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essence and became
Ackerman was an early member of the Los Angeles Chapter of the Science Fiction League, and became so active in and important to the club, that in essence he ran it, including after the name change the Los Angeles Science Fantasy Society, a prominent regional organization, as well as the National Fantasy Fan Federation ( N3F ).
Show became a seminal and original production-in essence one of the first rock videos-on its release in 1964.
He often told me that he got the essence of the portrait while lunching with the model who, off guard, became more natural.
It was originally created to capture the essence of the echo properties of a building such as a cathedral, although it later became particularly associated with easy listening music.
The show's mixed media format stood out from the rest of the Disney Channel's programming of the time and, in essence, became the channel's flagship and definitive show of the early 2000s ( decade ).
In Fahrenheit 911, Moore makes nine allegations concerning the Carlyle Group, including: That the Bin Laden and Bush families were both connected to the Group ; that following the attacks on September 11, the bin Laden family ’ s investments in the Carlyle Group became an embarrassment to the Carlyle Group and the family was forced to liquidate their assets with the firm ; that the Carlyle group was, in essence, the 11th largest defense contractor in the United States.
The term " existence precedes essence " subsequently became a maxim of the existentialist movement.
According to Azerbaijani historians, the design comes from ancient times of Zoroastrianism as an expression of essence of that religion and it became subsequently a decor element which is widely used in Azerbaijani culture and architecture.
Tillman's support for measures that would aid the small farmer, as opposed to the Bourbons, became the essence of what was to be called " Tillmanism.
From this moment, the name Byron became synonymous with all the prohibitions and audacities as if it had stirred up the very essence of the rise of those forbidden things.
The very presence and abundance of water became the essence of the Persian garden.
While the details of the history alter according to the teller, with names and places shifting as they tend to do in any oral history, in essence the story of Eagle Claw began in the Shaolin Temple and in Chinese military training, became a family tradition passed on from parent to child for generations and eventually shed its air of secrecy with the advent of public martial arts schools.
Scott was reunited with his son Nathan Christopher at the end of Inferno, and Jean, having re-absorbed her stray essence imbued in Madelyne, inherited her maternal feelings for the child and became his proxy mother.
One of the coaches in 1975 was former NBA player Rod Thorn, who became the NBA's vice president of basketball operations ( or, in essence, the No. 2 man behind commissioner David Stern ) for a number of years.
In 1946, the organization was transferred to Air Transport Command and became, in essence, a military airline its Continental Division, managing transport routes within the United States.
In essence he cut his own supply lines and the Schutztruppe caravan became a nomadic tribe.
Upon his death his essence became infused in his armor so that Tomas could replace him as guardian of Midkemia.
The translation was a huge success and went into multiple editions in the following years ( illustration, left ) Despite Leoni's often eccentric alterations to Palladio's illustrations, his edition became a main vehicle for disseminating the essence of Palladio's style among British designers.
Additionally, the aliens acquired the shell that had held his essence, which became, through unknown means, the talisman that would be known to the Transformers as the Matrix of Leadership.
In essence generations of entire families became the agricultural servants and later the armed tenants.
Replacing the library ( which was too small ) as a dance hall, it became in essence the “ Ballroom of Romance ” It was used as a national school while the new building was being built in 1962 / 63 and also as a church when masses were held there during the refurbishments of St. Mary's Roman Catholic Church in 1977.
Bismarck expressed the essence of Realpolitik in his subsequently famous " Blood and Iron " speech to the Budget Committee of the Prussian Chamber of Deputies on 30 September 1862, shortly after he became Minister President: " The great questions of the time will not be resolved by speeches and majority decisions — that was the great mistake of 1848 and 1849 — but by iron and blood.
After this time, mysticism, as an effort to find again the essence of the God of their fathers, became more widespread.
In Benedict Spinoza's philosophy, however, there was no personal God, and perfection became a property of — even a synonym forthe existence of reality ( that is, for the essence of things ).

essence and voice
And I select this sentence as its pertinent summation: `` in essence the drama of his ( Eisenhower's ) Presidency can be described as the ordeal of a nation turned conservative and struggling -- thus far with but limited and precarious success -- to give effective voice and force to that conservatism ''.
The voice of freedom, the essence of civilisation.
While timing is of the essence in kigurumi shows as well, in this case the voice actor's voice acting is recorded beforehand, and it is left to the kigurumi entertainer to move and act based on the spoken lines.
The disc tube a great success and exceeded projected sales reaching number one twice in the lists of sales, its first single " the essence of your voice " reached number one in the Top 40.
" Senate Democratic leader C. J. Prentiss of Cleveland was quoted by The Columbus Dispatch on January 5: " In essence, voters are being denied their franchise of public participation and are not having a voice in this process.
" At its essence, it is what allows billions of dollars of securities to trade each day based on nothing more than a voice on the telephone.

essence and youth
In essence, it was 27-year-old Popović's return to the DS since he was active in the party's youth wing since the early 1990s.
His work is most influenced by the feeling of being abandoned ( in his childhood and youth ) and by his incurable illness, which caused him to see death as the ultimate essence of existence.
Kaguya has many properties of a Gaki, a form of spiritual vampire, and as such she requires the essence of young girls to maintain her youth and power.
His cousin Karṇa demonstrated even from his youth that he grasped the essence of Śaivism and was detached of the world.
Los Angeles Olympic Organizing Committee President Peter V. Ueberroth said Barnes “ captured the essence of the Olympics ” and “ portray the city ’ s ethnic diversity, the power and emotion of sports competition, the singleness of purpose and hopes that go into the making of athletes the world over .” Barnes was commissioned to create five Olympic-themed paintings and serve as an official Olympic spokesman to encourage inner city youth.

essence and like
Under Arianism, Christ was instead not consubstantial with God the Father since both the Father and the Son under Arius were made of " like " essence or being ( see homoiousia ) but not of the same essence or being ( see homoousia ).
In essence, it is a river within an ocean, and, like a river, it can and does carry floating objects.
One Australian scholar argues, " For Edmund Burke and Australians of a like mind, the essence of conservatism lies not in a body of theory, but in the disposition to maintain those institutions seen as central to the beliefs and practices of society.
( Early modern philosophers like Locke used the corresponding English terms ' nominal essence ' and ' real essence ').
Note that congruences alter some properties, such as location and orientation, but leave others unchanged, like distance and angle s. The latter sort of properties are called invariant ( mathematics ) | invariant s and studying them is the essence of geometry.
And that this power which the prophetic word calls God, as has been also amply demonstrated, and Angel, is not numbered different in name only like the light of the sun but is indeed something numerically distinct, I have discussed briefly in what has gone before ; when I asserted that this power was begotten from the Father, by His power and will, but not by abscission, as if the essence of the Father were divided ; as all other things partitioned and divided are not the same after as before they were divided: and, for the sake of example, I took the case of fires kindled from a fire, which we see to be distinct from it, and yet that from which many can be kindled is by no means made less, but remains the same.
Debates concerning the nature, essence and the mode of existence of space date back to antiquity ; namely, to treatises like the Timaeus of Plato, or Socrates in his reflections on what the Greeks called khora ( i. e. " space "), or in the Physics of Aristotle ( Book IV, Delta ) in the definition of topos ( i. e. place ), or even in the later " geometrical conception of place " as " space qua extension " in the Discourse on Place ( Qawl fi al-Makan ) of the 11th century Arab polymath Alhazen.
During these centuries many other things have been wrongly defined, for example, that the Divine essence neither is begotten nor begets, that the soul is the substantial form of the human body, and the like assertions, which are made without reason or sense, as the Cardinal of Cambray himself admits.
" Hope is an essential and fundamental element of Christian life, so essential indeed, that, like faith and love, it can itself designate the essence of Christianity ".
NiMH use positive electrodes of nickel oxyhydroxide ( NiOOH ), like the NiCd, but the negative electrodes use a hydrogen-absorbing alloy instead of cadmium, being in essence a practical application of nickel – hydrogen battery chemistry.
We fail to perceive them as being empty of a real essence, whereas in fact they exist much like māyā, the magical appearance created by the magician.
In like manner, then ... the objects of knowledge not only receive from the presence of the good their being known, but their very existence and essence is derived to them from it, though the good itself is not essence but still transcends essence in dignity and surpassing power.
William, like every other Canterbury archbishop since Lanfranc, maintained that Canterbury held primacy — in essence, overlordship — over all other dioceses in Great Britain, including the archbishopric of York.
Armstrong explained that God was not a closed Trinity but actually building a family through the Holy Spirit, which he considered God's powerful unifying essence and which guides and brings to remembrance those things which Christ taught, but is not a distinct personality like the Father and the Son.
The emphasis is placed on techniques of effectively overcoming the obstacles, although street-trials ( as opposed to competition-oriented trials ) is much like Street and DJ, where doing tricks with style is the essence.
So the Son was held to be like the Father but not of the same essence as the Father.
In essence, he was a loner with little love, but the bounty hunters that worked for Ouyang Feng, like Blind Swordsman and another of his best fighters, Hong Qigong, discovered the intangible secret of true love while Ouyang retained his attitude towards his fighters and the precious lessons that they have taught.
In a simple laser, each of these modes will oscillate independently, with no fixed relationship between each other, in essence like a set of independent lasers all emitting light at slightly different frequencies.
The Homoiousians held that God and Jesus Christ are of like essence, the Homoousians that they are, as stated in the Nicene Creed, of the same essence ( see ousia and hypostasis ).

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