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footnote and second
In 1772, Johann Elert Bode, aged only twenty-five, completed the second edition of his astronomical compendium Anleitung zur Kenntniss des gestirnten Himmels, into which he added the following footnote, initially unsourced, but credited to Titius in later versions:
Today the composer ( past or present ) of the musical score to an opera or operetta is usually given top billing for the completed work, and the writer of the lyrics relegated to second place or a mere footnote, a notable exception being Gertrude Stein, who received top billing for Four Saints in Three Acts.
The dagger is only used for a second footnote when an asterisk is already used.
This part of the second great quintet is an ironic footnote for Davis, who was not fond of Dolphy's music ( in a 1964 Down Beat " Blindfold Test ", Miles famously quipped, " The next time I see I'm going to step on his foot.
: The first idea < sup > 1 </ sup > for the first footnote on the page, the second idea < sup > 2 </ sup > for the second footnote, and so on.
p. 68 footnote )</ ref > He was succeeded by his eldest son, the second Baronet.
As an interesting historical footnote, she appeared between two sets by The Beatles when they made their second appearance on The Ed Sullivan Show of February 16, 1964.
In footnote 48a, Gödel stated that a planned second part of the paper would establish a link between consistency proofs and type theory, but Gödel did not publish a second part of the paper before his death.
Stendhal, by contrast, sees the second section of this chapter as a large footnote to the last line of the genealogy, a lengthy explanation of why Joseph is merely the husband of Jesus ' mother but also why Jesus is an heir to David.
Bernstein also went so far as to include a footnote that the bassist and the keyboardist of the Blues band and the keyboardist, bassist and drummer of the Rock band are to be recruited as percussionists for the stage orchestra for the second movement.
E. A. Wallis Budge, in his preface to the second edition of his translation of the Kebra Nagast, claims that Brancaleon was a monk who had come to Ethiopia to convert Emperor Zara Yaqob and debated Abba Giyorgis several times on religious matters ; ( Wallis Budge may have misremembered James Bruce's statement about Abba Giyorgis's opponent in that religious debate, " We are not informed of the name of Abba George's antagonist, but he is thought to have been a Venetian painter, who lived many years after in Abyssinia, and, it is believed, died there " -- explicitly identifying him as Brancaleon in a footnote.
The first mention of the second identity for a crossed module seems to be in footnote 25 on p. 422 of Whitehead's 1941 paper cited below, while the term ` crossed module ' is introduced in his 1946 paper cited below.
In the West, Tomoe Shinohara is perhaps best known in the anime world for contributing the single " Ultra Relax " as the second opening theme song for the series Kodomo no Omocha, though this single is a small footnote to a larger body of musical work.

footnote and edition
Moreover, in a footnote added to the 1915 edition of Three Essays on the Theory of Sexuality ( 1905 ), Sigmund Freud urged that homosexuals not be segregated from mainstream society.
Sir John Herschel, in a footnote of the 1845 edition of the Encyclopedia Metropolitana, posed two ideas for the visual correction: the first " a spherical capsule of glass filled with animal jelly ", and " a mould of the cornea " which could be impressed on " some sort of transparent medium ".
( Philologist and Rector of the Leipzig Thomasschule, Johann Matthias Gesner, for whom Bach composed a cantata in 1729, published a substantial Quintilian edition with a long footnote in Bach's honor.
To which Fitzgerald adds the following footnote ( 1st edition, 1859 ): " Bahram Gur-Bahram of the Wild Ass from his fame in hunting it-a Sassanian sovereign, had also his seven palaces, each of a different colour ; each with a Royal mistress within ; each of whom recounts to Bahram a romance.
The editor of the 1850 edition of Bishop Burnet's history of his own time adds a footnote to Burnet's comment:
Philologist and Rector of the Leipzig Thomasschule, Johann Matthias Gesner, for whom Bach composed a cantata in 1729, published a substantial Quintilian edition with a long footnote in Bach's honor.
The Midrash Rabbah on Genesis 37: 5 ( page 298 in the 1961 edition of Maurice Simon's translation ) says that the " Caphtorim were dwarfs ".< ref > Midrash Rabbah Genesis Volume I, Maurice Simon ( 39. 4M PDF page 346 of 560 ) Simon's footnote on the " dwarfs " says: " Kaftor < nowiki >
Such a manuscript was subsequently produced, some say concocted, by a Franciscan, and Erasmus, true to his word, added the Comma to his 1522 edition, but with a lengthy footnote setting out his suspicion that the manuscript had been prepared expressly to confute him.
Johann Jakob Griesbach | Griesbach's critical edition of the New Testament explaining at the footnote the reasons for the textual rejection of the Comma Johanneum.
The 1952-1953 edition of Jane's All The World's Aircraft lists the head office address as Suite 309, Kass Building, 711 14th Street, N. W., Washington, D. C., with the footnote that the company had reregistered in the U. S. The president is given as Whiting Willauer, and the fleet, which consisted of 23 Curtiss C-46 Commando and 4 Douglas DC-3 aircraft.
Richard Neville ( later Lord Braybrooke ) in a footnote from his 1825 edition of Samuel Pepys ' diary:
Ritter appeared to disavow part of his original work of 1940 by the addition of a footnote to the third edition of Machstaat und Utopie published in 1943.
In a footnote of the biography on Martyn Lloyd-Jones, D. Martyn Lloyd-Jones: The Fight of Faith 1939-1981 by Iain Murray, Murray notes the following: " Lewis is said to have valued ML-J's appreciation and encouragement when the early edition of his Pilgrim's Regress was not selling well.
: Though I could wish that the new edition of the Norton had reflected more independent thought and less reactive borrowing of the most visible innovations of our table of contents, I am very glad that Norton has now also adopted the six-volume format. 1 ( footnote ) Then again, perhaps the Norton hasn't simply been imitating us in its rapid inclusions of Marie de France, Hogarth, The Beggar's Opera, Frankenstein, and a range of new context groupings whose topics track ours with what may only appear to be beagle-like devotion.
A footnote to Moses 5: 31 in the LDS Church edition of the Pearl of Great Price states that "' Mind ,' ' destroyer ,' and ' great one ' are possible meanings of the roots evident in ' Mahan '" but no further explanation is provided.
ISBN 0-201-14452-2. first edition of this well-known book only mentioned SEQUEL in a footnote.
Marc Drogin noted in his instructional manual Medieval Calligraphy: Its history and technique ( 1980 ) " for the past half-century every edition of The Oxford English Dictionary has listed an incorrect page reference for, of all things, a footnote on the earliest mention of Titivillus.

footnote and Mill
The correct interpretation of Mill ’ s footnote is a matter of some debate.

footnote and says
A footnote in the New American Bible says: Some scholars take the call be eunuchs for the sake of heaven to be meant for those who have been divorced by their spouses and who have refused to enter into another marriage ” ( p. 1041 ).
Additionally, in one of his many drafts, in a footnote on Big Daddy's action in the third act, Williams deems Cat on a Hot Tin Roof a " play which says only one affirmative thing about ' Man's Fate ': that he has it still in his power not to squeal like a pig but to keep a tight mouth about it.
However the name is traditional and well established ; it can be found both in ( Macdonald, 1979 ), which says ( footnote on p. 12 )
A page footnote in some editions says that soon after the book was published, the difference between 6-day taxicab licences ( not allowed to trade on Sundays ) and 7-day taxicab licences ( allowed to trade on Sundays ) was abolished and the taxicab licence fee was much reduced.
" The footnote says, " In the case of more than two channels the encoder and decoder diagrams have to be adapted.

footnote and
* Use supra with note ” to indicate a footnote within the same piece ( internal cross-reference ).
Hebrew tribal names usually are referred to with the introductory phrase the tribe of ,” even if the base text does not utilize this phrase, with the additional words noted in an explanatory footnote.
The Hebrew and Greek counterpart for saying ,” when pleonastic, may be omitted in translation without a footnote.
The Greek Gehenna is rendered hell .” Tartarus is rendered lowest hell ,” with an explanatory footnote.
*" Wife-Beater's Bible " ( 1537 ): A footnote to I Peter 3: 7 is rendered And if she be not obediente and healpeful unto hym, endevoureth to beate the fere of God into her heade, that thereby she may be compelled to learne her dutye and do it .”
" A footnote to the census returns comments the decline in population is attributed to the discontinuance of the flax mill ”.
A commentary footnote in one of the older copies of the Authorized Version seems to agree saying, The only hint about the onycha that we can find is in the Arabic version, where we meet with ladana, suggesting.
Meyer, however, did refer to both as serious ” thinkers, a Meyer footnote even conceded Kirk in recent years ” had been more supportive of freedom, and he called Kirk ’ s views on freedom itself excellent ”.
The Ralph L Clark memo of the 29th July contains a footnote reference to a meeting, OSI: FCD: RLC mtw ( 28July52 )” which appears to indicate a 28 July 1952 meeting between F C Durant and Clark on this subject.
It also gives the original Portuguese in a footnote: Ó meu Jesus, perdoai-nos e livrai nos do fogo do inferno ; levai as alminhas todas para o Céu, principalmente aquelas que mais precisarem .”

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