 ).
There were two forms of this title, the first had the names of other gods, and the second later one which was more ' singular ' and referred only to the Aten himself.
The regions are divided into seventy-six districts ( okresy, singular okres ) including three " statutory cities " ( without Prague, which had special status ).
While by no means the pioneer of " singular " team nicknames, which had been used by some college and professional sports teams since the 19th century, the quantity of them in a single league (" Fire ", " Sun ", " Bell ", " Storm ", " Steamer ", " Thunder ", " Express ") was rare in professional sports at the time, and was a distinguishing mark of the league.
Because of the lack of detailed information and singular nature of the Lucan account, it is likely the event had occurred not too long before Jesus mentioned it.
* Anyone who had a heart would know their own language — Transcript of ABC Radio program on the singular they.
In addition to singular and plural numbers, Attic Greek had the dual number.
As part of its lexicon, Proto-Celtic is thought to have had a feminine word * makajā denoting ‘ plain ,’ with a genitive singular * makajās ‘ of the plain ’.
Each of the main groups had a traditional leader called Amenokal, along with an assembly of tribal chiefs ( imɣaran, singular amɣar ).
But in 1671 he contributed to the singular miscellany of Psyché, in which Pierre Corneille and Molière also had a hand, and which was set to the music of Jean-Baptiste Lully.
The poem could never have had an abiding success, but at its appearance it had the singular bad luck almost to coincide with the massacre of St Bartholomew, which had occurred about a fortnight before its publication.
* The use of-ions ( now only plural first-person ending of verbs ) instead of-ais as the singular first-person ending, in the " imparfait " tense: e. g. j ' avions, j ' aimions, j ' étions ... instead of j ' avais, j ' aimais, j ' étais ... ( meaning: I had, I loved, I was ...).
Before game engines, games were typically written as singular entities: a game for the Atari 2600, for example, had to be designed from the bottom up to make optimal use of the display hardware — this core display routine is today called the kernel by retro developers.
One of the academics present at the meeting, William Channing Webb, a professor of anthropology at Princeton, states that on an 1860 expedition " high up on the West Greenland coast " he had encountered " a singular tribe or cult of degenerate Esquimaux whose religion, a curious form of devil-worship, chilled him with its deliberate bloodthirstiness and repulsiveness.

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