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has and supplemented
Another study has demonstrated that daily use of an alum-containing mouthrinse was safe and produced a significant effect on plaque that supplemented the benefits of daily toothbrushing.
Over time, these canons were supplemented with decretals of the Bishops of Rome, which were responses to doubts or problems according to the maxim, " Roma locuta est, causa finita est " (" Rome has spoken, case is closed ").
The game has been supplemented by many pre-made adventures as well as commercial campaign settings suitable for use by regular gaming groups.
This statute replaced earlier statutes from 1820, 1823, 1838, 1841 and 1848 and has since been supplemented 11 times, with the latest supplement in 1995.
Holden has offered a broad range of locally produced vehicles, supplemented by imported GM models.
This concern has found expression in the standards for involuntary commitment in every U. S. state and in other countries as the " danger to self or others " standard, sometimes supplemented by the requirement that the danger be " imminent.
Agriculture throughout the region has been supplemented by nomadic pastoralism, where tent-dwelling nomads herded sheep and goats ( and later camels ) from the river pastures in the dry summer months, out into seasonal grazing lands on the desert fringe in the wet winter season.
For example, a non-identity finite group is simple if and only if it is isomorphic to all of its non-identity homomorphic images, a finite group is perfect if and only if it has no normal subgroups of prime index, and a group is imperfect if and only if the derived subgroup is not supplemented by any proper normal subgroup.
As a theoretical concept or model, though, it has been supplemented and even replaced by others.
The strong interest of the Swedish Government and people in international cooperation and peacemaking has been supplemented in the early 1980s by renewed attention to Nordic and European security questions.
The Supreme Court has interpreted the Qualifications Clause as an exclusive list of qualifications that cannot be supplemented by a house of Congress exercising its Section 5 authority to " judge ... the ... qualifications of its own members " or by a state in its exercise of its Section 4 authority to prescribe the " times, places and manner of holding elections for Senators and Representatives.
The Supreme Court has interpreted the Qualifications Clause as an exclusive list of qualifications that cannot be supplemented by a House of Congress exercising its Section.
The protection of the European bison has a long history ; between the 15th and 18th century those in the Forest of Białowieża were protected and their diet supplemented.
The traditional agricultural products of meat, dairy and wool has been supplemented by other products such as fruit, wine and timber.
Stories have persisted that Crawford further supplemented her income by appearing in one or more stag, or soft-core pornographic, films, although this has been disputed.
Unlike the solo male vocals in the Rammstein original, this cover features both male and female vocals ( supplied by Laibach's Milan Fras and Mina Špiler from the band Melodrom ), and the orchestral sound of the original has been supplemented — and in some sections even replaced — by a more electronic element.
Since 1999, the public health scheme has been supplemented by a Private Health Insurance Rebate, where the government funds at least 30 % of any private health insurance premium covering people eligible for Medicare.
The American Naturopathic Medical Association ( ANMA ) and American Naturopathic Medical Certification and Accreditation Board ( ANMCAB ) has recognition and certification programs for Medical Doctors ( MD ) and Doctors of Osteopathic Medicine ( DO ) who have supplemented their education with naturopathic studies and integrate naturopathy into their practice.
And this has more recently ( Jan 26, 2006 ) been supplemented with guidelines for smaller IT units, not included in the original eight publications:
It has since been thought of as a reemerging zoonosis supplemented by the increased distribution of meat products, political changes, a changing climate, and increasing sylvatic transmission.
This harbour became silted up and needed to be supplemented later by a harbor built by Trajan finished in the year AD 113 ; it has a hexagonal form, in order to reduce the erosive forces of the waves.
Agriculture supplemented by the Central Valley Water Project has been the major source of economic growth in the area.
The Public Safety Department is also supplemented by the volunteer fire department which has been in operation since 1887.
Versailles has historically maintained a small police force, which in January 2009 had a strength of three full-time officers and was supplemented with a number of part-time officers.
Like the other communities in western Emery County, for most of its history Castle Dale has depended on an economic base of farming and livestock raising, supplemented by coal mining.

has and critical
It is to say rather, I believe, that he has brought to bear on the history, the traditions, and the lore of his region a critical, skeptical mind -- the same mind which has made of him an inveterate experimenter in literary form and technique.
As R.H. Hodgkin has remarked: `` The critical methods of the nineteenth century shattered most of this picturesque narrative.
Woodward, for example, has emphasized the `` need for a broad spectrum of services, including very brief services in connection with critical situations ''.
Where this approach becomes critical, the industry can be expected to put much emphasis on this as evidence of its sincerity in `` resisting '' the wage pressures of a powerful union, requesting tariff relief after it has `` reluctantly '' acceded to the union pressure.
The first stage of operation has centered on the literature imaging of critical or summarizing tabulations such as the Barker Index.
Basically, this means that simpler processing equipment ( the mixture has good flowing characteristics ) and less external heat ( the foaming reaction is exothermic and develops internal heat ) are required in one-shot foaming, although, at the same time, the problems of controlling the conditions of one-shot foaming are critical ones.
Its spokesmen insist that there has not been time enough to institute reforms in military and economic aid policies in the critical areas.
Virgilia Peterson, a critic by trade, has turned her critical eye pitilessly and honestly on herself in an autobiography more of the mind and heart than of specific events.
It is no common thing for a listener ( critical or otherwise ) to hear a singer `` live '' for the first time only after he has died.
Speeding up the low portion of memory is particularly useful on 6502 derived machines because that processor has a faster addressing mode for the first 256 bytes and so it is common for software to put any variables involved in time critical sections of program into that region.
Dürer has never fallen from critical favour, and there have been revivals of interest in his works Germany in the Dürer Renaissance of about 1570 to 1630, in the early nineteenth century, and in German nationalism from 1870 to 1945.
Analytical chemistry has played critical roles in the understanding of basic science to a variety of practical applications, such as biomedical applications, environmental monitoring, quality control of industrial manufacturing, forensic science and so on.
This film was a critical and box office failure, but has gained a modern following.
Capp's persona has long since eclipsed his work, complicating critical analysis and objective assessment of Li ' l Abner to this day.
Bede's scriptural commentaries employed the allegorical method of interpretation and his history includes accounts of miracles, which to modern historians has seemed at odds with his critical approach to the materials in his history.
H P Wilmott has noted that deep battle contains two critical differences – it advocated the idea of total war, not limited operations and it also rejected the idea of the decisive battle in favour of several large scale and simultaneous offensives.
According to John Gillespie, a former investment banker and co-author of a book critical of boards,: " Far too much of their time has been for check-the-box and cover-your-behind activities rather than real monitoring of executives and providing strategic advice on behalf of shareholders ".
In physics, for an ensemble of particles, the bistability comes from the fact that its free energy has three critical points.
< sup > 41 </ sup > Ca has received much attention in stellar studies because it decays to < sup > 41 </ sup > K, a critical indicator of solar-system anomalies.
Gad Barzilai has critically examined both liberalism and communitarianism and has developed the theory of critical communitarianism.
A critical turning point comes when the King decides not to give money to a man who has committed theft but instead to cut off his head and also to carry out this punishment in a particularly cruel and humiliating manner, parading him in public to the sound of drums as he is taken to the execution ground outside the city.
Under client – server, should a critical server fail, clients ’ requests cannot be fulfilled by this failed entity, but may be taken by another parallel server which has access to the same data as the failed entity.
This has led to the very literal use of ' critical theory ' as an umbrella term to describe any theory founded upon critique.

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