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principal and translation
The most important function of these DNS servers is the translation ( resolution ) of human-memorable domain names and hostnames into the corresponding numeric Internet Protocol ( IP ) addresses, the second principal Internet name space which is used to identify and locate computer systems and resources on the Internet.
" Lingard departed from usual Catholic practice by using early Greek manuscripts rather than the Latin Vulgate as the principal basis for the translation.
The principal source for the story is Plutarch's " Life of Mark Antony " from Lives of the Noble Grecians and Romans Compared Together, in the translation made by Sir Thomas North in 1579.
There are two principal reasons for concern about Ashton's translation of the title.
He published a series of German translations of the principal English writers on aesthetics, such as Charles Burney, Joseph Priestley and Richard Hurd ; and also produced the first complete translation in German prose of Shakespeare's plays ( William Shakespear's Schauspiele, 13 vols., Zürich, 1775 – 1782 ).
A parallel translation is then a lifting of a curve from the base to a curve in the principal bundle which is horizontal.
His principal pioneering achievement was the Eneados, a full and faithful vernacular translation of the Aeneid of Virgil and the first successful example of its kind in any Anglic language.
The principal editions since have been those by Kaspar von Barth ( 1623 ), P Bunyan ( 1731, in his edition of the minor Latin poets ), Ernst Friedrich Wernsdorf ( 1778, part of a similar collection ), August Wilhelm Zumpt ( 1840 ), and the critical edition by Lucian Müller ( Teubner, Leipzig, 1870 ), and another by Vessereau ( 1904 ); also an annotated edition by Keene, containing a translation by George Francis Savage-Armstrong ( 1906 ).
The book is a " principal spiritual text " for all the Eastern Orthodox Churches ; the publishers of the current English translation state that " The Philokalia has exercised an influence far greater than that of any book other than the Bible in the recent history of the Orthodox Church.
In general it is enough to explain the transition from a bundle with fiber, on which acts, to the associated principal bundle ( namely the bundle where the fiber is, considered to act by translation on itself ).
* Possible motions in the absence of external forces are translation with constant velocity, steady rotation about a fixed principal axis, and also torque-free precession.
His principal works, besides the translation of Aristotle and a number of studies connected with the same subject, are Des Védas ( 1854 ), Du Bouddhisme ( 1856 ) and Mahomet et le Coran ( 1865 ).
The first part of the manuscript contains prose, including the Mabinogion, for which this is one of the manuscript sources ( the other principal source being the White book of Rhydderch ), other tales, historical texts ( including a Welsh translation of Geoffrey of Monmouth's Historia Regum Britanniae ), and various other texts including a series of Triads.
The principal source is an inscription on Martin Behaim's 1492 Nuremberg globe which reads ( in English translation ):
As the principal professional association of translators and interpreters in the United Kingdom, it has become one of the primary sources of information on translation and interpreting to government, industry, the media and the public at large.
The Juvenalorden, or " Juvenal Order ", of 1907 was founded on the initiative of then student, later clergyman August Lindh, remembered for his widespread Swedish translation of the German student song O alte Burschenherrlichkeit ( in Swedish: Gamla klang-och jubeltid ), and with a tenuous connection to the original society in the form of the aging physician M. Aspelin, who had during his student days in Uppsala been introduced into the Juvenals by its principal figure, the poet and composer Gunnar Wennerberg ( 1817-1901 ) himself.
He was the principal translator into English of the works of Clarice Lispector, and met acclaim for his translation of Lispector's A Hora da Estrela, known in English as The Hour of the Star.
In 1825 he published an edition of Sir William Chambers's Treatise on Civil Architecture ; and among his other principal contributions to the literature of his profession are a translation of the Architecture of Vitruvius ( 1826 ), a Treatise on the Rudiments of Architecture, Practical and Theoretical ( 1826 ), and his valuable Encyclopaedia of Architecture ( 1842 ), which was published with additions by Wyatt Papworth in 1867.
In Hong Kong, James Legge, the principal of the Anglo-Chinese College invited Wang Tao to stay at the London Mission Society hostel and to assist him in the translation of The Thirteen Chinese Classics.
Josef Staudigl, the eminent German bass, was a member of the company, and at his suggestion Hatton wrote a more ambitious work, Pascal Bruno, which, in a German translation, was presented at Vienna, with Staudigl in the principal part ; the opera contained a song, " Revenge ", which the basso made very popular in England, though the piece as a whole was not successful enough to be produced there.
Xinomavro ( Greek: Ξινόμαυρο, English translation: " sour black ") is the principal red wine grape of the uplands of Naousa in the regional unit of Imathia, and around Amyntaio, in Northern Greece.
The principal work was done by Eric Carrén and is in fact a tertiary translation based on the German and other Darby translations of the New Testament.
In sociology, AI and programming language theory, actants are the principal concern of the actor-network theory, the activity of which is described as " mediation " or " translation ".
The first Protestant French translation of the Bible was issued at Neuchâtel in 1535, its principal authors being Pierre Robert Olivétan and Pierre de Vingle.

principal and embraced
Eventually, three of the four principal khanates embraced Islam.
Later, three of the four principal Mongol khanates embraced Islam.
Nordic theory was strongly embraced by the racial hygiene movement in Germany in the early 1920s and 1930s ; however, they typically used the term " Aryan " instead of " Nordic ", though the principal Nazi ideologist, Alfred Rosenberg, preferred " Aryo-Nordic " or " Nordic-Atlantean ".
Kristol continued on, and the magazine become known as the principal house organ of neoconservatism, a hostile label which Kristol embraced.
* Dr. Thomas P. Marshall Award-presented in honor of Springbrook High School ' second principal to a senior whose scholastic career exemplifies the attributes of dedication to the Springbrook community, academic excellence, personal initiative, and versatility through participation in athletics, creative arts, performing arts, or leadership roles embraced by Dr. Marshall.
Instead they embraced the Reformed faith although its inclusion of infant baptism was problematic for some and at Easter 1961 the Reverend J L Lincolne, former principal of the WEC International College in Launceston left the fellowship and established a new college and congregation based on the 1689 Baptist Confession of Faith.
Owen ’ s time as principal was not an easy one: he fought a sustained battle for Lampeter to be included in the newly formed federal University of Wales, which had already embraced the colleges at Aberystwyth, Bangor and Cardiff.
His principal contributions were through his ideas of psychobiology ( or alternatively, ergasiology, a term he coined from the Greek words for working and doing ), by which Meyer designated an approach to psychiatric patients that embraced researching and noting all biological, psychological, and social factors relevant to a case — thus his emphasis on collecting detailed case histories for patients, paying particular attention to the social and environmental background to a patient's upbringing.
NJHP, ACHS, and ACS all embraced democratic shared governance by the students, staff, principal, and parents.

principal and first
Emotional maturity is the result of many factors, the principal ones being the experiences of the first few years of the child's life.
In their very first collages, Braque and Picasso draw or paint over and on the affixed paper or cloth, so that certain of the principal features of their subjects as depicted seem to thrust out into real, bas-relief space -- or to be about to do so -- while the rest of the subject remains imbedded in, or flat upon, the surface.
Naming the central ray passing through the entrance pupil the axis of the pencil or principal ray, it can be said: the rays of the pencil intersect, not in one point, but in two focal lines, which can be assumed to be at right angles to the principal ray ; of these, one lies in the plane containing the principal ray and the axis of the system, i. e. in the first principal section or meridional section, and the other at right angles to it, i. e. in the second principal section or sagittal section.
This ray, named by Abbe a principal ray ( not to be confused with the principal rays of the Gaussian theory ), passes through the center of the entrance pupil before the first refraction, and the center of the exit pupil after the last refraction.
Also in that year, she was made one of the visiting physicians of the East London Hospital for Children, becoming the first woman in Britain to be appointed to a medical post, but she found the duties of these two positions to be incompatible with her principal work in her private practice and the dispensary, as well as her role as a new mother, so she resigned from these posts by 1873.
In the United States, under DGA rules, directors receive a minimum of ten weeks after completion of principal photography to prepare their first cut.
The Christian groups first called " gnostic " a branch of Christianity, however Joseph Jacobs and Ludwig Blau ( Jewish Encyclopedia, 1911 ) note that much of the terminology employed is Jewish and note that this " proves at least that the principal elements of gnosticism were derived from Jewish speculation, while it does not preclude the possibility of new wine having been poured into old bottles.
In 1896, Booker T. Washington, the first principal and president of the Tuskegee Institute, invited Carver to head its Agriculture Department.
The " ground state ", i. e. the state of lowest energy, in which the electron is usually found, is the first one, the 1s state ( principal quantum level n
Notice that neither the square root nor the principal square root function is the inverse of x < sup > 2 </ sup > because the first is not single-valued, and the second returns-x when x is negative.
And when Pilate, at the suggestion of the principal men amongst us, condemned him to the cross, those that loved him at the first did not forsake him.
It was to be the first major city of the southern Baltic and, after 1282, a principal trading centre in the Hanseatic League.
It was the first permanent international organization whose principal mission was to maintain world peace.
The first are laterites where the principal ore minerals are nickeliferous limonite: ( Fe, Ni ) O ( OH ) and garnierite ( a hydrous nickel silicate ): ( Ni, Mg )< sub > 3 </ sub > Si < sub > 2 </ sub > O < sub > 5 </ sub >( OH )< sub > 4 </ sub >.
The violins are divided into two groups, first violin and second violin, each with its principal.
The principal first violin is called the concertmaster ( or " leader " in the UK ) and is considered the leader of not only the string section, but of the entire orchestra, subordinate only to the conductor.
Most sections also have an assistant principal ( or co-principal or associate principal ), or in the case of the first violins, an assistant concertmaster, who often plays a tutti part in addition to replacing the principal in his or her absence.

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