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was and cognizant
From his own experience, Ravel was cognizant of the effect of new music on the ears of the public and he insightfully wrote:
The Sia ( hieroglyph ) was also used to represent " to perceive ", " to know " or " to be cognizant ".
His wife Emma was cognizant of the fact of some, if not all, of these being his wives, and she generally treated them very kindly.
I was cognizant of my complete indifference toward my own body.
Early in 1913, he was part of a delegation to lobby the provincial government of Arthur Sifton to grant a charter to such a company ; Sifton was cognizant of the political power of the UFA, and quickly incorporated the Alberta Farmers ' Cooperative Elevator Company ( AFCEC ) Limited, but refused the farmers ' request to guarantee bank loans to the new company.
Neither envoy was fully cognizant of conditions within the country, and neither succeeded.
It was now, probably, that he became more fully cognizant of his plan, and of what was necessary to its development.
Ibas attended the First Council of Ephesus in 431 as a presbyter, was cognizant of Cyril's autocratic conduct, and wrote in 433 the letter to Maris, bishop of Hardaschir in Persia, a letter which later became one of the Three Chapters.
Eastern was also cognizant of the proximity of Melbourne to the NASA Kennedy Space Center and introduced new air services accordingly.
United Airlines was also cognizant of the importance of Huntsville to the NASA space program and accordingly introduced twice daily nonstop Boeing 727-100 jet service to and from Los Angeles ( LAX ), another important aerospace center.
Zhang Liang was still the chancellor of Hán under the new arrangement but he was aware of his precarious position, and cognizant of how Xiang Yu had destroyed his hope of restoring the Hán state.
However, Gilbert's overall influence in the lives of the players was so well known, the Times reporters concluded that if Wooden was not cognizant of the specifics of Gilbert's favors for players, it was only because Wooden made no effort to discover those details.
The Ancien Régime administration was cognizant of the development of a new culture many years before The Conquest, and decided against pursuing any more involvement in the economically unsustainable colony.
Josette was willing, if not fully cognizant of what this would entail, until Angelique revealed a vision of what she would become.
However, in the episode " 72 Hours ," it is mentioned that Blanche was cognizant of the dangers of HIV and STDs ; she always used protection and knows every lover's full sexual history.
As it was under no constitutional obligation to enact a purely majoritarian system ( nor were they under obligation to promulgate a new electoral law for the Chamber of Deputies ), and cognizant of its declining popular support, the sitting parliament enacted a new electoral law in August, 1993 that provided for single-member districts while reflecting their own interests.
Here we run out of even " blue yonder " explanations that might be tenable, and, we still are left with numbers of incredible reports from credible observers .” On the 2nd December 1952 CIA Assistant Director Chadwell noted, “ Recent reports reaching CIA indicated that further action was desirable and another briefing by the cognizant A-2 and ATIC personnel was held on 25 November.

was and concept
Jean Bodin, writing in the sixteenth century, may have been the seminal thinker, but it was the vastly influential John Austin who set out the main lines of the concept as now understood.
They recognized that slavery was a moral issue and not merely an economic interest, and that to recognize it explicitly in their Constitution would be in explosive contradiction to the concept of sovereignty they had set forth in the Declaration of 1776 that `` all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights, that among them are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.
But though the Southern States, when drafting a constitution to unite themselves, narrowed the difference to this fine point by omitting to assert the right to secede, the fact remained that by seceding from the Union they had already acted on the concept that it was composed primarily of sovereign states.
What was perhaps more important than his concept of the nature of history and the historical method were those forces which shaped the direction of his thought.
There was only one way to accomplish this: by design, by drawing diagrams and sketches in which he probed the remotest corner of his mind for creative ideas to carry his concept.
what mattered was that a new concept of Americans was being born.
The concept of the Middle Kingdom at peace, strong and united under a forceful ruler, which had been only a longed-for ideal in the time of the Warring States, was finally realized by the establishment of a Chinese Empire under the Ch'in dynasty ( 221-207 B.C. ).
there was no Martian concept to match it -- unless one took `` church '' and `` worship '' and `` God '' and `` congregation '' and many other words and equated them to the totality of the only world he had known during growing-waiting then forced the concept back into English in that phrase which had been rejected ( by each differently ) by Jubal, by Mahmoud, by Digby.
He was closer to understanding it in English now, although it could never have the inevitability of the Martian concept it stood for.
`` I did not perceive this essential distinction either, First-Born '', Hesperus said at once, `` I was only practicing a concept that Jack taught me, called a deal ''.
This concept was emphasized by Sufi mystics like Rabia al-Adawiyya who paid attention to the difference between dedication to Allah ( i. e. God ) and dedication to people.
The zero was probably introduced to the Chinese in the Tang Dynasty ( 618-907 AD ) when travel in the Indian Ocean and the Middle East would have provided direct contact with India, allowing them to acquire the concept of zero and the decimal point from Indian merchants and mathematicians.
A third concept was proposed in 1923 by Gilbert N. Lewis which includes reactions with acid-base characteristics that do not involve a proton transfer.
The concept of an atom as an indivisible component of matter was first proposed by early Indian and Greek philosophers.
As it took many years for the name " The Ashes " to be given to the ongoing series between England and Australia, there was no concept of there being a representation of the ashes being presented to the winners.
Ford was the first company to build large factories around the assembly line concept.
The assembly line concept was independently redeveloped throughout history and not " invented " at one time by one person.
A peculiar feature of these Taoist thinkers, like the Seven Sages of the Bamboo Grove, was the concept of feng liu ( lit.
Rabbi Trugman states that in the last five centuries the concept of reincarnation, which until then had been a much hidden tradition within Judaism, was given open exposure.
The Arian concept of Christ is that the Son of God did not always exist, but was created by — and is therefore distinct from — God the Father.
Woolfson, a songwriter and composer, was working as a session pianist ; he had also composed material for a concept album idea based on the work of Edgar Allan Poe.
A grant application to build a proof of concept prototype was submitted in March 1939 to the Agronomy department which was also interested in speeding up computation for economic and research analysis.

was and transmigration
Kalimantan was the focus for an intense transmigration program that financed the relocation of poor landless families from Java, Madura, and Bali.
Whereas deforestation was primarily driven by subsistence activities and government-sponsored development projects like transmigration in countries like Indonesia and colonization in Latin America, India, Java, and so on, during late 19th century and the earlier half of the 20th century.
The Christian historian Socrates Scholasticus was of the opinion that Julian believed himself to be Alexander the Great " in another body " via transmigration of souls, " in accordance with the teachings of Pythagoras and Plato ".
As early as the fourth century, his orthodoxy was suspect, largely because he believed in the pre-existence and transmigration of souls, and apokatastasis, or universal reconciliation, ideas acknowledged to be beyond the pale of Christianity.
In his Comment on the Gospel of Matthew, which stems from a 6th century Latin translation, it is written: " In this place Jesus said Elijah was come and referred to John the Baptist it does not appear to me that by Elijah the soul is spoken of, lest I fall into the doctrine of transmigration, which is foreign to the Church of God, and not handed down by the apostles, nor anywhere set forth in the scriptures " ( ibid., 13: 1: 46 – 53 ).
In Plato's view the number of souls was fixed ; birth therefore is never the creation of a soul, but only a transmigration from one body to another.
He claimed that it was permitted to marry close relatives, such as a sister or a daughter, and he permitted sodomy and promoted the idea of transmigration of the soul.
These migrants came on their initiative, in search of more land than was available on the more densely populated islands, and as part of the national government's transmigration program, for which Lampung was one of the earliest and most significant transmigration destinations.
The transmigration program () was an initiative of the Dutch colonial government, and later continued by Indonesian government to move landless people from densely populated areas of Indonesia to less populous areas of the country.
Among the further details are these: that Scythianus lived " in the time of the Apostles "; that Terebinthus said the name of Buddas had been imposed on him ; that in the mountains he had been brought up by an angel ; that he had been convicted of imposture by a Persian prophet named Parcus, and by Labdacus, son of Mithra ; that in the disputation he taught concerning the sphere, the two luminaries, the transmigration of souls, and the war of the Principia against God ; that " Corbicius " or Corbicus, about the age of sixty, translated the books of Terebinthus ; that he made three chief disciples, Thomas, Addas, and Hermas, of whom he sent the first to Egypt, and the second to Scythia, keeping the third with him ; that the two former returned when he was in prison, and that he sent them to procure for him the books of the Christians, which he then studied.
Since 1970s transmigration of people to East Kalimantan was organised by the Indonesian government especially in areas near River Mahakam.

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