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Page "George Stacy" ¶ 14
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often and speaks
Origen often speaks of Ambrose in affectionately as a man of education with excellent literary and scholarly tastes.
His top gums are often exposed due to a small upper lip and he speaks nasally with a deep voice and a slight lisp.
These statements, soon dubbed " esternazioni ", or " mattock blows " ( picconate ), were considered by many to be inappropriate for a President and, often, beyond his constitutional powers ; also, his mental health was doubted and Cossiga had to declare " I am the fake madman who speaks the truth.
In the synoptics, Jesus speaks often about the Kingdom of God ; his own divine role is obscured ( see Messianic secret ).
When someone speaks of a mishap involving an audible arcing of electricity, the word " zap " is often used ( and has subsequently been expanded and used to describe non-auditory effects generally connoting the same sort of localized but thorough interference or destruction similar to that produced in short-circuit sparking ).
In 2002, DC Comics introduced a villain named Onomatopoeia, an athlete, martial artist and weapons expert who often speaks sounds.
In high-low split games one often speaks of " nut-low " and " nut-high " hands separately.
Prima facie is often confused with res ipsa loquitur ( literally, " the thing speaks for itself "), the common law doctrine that when the facts make it self-evident that negligence or other responsibility lies with a party, it is not necessary to provide extraneous details, since any reasonable person would immediately find the facts of the case.
It could refer to the Messiah because it often speaks of the Davidic king Solomon.
A Latino North Hollywood resident who speaks with a thick Cuban American accent, and often refers to himself in the third person, insisting on the English pronunciation of his name rather than the Spanish.
Rather is it to be said that the Scripture speaks often " figuratively " and " in riddles.
For this reason one often speaks of the limit of F.
The character Ralph Garcy ( stage name for Raul Garcia ) played by Barry Miller speaks often of growing up with Prinze and seeing him as the local neighborhood hero.
He is often assumed to have been a member of the Novatian church, but this is based on the fact that he gives a lot of details about the Novatians, and speaks of them in generous terms, but he also speaks of Arians and other groups in a similar fashion, but speaks of himself as belong to the mainstream Church.
He would often appear as a character in a sketch ; in the second series, when Horne decides he wants to be a seaside end-of-the-pier-show impresario, one of the acts he auditions is Dentures as ' The Great Omipaloni, the world's fastest illusionist-and also the dampest '; in the third series he was Captain Ahab in the first part of The Admirable Loombucket ; also in the same series, in The Big Top, Luigi Omipaloni, the trapeze artist at Cuckpowder's Mammoth Circus, and Buffalo Sidney Goosecreature, the fearless desperado and adversary of The Palone Ranger ; in the fourth series in Apache Story, he is Rain In The Face-Kenneth Williams, as Billy Two Cheeks, exclaims " He speaks with forked tongue!
Idle's work in Python is often characterised by an obsession with language and communication: many of his characters have verbal peculiarities, such as the man who speaks in anagrams, the man who says words in the wrong order, and the butcher who alternates between rudeness and politeness every time he speaks.
In the BBC television sitcom May to December, solicitor Alec Callender ( portrayed by Anton Rodgers ) is a huge Perry Mason fan ; he often speaks privately to a large poster of Raymond Burr hanging on his office wall.
When he rambles he often speaks incoherently in run-on sentences without pauses.
Ebert often speaks of having attended films at the Virginia while growing up in Champaign-Urbana and attending the University.
The use of the word tomte in Swedish is now somewhat ambiguous, but often when one speaks of jultomten ( definite article ) or tomten ( definite article ) one is referring to the more modern version, while if one speaks of tomtar ( plural ) or tomtarna ( plural, definite article ) one could also likely be referring to the more traditional tomtar.
" Plutarch commended " the saying of Simonides, that he had often felt sorry after speaking but never after keeping silent " and observed that " Simonides calls painting silent poetry and poetry painting that speaks " ( later paraphrased by the Latin poet Horace as ut pictura poesis ).

often and innuendo
The show often opened with a deadpan delivery by Horne of " the answers to last week's questions "-questions which had never been asked, and which were laced with ( what were for BBC Radio at that time ) incredible double entendres and sexual innuendo, such as
They were often bawdy in nature, making use of innuendo and double entendres and traditionally featured stereotypical characters such as vicars, large ladies and put-upon husbands, in the same vein as the Carry On films.
Though the Comics Code Authority had grown more lenient by the late 1960s, and was officially revised starting in 1971, some comic creators were including non-explicit innuendo or otherwise implied in stories that some characters were gay, though often in a negative light.
Perhaps because it is not offensive to those who do not recognize it, innuendo is often used in sitcoms and other comedy considered suitable for children, who may enjoy the comedy while being oblivious to its second meanings.
A Bawdy song is a humorous song which emphasises sexual themes and is often rich with innuendo.
Popularisation of the term has resulted in its being applied to any slip-of-the-tongue phenomenon, often in an attempt by the user to humorously assign hidden motives or an air of sexual innuendo to the mistake.
Explored with irony, sexual innuendo, sarcasm, and stereotypical views of classes and nationalities, these themes help to give the play something closer to a modern-day view than is often found in Shakespeare's plays.
Humor in the show was based on farce, often relying on innuendo and misunderstanding, as well as physical comedy to punctuate the hare-brained schemes the characters would invariably conjure up to get themselves out of situations and dilemmas.
The humor often featured profanity, sexual references, drug innuendo, crude humor, bodily functions, and violence.
Shakespeare often used innuendo in his Comedies, but it it also frequently featured in his non-comedic plays, as in Hamlet act 4 scene v:
They were often bawdy in nature, making use of innuendo and double entendres and traditionally featured stereotypical characters such as vicars, large ladies and put-upon husbands, in the same vein as the Carry On films.
The subject matter of the former was often quite risqué for its time, though generally based on multiple misunderstandings or innuendo, rather than sexual misconduct as such.
Inspired by stage comedians such as Roy Rene, his style was bawdy, irreverent, iconoclastic, often smutty, sometimes deliberately camp, and laden with innuendo and double-entendre.
As mentioned in Safire's article, the food terms, especially the third term, shafafa, are often interpreted as having a sexual meaning or innuendo.
* Risqué double entendre, often wringing innuendo out of perfectly innocent phrases.
" She finishes her column by listing, with heavy sexual innuendo, the men in the news she finds attractive that week, often using a variation on her catchphrase " Crazy name, crazy guy !?!
The show was cancelled after airing only three episodes ; the remaining three episodes have never been aired in the U. S. Fish Police had a decidedly more mature tone than most other animated Hanna-Barbara series, with episodes often filled with innuendo and cases of mild language.
The belief that Victoria may have been Conroy's daughter has been generally dismissed by historians as a legend based solely on rumour and innuendo, often from sources hostile to the House of Hanover.
His raunchier songs often use innuendo, with lyrics that taken literally are perfectly benign.

often and encrypted
As sensitive information is often encrypted, signals intelligence often involves the use of cryptanalysis.
Virtual hard disks are often used in on the fly disk encryption (" OTFE ") software such as FreeOTFE and TrueCrypt, where an encrypted " image " of a disk is stored on the PC.
In the mid 2000s, UUCP over TCP / IP ( often encrypted, using the SSH protocol ) was proposed for use when a computer does not have any fixed IP addresses but is still willing to run a standard mail transfer agent ( MTA ) like Sendmail or Postfix.
Cipherspace or cypherspace is the encrypted ( and often pseudonymous or fully anonymous ) equivalent to cyberspace.
However, commercial DVDs are often encrypted, preventing access to the files without using the ripping software's decryption ability, which may not be legal to distribute or use.
Detecting a probable steganographic payload is often only part of the problem, as the payload may have been encrypted first.
( Rights to purchase programs for free-to-air broadcast, especially via satellite, are often higher in price than for encrypted broadcast.
Specialty channels and premium movie channels are most often encrypted ; in most countries, broadcasts consisting of explicit pornography must always be encrypted to prevent reception by those who wish not to be exposed to this sort of " adult content.
These were encrypted in primitive ciphers and codes, and often involved incredible breaches of security by Bolshevik cipher clerks.
Some systems have expanded offerings that include off-site encrypted resume and data storage, which are often legally required by equal opportunity employment laws.

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