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appendices and states
They will be printed in heaven ", while " Appendix Mem " states: " Where are the missing eight appendices?

appendices and by
An English translation of all three volumes, with notes, essays and appendices, was translated and edited by Rabbi Gordon Tucker, entitled Heavenly Torah: As Refracted Through the Generations.
The last trip's conclusion is followed by fourteen appendices named after letters of the Hebrew Alphabet, which share their names with paths on the Tree of Life.
" Rand is also disparaged in one of the appendices concerning property, ostensibly written by Hagbard, which serves as an explanation of anarchist Pierre-Joseph Proudhon's views on the subject.
In view of the sexual imagery in the source texts ( which Burton even emphasized further, especially by adding extensive footnotes and appendices on Oriental sexual mores ) and the strict Victorian laws on obscene material, both of these translations were printed as private editions for subscribers only, rather than published in the usual manner.
* Translated and with appendices by Paul Taylor and Yves Lafont.
It was re-published by the Elzevirs at Leiden in 1633, and again at Zürich in 1735, while an elaborate annotated edition ( prepared by Mr Coolidge ), with French translation, notes and appendices, appeared at Grenoble in 1904.
The most recent published version of the Radio Regulations, the " Edition of 2008 " contains the complete texts of the Radio Regulations as adopted and revised by WRC-07, including all articles, appendices, resolutions, and a subset of the recommendations issued by ITU-R ( previously known as the CCIR ) ( those " recommendations " which have a mandatory nature, as a result of being cited in the Radio Regulations ).
The work's forty-five chapters and ninety-five appendices make up the most complete study of Tacitus yet produced, backed by an exhaustive treatment of the historical and political background — the Empire's first century — of his life.
The whole work was reissued in a revised and slightly abridged form by Ashley in 2 volumes in 1879, with the title The Life and Correspondence of Henry John Temple, Viscount Palmerston ; the letters are judiciously curtailed, but unfortunately without indicating where the excisions occur ; the appendices of the original work are omitted, but much fresh matter is added, and this edition is undoubtedly the standard biography.
* D. Rawlins: " Methods for Measuring the Earth's Size by Determining the Curvature of the Sea " and " Racking the Stade for Eratosthenes ", appendices to " The Eratosthenes-Strabo Nile Map.
La Géométrie and two other appendices also by Descartes, the Optics and the Meteorology, were published with the Discourse to give examples of the kinds of successes he had achieved following his method ( as well as, perhaps, considering the contemporary European social climate of intellectual competitiveness, to show off a bit to a wider audience ).
Translated by and with appendices by Lafont, Yves and Taylor, Paul.
These were followed by a large number of appendices that contained extra monsters for particular campaign settings.
* Kozaczuk, Władysław, Enigma: How the German Machine Cipher Was Broken, and How It Was Read by the Allies in World War II, edited and translated by Christopher Kasparek, Frederick, MD, 1984: a history of cryptological efforts against Enigma, concentrating on the contributions of Polish mathematicians Marian Rejewski, Jerzy Różycki and Henryk Zygalski ; of particular interest to specialists will be several technical appendices by Rejewski.
The main body is followed by schedules ( i. e. appendices ) relating to some of the above-mentioned Parts and a series of prescribed legal forms, such as Form 5 which sets out the proper legal wording for a search warrant.
In the added appendices added to the 1909 re-print of Caius ' work, the editors suggested that the type of dogs may have been brought into the British Isles as early as 900 BC by a branch of the Celts moving from Spain into Cornwall and on into Wales, England and Ireland.
The research methodology referred to in the appendices of most VFM studies ( carried out by the NAO ) reflects on the use of a wide-range of market-research techniques such as focus groups, customer-interviews, expert panels, commissioned research, longitudinal studies.
The only significant biography of him is by Jan Coldewey and Tony Keulemans, Feathers to Brush, a book that includes a bibliography of the artist's publications, a genealogical tree and notably appendices detailing his spiritualism and a sample of his financial correspondence.
A large number of the inscriptions collected by Gamurrini in the appendices to Fabretti's Corpus inscriptionum italicarum are forgeries, and the text of the rest is negligently reported.

appendices and with
Analytic geometry has traditionally been attributed to René Descartes Descartes made significant progress with the methods in an essay entitled La Geometrie ( Geometry ), one of the three accompanying essays ( appendices ) published in 1637 together with his Discourse on the Method for Rightly Directing One's Reason and Searching for Truth in the Sciences, commonly referred to as Discourse on Method.
The book concludes with two appendices (), stories which do not feature a specific judge:
Even certain male deities representing regeneration and fertility were occasionally depicted with breast-like appendices, such as the river god Hapy who was considered to be responsible for the annual overflowing of the Nile.
Gallbladders, appendices, and colons can all be removed with this technique.
* < tt > book </ tt >: a titled collection of < tt > chapter </ tt > s, < tt > article </ tt > s, and / or < tt > part </ tt > s, with optional glossaries, appendices, and so forth.
The new edition added a second preface, a chapter about his life up to 1846, a chapter concerning the post-war period ( ending with his 1884 retirement from the army ), several appendices, portraits, improved maps, and an index ( 1886 edition:
This restores the work as far as possible to the state in which its authors left it and includes a substantial introduction that explains many of the changes, with appendices containing some music deleted early in the run.
Along the sides of the taeniae, tags of peritoneum filled with fat, called epiploic appendages ( or appendices epiploicae ) are found.
The original publisher split the work into three, publishing the fifth and sixth books with the appendices under the title The Return of the King.
The books are heavily annotated, with end notes and appendices, as Fraser ( in accordance with the pretence of the memoirs ) attempts to " confirm " ( and in some cases " correct ") the elderly Flashman's recollections of events.
The original book had two appendices, " Anatomical Sniglets " and " Extra Added Bonus Section for Poets " ( a sniglet that rhymed with orange ).
* An Old Hebrew Text of St. Matthew's Gospel, Translated ( translator, with notes and appendices )
* Report on the crisis and legal proceedings, published 26 April 2006 ( with appendices in Russian, appendices translated )
Due to their utility in saving work in laborious multiplications and divisions with pen and paper, tables of base 10 logarithms were given in appendices of many books.

appendices and war
According to Banks ' appendices to Consider Phlebas, the war began in 1327 AD, and continued for 48 years and one month, resulting in an eventual but total victory for the Culture.
It treats of the history and lessons of Caesar's campaigns and their application to modern warfare, and contains appendices dealing with phalangite and legionary methods of fighting and the art of war in general.

appendices and on
This includes a title, chapters, glossaries, appendices, and so on.
He was the author of the appendices on botany ( in part ) and ornithology in Potter's History and Antiquities of Charnwood Forest ( 1842 ).
Further history of the kingdom can be glimpsed from the appendices to the book, which also cast light on its origins.
In addition to the ship entries, DANFS includes appendices on small craft, histories of Confederate Navy ships, and various essays related to naval ships.
He edited the last twelve books of the Odyssey, with valuable appendices on the composition of the poem, its relation to the Iliad and the cyclic poets, the history of the text, the dialects, and the Homeric house ; a critical text of the poems and fragments ( Homeri opera et reliquiae, 1896 ); Homeri opera ( 1902, with T. W. Allen, in the Scriptorum Classicorum Bibliotheca Oxoniensis ); and an edition of the Iliad with notes for schools.
Further Essays on Capital and Interest ( 1921 ) was started as appendices to the second volume, but appeared as a third volume.
He served on the ecclesiastical courts commission of 1881-1883, and wrote the weighty appendices to the report.
In 1884 he graduated with two theses, one on Simon de Montfort translated as Simon de Montfort: Earl of Leicester, 1208-1265 ( 1930 ), without the thesis ' appendices of historical documents, and La Condamnation de Jean Sansterre ( Revue historique, 1886 ).
It includes early drafts of the novel's Prologue and the appendices on languages, family trees, and calendars, as well as the history of the Akallabêth, " The Tale of Years " ( chronologies of the Second and Third Ages ), the heirs of Elendil, and the making of Appendix A.
-note: very useful appendices on Law of Primogeniture and blood lines, including cases in the High Court in parliament ; as is the extensively researched footnotes.
* Notes on Kamba grammar: with two appendices: Kamba names of persons, places, animals and plants-salutations, 1926
The most comprehensive study of Irish souterrains is Clinton's 2001 work, containing chapters on distribution, associated settlements, function, finds, chronology and no less than thirteen appendices on various structural aspects of souterrains themselves.

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