Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Armies of the Imperial Japanese Army" ¶ 3
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

terms and permanent
In terms of land use, it is 20 % arable land, 6. 67 % permanent crops and 73. 33 % other as of a 2005 figure.
In its original permanent dispositions, it gave the President of the Republic a large amount of power ; however, some of these dispositions, such as the power of dissolving the Lower Chamber of Congress and serving eight year terms with possibility of reelection, were modified or eliminated after 1990, when the country regained its democracy and the Congress was reestablished.
With the election of a new Minister, the FCP is in the process of being wound down, despite campaigning to extend its terms of reference to make it a permanent advisory panel.
A 1934 treaty reaffirmed the lease terms and made the lease permanent unless both governments agreed to break it or the U. S. abandoned the base property.
It has a small number of permanent professors, appointed for life, and invites about 200 visitors a year for varying terms averaging three months.
The General Assembly cannot make binding resolutions, only ' recommendations ', but through its adoption of the " Uniting for Peace " resolution ( A / RES / 377 A ), of 3 November 1950, the Assembly declared that it has the power to authorize the use of force, under the terms of the UN Charter, in cases of breaches of the peace or acts of aggression, provided that the Security Council, owing to the negative vote of a permanent member, fails to act to address the situation.
Shouting terms at each other, they could not reach agreement on the terms of a permanent truce, but did agree to further mediation, which resulted in a five year truce.
The islands of Liamuiga and Oualie marked the furthest the Kalinago ever reached northwards, in terms of permanent residence, and probably would have succeeded in occupying the entire archipelago had the Europeans not come.
Stephen and Henry FitzEmpress's armies met again at Winchester, where the two leaders would ratify the terms of a permanent peace in November.
In terms of land use, 58 % of Ukraine is considered arable land ; 2 % is used for permanent crops, 13 % for permanent pastures, 18 % is forests and woodland, and 9 % is other.
There are 15 members of the Security Council, consisting of five veto-wielding permanent members — China, France, Russia, the United Kingdom, and the United States — based on the great powers that were the victors of World War II, and 10 elected non-permanent members with two-year terms.
Thus, the Council was to consist of ( 1 ) all U. N. members administering trust territories, ( 2 ) the five permanent members of the Security Council, and ( 3 ) as many other non-administering members as needed to equalize the number of administering and non-administering members, elected by the United Nations General Assembly for renewable three-year terms.
Alternatively, the magnetic field can be defined in terms of the torque it produces on a magnetic dipole ( see magnetic torque on permanent magnets below ).
Because of the fairly brief terms of the two presidents who preceded him, Hinsdale is known as the first permanent president of Hiram College.
But whatever terms were arranged, he did not pretend that they meant a permanent peace.
Under the terms of the Canada Health Act, all " insured persons " ( basically, legal residents of Canada, including permanent residents ) are entitled to receive " insured services " without copayment.
In the reign of Hadrian, however, the terms of the Edict were made permanent and the Praetor's de facto legislative role was abolished.
The terms genital modification and genital mutilation can refer to permanent or temporary changes to human sex organs.
Under his guidance the school flourished greatly — there were at one period more than 2000 students, Diogenes affirms, and at his death, according to the terms of his will preserved by Diogenes, he bequeathed to it his garden with house and colonnades as a permanent seat of instruction.
Stephen and Henry FitzEmpress's armies met again at Winchester, where the two leaders would ratify the terms of a permanent peace in November.
A confederation, in modern political terms, is usually limited to a permanent union of sovereign states for common action in relation to other states ..
The District court ruled in favor of the United States and issued a permanent injunction requiring the Heart of Atlanta Motel, Inc. to refrain from using racial discrimination in terms of the goods or services that it offered to guests or the general public upon its premises.
These include a limit to two five year terms, regional ( continental ) rotation of the appointee ’ s national origin, and the appointee may not be a citizen of any of the Security Council ’ s five permanent members.

terms and standing
The country's standing as the largest Caribbean economy, second-largest country in terms of population and land mass, with large bilateral trade with the United States, and its proximity to the United States and other smaller Caribbean nations make the Dominican Republic an important partner in hemispheric affairs.
Unable to decisively engage and defeat the standing Russian armies, Napoleon attempted to force the Tsar to terms by capturing Moscow at the onset of winter.
Daoud was the long standing prime minister, and while he instituted a republic he had Soviet leanings in terms of political allies.
The SPA's standing committee also appoints judges to the highest court for 5-year terms that are concurrent with those of the Assembly.
During the meeting, Edward had his army standing by, thus forcing the Scots to accept his terms.
Asked for a summary of the Jewish religion in the most concise terms, Hillel replied ( reputedly while standing on one leg ): " That which is hateful to you, do not do to your fellow.
Despite being the final major conflict between York and Lancaster ( Tudor ), it was one of the costliest in terms of life, as there was a mutual agreement that there would be a policy of no quarter for those left standing.
In this system, a physicians involvement is most likely to be the provision of medical oversight for the work of the ambulance crews, which may be accomplished in terms of off-line medical control, with protocols or ' standing orders ' for certain types of medical procedures or care, or on-line medical control, in which the technician must establish contact with the physician, usually at the hospital, and receive direct orders for various types of medical interventions.
It describes quantum interactions in terms of a standing wave formed by retarded ( forward-in-time ) and advanced ( backward-in-time ) waves.
Money came to be seen by many Hutus as a replacement for cattle, in terms of both economic prosperity and for purposes of creating social standing.
sometimes appointed by the session, in some denominations elders serve for life, others have fixed terms, and some churches appoint elders on a rotation from among willing members in good standing in the church.
In later life, Rogers remained on good terms with Astaire: she presented him with a special Academy Award in 1950, and they were co-presenters of individual Academy Awards in 1967, during which they elicited a standing ovation when they came on stage in an impromptu dance.
The terms used respecting the standing of the stake are, ' I'll see ' ( à moi le tout ) and Je tiens.
A system of terminology developed to codify the standing of each narrator, with some variation in usage of terms between the individual evaluators.
The terms anadromous and catadromous were of long standing ( and similar but not identical usage ); the other terms were coined by Myers.
Saline lakes includes things such as perennial lakes, which are lakes that are there year-round, playa lakes, which are lakes that appear only during certain seasons, or any other terms that are used to define places that hold standing bodies of water intermittently or year-round.
Many languages use the same inaccurate terms as English of " setting ," " descending ," or " sleeping ," the origin of these terms tracing back to the beliefs of earlier cultures, which did not understand that the sun is standing still in relation to the solar system and not moving within Earth's sky.
Ruddock dropped Morrison to his knees in the first round, but Morrison recovered to force a standing count in round two and compete on even terms for five rounds.
The ILP's insistence on standing by its long-held ethically based objections to militarism and war proved costly in terms both in terms of its standing in the eyes of the general public as well as its ability to hold sway over the politicians who ran under its banner.
The majority-Han Chinese revolutionaries who overthrew the Qing were fueled by failure of the Qing to defend China against western imperialists and the low standing of the Qing in terms of technology and science compared to the West.

0.670 seconds.