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Page "editorial" ¶ 565
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stands and is
The work as it stands is not the entire book that Malraux wrote at that time -- it is only the first section of a three-part novel called La Lutte avec l'Ange ; ;
While some think we move too fast and others too slowly, Florida's record is a good one and stands out among the 50.
Laguerre Hanover is outstanding in type and conformation -- good body, plenty of heart girth, stands straight on his legs on excellent feet -- and has the smoothest gait.
the fire of love is dead, and Hardy stands, as the speaker does in the last poem of the sequence, over the burnt circle of charred sticks, and thinks of past happiness and present grief, honest and uncomforted.
Achilles, like Siegfried in The Nibelungenlied, is potentially the swiftest of men and may accordingly be called swift-footed even when he stands idle.
Neither is adequate if it stands alone.
The state is now faced with the immediate question of raising new taxes whether on utilities, real estate or motor vehicles, he said, `` and I challenge Mitchell to tell the people where he stands on the tax issue ''.
In this historic square are several statues, but the one that stands out over the others is that of Gen. Andrew Jackson, hero of the Battle of New Orleans.
water is Af and the H stands for hydrogen ; ;
stereo LSO 1065 ), but in this case it is the music that stands above the lyrics.
The Canadian Aboriginal syllabics are also an abugida rather than a syllabary as their name would imply, since each glyph stands for a consonant which is modified by rotation to represent the following vowel.
An aardwolf is about 55 to 80 centimeters long, excluding its bushy tail about 20 to 30 cm long, and one stands about 40 to 50 cm tall at the shoulders.
An abjad is a type of writing system where each symbol always or usually stands for a consonant, leaving the reader to supply the appropriate vowel.
** This is a distinguished work which stands out from, and above, many of the books and articles which have ben written in this century on Avicenna ( Ibn Sīnā ) ( A. D. 980 – 1037 ).
The house of his birth still stands in the middle of town and there is a monument to him on Front Street.
The area around Abensberg is characterized by the narrow valley of the Danube, where the Weltenburg Abbey stands, the valley of the Altmühl in the north, a left tributary of the Danube, and the famous Hallertau hops-planting region in the south.
In English a voiceless plosive that is p, t or k is aspirated whenever it stands as the only consonant at the beginning of the stressed syllable or of the first, stressed or unstressed, syllable in a word.
The original fossil skeleton is assembled and stands in the Hall of Dinosaurs at the Carnegie Museum of Natural History in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
Nevertheless, Canberra stands as an exemplary city design and is located halfway between the ski slopes and the beach.
Ann Arbor was founded in 1824, with one theory stating that it is named after the spouses of the city's founders and for the stands of trees in the area.
Church, Ministry and Sacraments in the New Testament Paternoster Press: 1993, p. 92f </ ref > Moving on to Ignatius of Antioch, Barrett states that here we find a sharp distinction between ' presbyter ' and ' bishop ': the latter now stands out as " an isolated figure " who is to be obeyed and without whom it is not lawful to baptise or hold a love-feast .< Barrett, C. K.

stands and lonely
" The New York Times writer also noted that " In his lyrics, as in his life, Hart stands as a compellingly lonely figure.
And in 1934, Ernst Krebs wrote :“ Thus now still stands Saint George ’ s sanctuary so lonely and forlorn there below as it did hundreds of years ago, and if one enters the church ’ s humble interior, one feels in this room as if sent back to a vanished time and only a train abruptly roaring by destroys the illusion and recalls the gap that divides the beginnings of the old place of worship from the present.

stands and lost
Balls were only replaced if they were hit into the crowd and lost, and many clubs employed security guards expressly for the purpose of retrieving balls hit into the stands — a practice unthinkable today.
The Browns finished 8 – 4 in 1952, but lost that year's championship game 17-7 after a muffed punt, several Lions defensive stands and a 67-yard touchdown run by Doak Walker scuttled their chances.
At the very end of the novel, where Superman stands poised to destroy the United Nations, Norman McCay makes him realise that, when he abandoned Clark Kent fifteen years ago after the murder of Lois Lane by the Joker and retreated into his Superman self, he lost this instinctive morality and thus the ability to be the hero Superman.
The charioteer has lost many features, including his chariot and his left arm, but he stands as a tribute to athletic art of antiquity.
The further charge that Bopp, in his Comparative Grammar, gave undue prominence to Sanskrit stands disproved by his own words ; for, as early as the year 1820, he gave it as his opinion that frequently the cognate languages serve to elucidate grammatical forms lost in Sanskrit ( Annals of Or.
The Phillies sank back to mediocrity during the mid-1950s after the departure of the " Whiz Kids ", their competitive futility culminating in a record that still stands: in 1961, the Phillies lost 23 games in a row ( a record since 1900 ).
The accident-free record of United States Navy reactor operations stands in stark contrast to those of America's primary competitor during the Cold War, the Soviet Union, which lost several submarines to reactor accidents in both its haste and chosen priorities for competing with superior U. S. technology.
A monument to the men lost in the disaster bearing this inscription stands in the cemetery in Caister and there is a pub called the " Never Turn Back " that is named after the incident.
A memorial to those lost in the Battle of Britain stands slightly to the south.
A driver lost control of his motorcycle and veered off into the stands.
The same rhyme continues with the line " Op April zes verloor Alva zijn fles " " On April 6th Alva lost his bottle " in which the word " Fles " stands for the town of Vlissingen, which was the next town to be caught by the Dutch rebels.
Nearby stands the elegant and imposing monument to Samuel Turner ( 1805 – 1878 ), treasurer of the Devonshire Hospital and Buxton Bath Charity, built in 1879 and accidentally lost for the latter part of the 20th century during construction work before being found and restored in 1994.
In 1930, when Tecumseh lost the county seat status to Shawnee, The Tecumseh City Hall now stands on that location.
The 10, 850-ton armoured cruiser, which went down in a heavy storm four days after the Battle of Jutland with only 12 surviving from its 655 crew, lies in 70 metres of water 1. 5 miles off the steep, desolate cliffs of Marwick Head, above which the Kitchener Memorial now stands as a silent memorial to those lost.
Even though not all the plant losses can be attributed to drought and land shortage and hence early consumption of immature crops, estimations go as far as more than 60 % of the false banana crop stands have been lost in some areas in SNNPR during the last 10 years.
A nation abolishing such subsidies stands to lose much of its family farm infrastructure to cheap imports unless a simultaneous initiative in another country, or in tax, tariff and trade to make up for lost subsidies, takes place.
Including tournaments and one-night stands, they played over 130 matches, all of them as professionals, with some results from the barnstorming pro tours lost or badly recorded.
The house has lost some of its original parts, but it still stands today and has a beautiful overlook of the Loire River.
On his way, he gets lost, and stands in the middle of a field.
Just off the A483, on the edge of Wrexham, the Gresford Disaster Memorial stands witness to the 266 miners who lost their lives after a series of explosions at Gresford colliery in September 1934.
The village stands on the site of a medieval town, founded in 1288, to replace an earlier town of the same name, sometimes known as Old Winchelsea, which was lost to the sea.
Bithorn won 9 games and lost 14 in his first season, but he rebounded in 1943 by going 18 – 12 with an earned run average of 2. 60 and completing 19 of his 30 starts, leading the league in shutouts with seven, establishing a record for Puerto Rican pitchers that still stands to this day.
The city was indeed one of the most important in mediaeval Portugal, as attested by its large number of monasteries and its royal palace ( now lost where the Cathedral stands ).
The sandy beach, which lost its Blue Flag status in 2012 due to water quality issues, stands in a sheltered bay.

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