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words and Geoffrey
Geoffrey had this individual in mind when he wrote his earliest surviving work, the Prophetiae Merlini ( Prophecies of Merlin ), which he claimed were the actual words of the legendary madman.
Geoffrey appears to twist Gildas ' words to obtain his reference to sodomy.
The same claim appears in Geoffrey of Monmouth's Historia Regum Britanniae, in a passage using some of the same words.
A recent version of this piece was recorded by the girl choristers that make up the group " All Angels "; the words set to the music from the ITV series Brideshead Revisited by Geoffrey Burgon.
* His life and work are chronicled, mostly in the artist's own words, in Out of the Picture, Milton Resnick and the New York School, by Geoffrey Dorfman, published by Midmarch Arts Press, NY.
English composer Geoffrey Burgon wrote a duet ( This Eane Night ) for two countertenors ( recorded by James Bowman and Charles Brett ) with words altered slightly to fit the canonical single melody, the second countertenor starting one bar behind the first.
According to linguist Geoffrey D. Kimball, the lyrics of the song are derived in part from Mobilian Jargon, an extinct Native American trade language consisting mostly of Choctaw and Chickasaw words and once used by Southeastern Indians, African Americans, and European settlers and their descendants in the Gulf Coast Region.

words and then
In other words, if F satisfies the differential equation Af, then F is uniquely expressible in the form Af where Af satisfies the differential equation Af.
But if no two lines of the regulus of multiple secants of **zg can intersect, then the regulus must be quadratic, or in other words, **zg must be either a Af or a Af curve on a nonsingular quadric surface.
As if in a trance, she repeats his words -- then realizes, with a shock, her own audacity.
Although it was at the Battle of The Little Horn, about which more words have been written than any other battle in American history, that the 7th Cavalry first made its mark in history, the regiment was ten years old by then.
The poem consisted of only two words, the word `` Wait '', repeated over and over at irregular intervals and with different inflections, and then the word `` Now ''!!
And then off he went so casually, to someone else with breasts better developed, more obvious in a lower-cut dress, someone without a mouthful of wire bands and an inability to find words that would hold him.
there was no Martian concept to match it -- unless one took `` church '' and `` worship '' and `` God '' and `` congregation '' and many other words and equated them to the totality of the only world he had known during growing-waiting then forced the concept back into English in that phrase which had been rejected ( by each differently ) by Jubal, by Mahmoud, by Digby.
Alphabets often come to be associated with a standard ordering of their letters, which can then be used for purposes of collation – namely for the listing of words and other items in what is called alphabetical order.
" Johnston glanced down at his leg wound, then faced Harris and replied with his last words: " Yes, and I fear seriously.
The key words here are fair and eventually-if characters ' ranks are close, and the weaker character has obtained some advantage, then the weaker character can escape defeat or perhaps prevail.
In other words AVL tree is a binary search tree where the height of the left subtree differs from the height of the right subtree by at most 1 level, if it exceeds 1 level then rebalancing occurs.
Newer files have a header that consists of six unsigned 32-bit words, an optional information chunk and then the data ( in big endian format ).
In other words, it is quite possible that actual existence may be ... an efficient cause of observable effects ...." He then launches into a history of attempts to conceptualize the inconceivable from the ancient Greeks to the present.
Stroustrup began developing C ++ in 1979 ( then called " C with Classes "), and, in his own words, " invented C ++, wrote its early definitions, and produced its first implementation ... chose and formulated the design criteria for C ++, designed all its major facilities, and was responsible for the processing of extension proposals in the C ++ standards committee.
In the Mahayana Mahaparinirvana Sutra, the Buddha insists that while pondering upon Dharma is vital, one must then relinquish fixation on words and letters, as these are utterly divorced from liberation and the Buddha-nature.
) In other words, if A is a linear operator and is a ket, then is another ket.
The words and, or, if ... then, not, for some, for every are not subject to rigorous definition.
By the well ordering principle, if there are positive integers that satisfy a given property, then there is a smallest positive integer that satisfies that property ; therefore, there is a smallest positive integer satisfying the property " not definable in under eleven words ".
In case the line is busy, prospective recruits are asked to meditate on the five magic words for a few minutes, and then try calling again.
In other words, if an ' uninhabited ' or ' infidel ' territory is colonized by Britain, then the English law automatically applies in this territory from the moment of colonization ; however if the colonized territory has a pre-existing legal system, the native law would apply ( effectively a form of indirect rule ) until formally superseded by the English law, through Royal Prerogative subjected to the Westminster Parliament.
In other words, if the orientation is reversed, then the direction of the curl is also reversed.
This concept is then no longer intuitively perceptible, but is denoted and fixed merely by words.
The construction involves replacing a common word with a rhyming phrase of two or three words and then, in almost all cases, omitting the secondary rhyming word, in a process called hemiteleia, making the origin and meaning of the phrase elusive to listeners not in the know.

words and editor
Lutz was also the former editor of the now defunct Quarterly Review of Doublespeak, which examines ways that jargon has polluted the public vocabulary with phrases, words and usages of words designed to obscure the meaning of plain English.
Murray resisted the second demand: that if he could not meet schedule, he must hire a second, senior editor to work in parallel to him, outside his supervision, on words from elsewhere in the alphabet.
On June 27, 1978, Gell-Mann wrote a private letter to the editor of the Oxford English Dictionary, in which he related that he had been influenced by Joyce's words: " The allusion to three quarks seemed perfect.
Symbolics ' Zmacs text editor, a variant of Emacs, was implemented in a text-processing package named " ZWEI ", an acronym for " Zwei was Eine initially "" Eine " being an acronym for " Eine Is Not Emacs " ( both recursive acronyms and puns on the German words for " One " (" Eins ", " Eine ") and " Two " (" Zwei ")).
Different versions of Truth's words have been recorded, with the first one published a month later by Marius Robinson, a newspaper owner and editor who was in the audience.
Additionally, Debs was visited in jail by Milwaukee socialist newspaper editor Victor L. Berger, who, in Debs ' words, " came to Woodstock, as if a providential instrument, and delivered the first impassioned message of Socialism I had ever heard.
In 1949, Doubleday editor Walter I. Bradbury accepted the story on the suggestion on Frederik Pohl, on the condition it was expanded to seventy thousand words and the title changed to something more science fiction oriented ; it was published in January of 1950 as Pebble in the Sky.
This version of the story — which was culled to 18, 000 words by an editor specifically for the serialization — was reprinted in newspapers across America, establishing Crane's fame.
This “ yeti discovery ”, in the words of National Geographic Magazine editor Bill Garrett, “ on-site research sweeps away much of the ‘ smoke and mirrors ’ and gives us a believable yeti ”.
The draft that Allen presented to the film's editor, Ralph Rosenblum, concluded with the words, " ending to be shot.
" Toff, who is also an editor for Oxford University Press, describes in some detail the etymology of words for " flute ," comparing OED, Fowler's Modern English Usage, Evans ' Dictionary of Contemporary American Usage, and Copperud's American Usage and Style: The Consensus before arriving at her conclusion: " I play the flute, not the flaut ; therefore I am a flutist not a flautist.
Following Greg, the editor would then replace any of the manuscript readings with substantives from printed editions that could be reliably attributed to the author: " Obviously, an editor cannot simply reprint the manuscript, and he must substitute for its readings any words that he believes Hawthorne changed in proof.
Mrs Beeton is perhaps described better as its compiler and editor than as its author, many of the passages clearly being not her own words.
In 1949, Doubleday editor Walter I. Bradbury accepted the story on the suggestion on Frederik Pohl, on the condition it was expanded to seventy thousand words and the title changed to something more science fiction oriented, and it was published in January of 1950 as Pebble in the Sky.
In 1870 he succeeded Dean Alford as editor of the Contemporary Review, but left it in 1877 owing to the objection of the proprietors to the insertion of articles ( by W. K. Clifford notably ) attacking Theism and founded the Nineteenth Century ( to the title of which, in 1901, were added the words And After ).
Dialogue editing is more accurately thought of as " production sound editing ", where the editor takes the original sound recorded on the set, and using a variety of techniques, makes the dialogue more understandable, as well as smoother, so the listener doesn't hear the transitions from shot to shot ( often the background sounds underneath the words change dramatically from take to take ).
" Before he had settled into his new printing office on Gay Street, Brownlow had become embroiled in a war of words with Knoxville Register editor John Miller McKee that lasted until McKee's departure in 1855.
When Abe Rosenthal, editor of the Times, accused her of trying to inspire readers to think " dirty thoughts " with these words, her response was, " Damn if I could fool you, Mr. Rosenthal.
Volume 24 is in two books, one of them being a full-sized book about the USSR ) – all with about 21 million words, and the chief editor being Alexander Prokhorov ( since 1969 ).
Mad editor Harvey Kurtzman spotted the word printed in the Polish language section of a multi-languaged " Instructions for Use " sheet accompanying a bottle of aspirin, and Kurtzman, who was fascinated with unusual words, decided it would make an appropriate but meaningless background gag.
An intercolonial rail system in the British North American colonies was never far from the minds of government and civic leaders and in an 1851 speech at a Mason's Hall in Halifax, local editor of the Novascotian, Joseph Howe spoke these words:
The copy editor needs to be able to easily read all the letters that make up the words.

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