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popular and usage
But by comparison with the railroad, the motor car is a relatively new object of popular worship, so it is too much to hope that it may be brought within the bounds of civilized usage quickly and easily.
In more modern English usage, the term " adobe " has come to include a style of architecture popular in the desert climates of North America, especially in New Mexico.
In popular usage, abjads often contain the word " alphabet " in their names, such as " Arabic alphabet " and " Phoenician alphabet ".
Indeed most Arminians reject all accusations of Pelagianism ; nonetheless, primarily due to Calvinist opponents, the two terms remain intertwined in popular usage.
In popular usage, this term is often used to refer to unfounded or weakly based speculation, leading to the idea that " It's not a conspiracy theory if it's actually true ".
The modern usage of terms for mail armour is highly contested in popular and, to a lesser degree, academic culture.
While in popular usage the term " myth " is often thought to refer to false or fanciful stories, creation myths are by definition those stories which a culture accepts as both a true and foundational account of their human identity.
Eric Pement urged Melton to adopt the label " Christian countercult ", and since the early 1990s the terms has entered into popular usage and is recognised by sociologists such as Douglas Cowan.
In popular usage in western nations, " dictatorship " is often associated with brutality and oppression.
In popular usage, the El Niño – Southern Oscillation is often called just " El Niño ".
In the popular usage, hallitus ( with the president ) may also refer to valtioneuvosto ( without the president ).
Hypoglycemia ( common usage ) is also a term in popular culture and alternative medicine for a common, often self-diagnosed, condition characterized by shakiness and altered mood and thinking, but without measured low glucose or risk of severe harm.
In popular usage and in the media, computer intruders or criminals is the exclusive meaning today, with associated pejorative connotations.
Others prefer to follow common popular usage, arguing that the positive form is confusing and unlikely to become widespread in the general public.
The primary weakness of this analogy is the inclusion of script kiddies in the popular usage of " hacker ", despite the lack of an underlying skill and knowledge base.
Later that year, the release by Robert Tappan Morris, Jr. of the so-called Morris worm provoked the popular media to spread this usage.
In the 18th century, well after the term handfasting had passed out of usage, there arose a popular myth that it referred to a sort of " trial marriage.
According to Lemley, it was only at this point that the term really began to be used in the United States ( which had not been a party to the Berne Convention ), and it did not enter popular usage until passage of the Bayh-Dole Act in 1980.
Otherwise, the term has achieved very little popular usage in any context.
While popular usage translates it as ' Keep it simple, stupid ', Johnson translated it as ' Keep it simple stupid ', and this reading is still used by many authors.
The usage in this sense is encountered in some popular references on aerodynamics.
However, the term has historically been in popular usage for over a century to describe a region that extends from Horseshoe Bay south to the Canada – United States border and east to Hope at the eastern end of the Fraser Valley.
It predates C and most other popular languages in current usage, and has very different syntax and terminology.
In commentary on the term and its usage, scholars have noted it is both a popular colloquial term, and one that has negative connotations.

popular and mind
In the popular Chinese mind, Ch'an ( Zen ) was no exception to the ideas of coarse magic that dominated.
Pepper, the notion of the concept album came to the forefront of the popular and critical mind, with the earlier prototypes and examples from traditional pop music and other genres sometimes forgotten.
In their book Trust Us, We're Experts ( 2001 ), they write that industries have launched multi-million-dollar campaigns to position certain theories as " junk science " in the popular mind, often failing to employ the scientific method themselves.
This approach, the Animal, Vegetable and Mineral Kingdoms, survives today in the popular mind, notably in the form of the parlour game question: " Is it animal, vegetable or mineral ?".
This highly popular car was made with off-road use in mind, featuring a gearbox with a four-wheel-drive selector lever as well as a low-and high-range selector lever.
The term " mind map " was first popularized by British popular psychology author and television personality Tony Buzan when BBC TV ran a series hosted by Buzan called Use Your Head.
Buzan also uses popular assumptions about the cerebral hemispheres in order to promote the exclusive use of mind mapping over other forms of note making.
Combe created a system of philosophy of the human mind that became popular with the masses because of its simplified principles and wide range of social applications that were in harmony with the liberal Victorian world view.
Yet the most popular, and at the same time most stigmatized, use of psychedelics in Western culture has been associated with the search for direct religious experience, enhanced creativity, personal development, and " mind expansion ".
Orbison credited this cover in particular for reviving his memory in the popular mind, if not his career.
The distinction between the spiritual and the religious became more common in the popular mind during the late 20th century with the rise of secularism and the advent of the New Age movement.
On the subject of propaganda, it should be borne in mind that, contrary to the impression given in the popular American film The Patriot, British forces never adopted a popular response to partisan-style asymmetric warfare — retribution massacres of groups selected on a semi-random basis from the population at large.
The mind perceives itself as the cause of certain feelings, (" I " am the source of my desires ), while according to popular scientific models, feelings and desires are strictly caused by the interactions of neurons.
The last three have traditional associations in the popular mind with the Roma and Sinti people ( often called " gypsies ").
National interests and foreign affairs are still deemed to be beyond the average citizen's competence, and the idea that the party / government knows best is still prevalent in the popular mind.
Very popular with all the residents — both young and old — of Vere Street, Lambeth, she cannot really make up her mind as far as her love life is concerned.
When Kyrgyzstan became independent following the Soviet Union's collapse in 1991, there was a popular idea among some Kyrgyz people to make transition to the Latin alphabet ( taking in mind a version closer to the Turkish alphabet, not the original alphabet of 1928 – 1940 ), but the plan was never implemented.
The renown and prestige of Mayfair could have grown in the popular mind because it is the most expensive property on the British Monopoly set.
Although several significant exceptions leave the issue open to question, in the popular mind ( and traditional historiography ), the supporters of " Palamism " and of " Kantakouzenism " are usually equated.
William Wordsworth's short poem I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud has become linked in the popular mind with the daffodils that form its main image.
After Lowell's death in 1916, astronomers developed a consensus against the canal hypothesis, but the popular concept of Martian canals excavated by intelligent Martians remained in the public mind for the first half of the 20th century, and inspired a corpus of works of classic science fiction.
DOS 3. 30 was the last version designed with the IBM XT and floppy-only systems in mind ; it became one of the most popular versions and many users preferred it to its buggy successor.
The resulting popularity has contributed to the stereotypical Victorian male figure in the popular mind, the stern figure clothed in black whose gravitas is added to by a heavy beard.

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