Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Matthew Thornton" ¶ 17
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

word and we
As a word of caution, we should be aware that in actual practice no message is purely one of the four types, question, command, statement, or exclamation.
May we have a word with you ''??
Therefore, what we must prove or disprove is that there were Saxons, in the broad sense in which we must construe the word, in the area of the Saxon Shore at the time it was called the Saxon Shore.
It may be thought unfortunate that he was called on entirely by accident to perform, if again we may trust the opening of the oratio, for it marks the beginning for us of his use of his peculiar form of witty word play that even in this Latin banter has in it the unmistakable element of viciousness and an almost sadistic delight in verbally tormenting an adversary.
Furthermore, Bern decrees that we must do as we are ordered by the Council, preach only the word of God and stop meddling in politics ''!!
She'd found one and she hadn't said a word while Big Hans and I had hunted and hunted as we always did all winter, every winter since the spring that Hans had come and I had looked in the privy and found the first one.
Any alteration of one of these factors is distortion, although we generally use that word only for effects so pronounced that they can be stated quantitatively on the basis of standard tests.
Applying the techniques developed at Harvard for generating a paradigm from a representative form and its classification, we can add all forms of a word to the dictionary at once.
In our disbelief we think that we can no longer even use the word and so are unable to even name the elemental power which is so vividly real in this play.
And so today when we examine the structure of our knowledge of the atom and of the universe, we are forced to conclude that the best word to describe our universe is music.
this was not virtue as we understand the word today, and it did not mean an abandonment of the belief in magic manipulation.
Then she said, `` Allons '', and we got up and went to my hotel without another word.
The word amphibian became restricted in the taxonomical sense to what we now use around 1600, with the taxon " Amphibia " first published in scientific classification circa 1819.
The main recent sense of the word “ art ” is roughly as an abbreviation for creative art or “ fine art .” Here we mean that skill is being used to express the artist ’ s creativity, or to engage the audience ’ s aesthetic sensibilities, or to draw the audience towards consideration of the “ finer ” things.
To show the derivation clearly, we propose that the stress should be on the penultimate syllable, the second half of the word being pronounced like " ptosis " ( with the " p " silent ), which comes from the same root " to fall ", and is already used to describe the drooping of the upper eyelid.
However, as more people gradually moved from working the land to living in towns ( especially those who could read and write, the only people whose use of language we now know ), the word harvest lost its reference to the time of year and came to refer only to the actual activity of reaping, and autumn, as well as fall, began to replace it as a reference to the season.
" WIR " is both an abbreviation of Wirtschaftsring and the word for " we " in German, reminding participants that the economic circle is also a community.
Bliss found especially useful their " triangle of reference ": the physical thing or " referent " that we perceive would be represented at the right angle ; the meaning that we know by experience ( our implicit definition of the thing ), at the top angle ; and the physical word that we speak or write, at the left angle.
In this section we consider codes, which encode each source ( clear text ) character by a code word from some dictionary, and concatenation of such code words give us an encoded string.

word and seriously
Americans tend to apply quotations when signifying doubt of veracity ( sarcastically or seriously ), to imply another meaning to a word or to imply a cynical take on a paraphrased quotation, without punctuation at all.
Whewell proposed the word again more seriously ( and not anonymously ) in his 1840 The Philosophy of the Inductive Sciences:
Anita Hoffman liked the word, but felt The New York Times and other " strait-laced types " needed a more formal name to take the movement seriously.
* The book has spawned the word " Pooterish " to describe a tendency to take oneself excessively seriously.
In December he received word that his father was dead, and that his sister, Susan, was seriously ill.
Oaths are taken very seriously in the Book of the Law, and severe spiritual penalties are forewarned upon all who break their solemn word, once given.
Despite many stories in the British press, the word was never officially used by the EU nor was its mandatory use ever seriously considered.
While many businesses did not take the Commodore 64 seriously as a business machine, the Commodore 64 was still widely used for many important tasks, including computer graphics creation, desktop publishing, and word processing.
The name Walter Mitty and the derivative word " Mittyesque " have entered the English language, denoting an ineffectual person who spends more time in heroic daydreams than paying attention to the real world, or more seriously, one who intentionally attempts to mislead or convince others that he is something that he is not.
Allah then takes another oath on the heaven and the earth to say that, whatever being said here is word of Allah and must be taken very seriously.
Lobo takes his promises very seriously ; he keeps his reputation by keeping his word.
But Krishna asks him, did he seriously gave a thought about the consequences before giving such a word to his mother ( to support the weak side ).
The Low Country origin of the word " wayzgoose " has never seriously been disputed by etymologists, seeing that much early chapel terminology was borrowed from Low Country printers by their English apprentices ( and later journeymen ).
But Krishna asks him, did he seriously gave a thought about the consequences before giving such a word to his mother ( to support the weak side ).
" Jokes are sometimes taken seriously ... if such is the case, and thereby the person deceived is led to give valuable services in the full belief and expectation that the joker is in earnest, the law will also take the joker at his word, and give him good reason to smile.

word and earnestly
# Dear reader, for the above we contend earnestly, and you, with all men, are entreated to hear, to examine and accept it as the word, which began to be spoken by the Lord, and the faith once delivered to the saints ( Jude 3 ).
Thereby, merit is acquired by devoutly repeating, comprehending and living by the sacred word every day so as to progressively reveal the divine and ultimate truth to the person who earnestly seeks it:
" To live constantly above snobbery of word or deed ; to place scholarship before social obligations and character before appearances ; to be, in the best sense, democratic rather than " exclusive ", and loveable rather than " popular "; to work earnestly, to speak kindly, to act sincerely, to choose thoughtfully that course which occasion and conscience demands ; to be womanly always ; to be discouraged never ; in a word, to be loyal under any and all circumstances to my Fraternity and her highest teachings and to have her welfare ever at heart that she may be a symphony of high purpose and helpfulness in which there is no discordant note.

word and recommend
) The final segment of each show, called Book Reviews, began with Burton's introductory phrase, " But you don't have to take my word for it ," and features children giving capsule reviews of books they recommend.
One might recommend collective conscience as a superior translation of Durkheim's concept, in part due to the busy association of the word " consciousness " with both Marxist and Freudian thought, but also as " a conscience for Durkheim is pre-eminently the organ of sentiments and representations ; it is not the rational organ that the term consciousness would imply.
With word of French plans to occupy Egypt, Nelson wrote to Berry in late 1797, ' If you mean to marry, I would recommend your doing it speedily, or the to-be Mrs. Berry will have very little of your company, for I am well, and you may expect to be called for every hour '.

word and practice
ASL grammar was obscured for much of its history by the practice of glossing it rather than transcribing it ( see Writing systems below ), a practice which conveyed little of its grammar apart from word order.
The word is also used in a qualitative sense of, a person creative in, innovative in, or adept at, an artistic practice.
Since the development of cannon, the word " artillery " in practice has largely meant cannon ; in contemporary usage it usually refers to shell-firing guns, howitzers, mortars, and rockets.
Ogden's word lists include only word roots, which in practice are extended with the defined set of affixes and the full set of forms allowed for any available word ( noun, pronoun, or the limited set of verbs ).
It is widespread practice in the media in the UK ( and elsewhere ) to use the word Europe to mean continental Europe ; that is, " Europe " excludes Britain, Iceland and Ireland ( though the term is sometimes used to refer to the European Union ).
The word is often used in yogic practice to refer to celibacy or denying pleasure, but this is only a small part of what brahmacharya represents.
In England, the clerks of Robert, 1st Earl of Gloucester, made a practice of using the Latin word consul rather than the more common comes when translating his title of ' Earl '.
The checksum algorithms that are most used in practice, such as Fletcher's checksum, Adler-32, and cyclic redundancy checks ( CRCs ), address these weaknesses by considering not only the value of each word but also its position in the sequence.
The word in English can mean either " including a wide variety of things ; all-embracing " or " of the Roman Catholic faith " as " relating to the historic doctrine and practice of the Western Church.
*" Zi Gong asked, saying, " Is there one word that may serve as a rule of practice for all one's life?
A writer of hymns is known as a hymnist or hymnodist, and the practice of singing hymns is called hymnody ; the same word is used for the collectivity of hymns belonging to a particular denomination or period ( e. g. " nineteenth century Methodist hymnody " would mean the body of hymns written and / or used by Methodists in the 19th century ).
The # follows standard practice in denoting a word boundary ; that is, # at the beginning denotes word-initial.
Jains practice Samayika, which is a Sanskrit word meaning equanimity.
In practice, however, this distinction is of little significance when referring to residents of the United States, most of whom are of Latin American origin and can theoretically be called by either word.
The word Mormon is often associated with polygamy ( or plural marriage ), which was a distinguishing practice of many early Mormons ; however it was renounced by the LDS Church in 1890,
* 無, Mu ( negative ), a Japanese and Korean word important in Zen practice
( The Wonderful Dharma of the Lotus ), Nichiren added to the title the word Namu ( devotion to ), and declared on 28 April 1253, the chanting of the phrase Nam ( u ) Myoho Renge Kyo as his basic practice for revealing one ’ s Buddha nature in daily life.
In most jurisdictions, physicians ( in either sense of the word ) need government permission to practice.
The practice is sometimes contrasted with what is called " believer's baptism ", or credobaptism, from the Latin word credo meaning " I believe ", which is the religious practice of baptising only individuals who personally confess faith in Jesus, therefore excluding underage children.
The story of Samson's wedding feast alludes to the Philistine practice of engaging in week-long drinking parties, as the Hebrew word mishkeh, translated as " strong drink " in Judges 14: 10, indicates a " drinking feast.

2.015 seconds.