Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Kinder, Küche, Kirche" ¶ 10
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Incidentally and term
Incidentally, he used the term " かくれ切支舟 " instead of the more common " かくれキリシタン ".
Incidentally, " Jihad " is also the term used by Muslims, roughly translating to " the struggle ", or as a reference to the " Holy War ".
Incidentally, the Swabians also used the term Schwyzer to denote all the Swiss, who called themselves Eidgenossen at the time, as an insult.

Incidentally and
Incidentally, there was a time when a Spanish officer visited Dunggoan ’.

Incidentally and women
Incidentally, both women went on to become Playmate of the Year.

Incidentally and
Incidentally, Telemachus learns the fate of Menelaus brother Agamemnon, king of Mycenae and leader of the Greeks at Troy: he was murdered on his return home by his wife Clytemnestra and her lover Aegisthus.
Incidentally, the director of Grandi, Brynjólfur Bjarnason, who oversaw what was Davíð s first privatisation, later became the director of the Icelandic Telephone Company which turned out to be Davíð s last privatisation in government ( 2005 ).
* Pickett s History of Alabama: And Incidentally of Georgia and Mississippi from the Earliest Period.
In the description of the Parish of Heidesheim drawn up sometime between 1667 and 1677 in Johann Sebastian Severus s Dioecesis Moguntina, it says of the Castle Mill :“ Incidentally, an important mill is vaunted – with a great house, barns and stalls, garden and other appurtenances.
Incidentally it was also the club s very first county title.
( Incidentally, in What Just Happened, Brunell s film is being produced by De Niro and it stars Sean Penn.

Incidentally and issue
Incidentally, the cartoon was later reissued as part of the Merrie Melodies Blue Ribbon program ( the closing music remained unchanged from the original issue, however there are prints which retain the original closing rings as well ).

Incidentally and .
Incidentally, there was an Atlas firing last night.
Incidentally, it needs to be noted that because auditors were permitted the section began increasing in numbers each week, until at last it swelled to such proportions that this `` free '' auditing policy had to be retracted.
( Incidentally, no Mexican nationals were involved.
Incidentally, one cannot miss the significance of this gesture, for Dickens reintroduces it associatively in Pip's mind at another moral and psychological crisis -- his painful recognition, in a talk with Herbert Pocket, that his hopeless attachment to Estella is as self-destructive as it is romantic.
Incidentally, only two did it before a home audience.
Incidentally, 14th Street and the Expressway is the high accident intersection during daylight hours.
Incidentally, I'm pretty famous in these parts: I'm called The Wrangler ''.
Incidentally, rugby was to make a similar change to its scoring system 10 years later.
Incidentally, the first public performance of the poem was on August 14, 1888, by actor De Wolf Hopper, on Thayer's 25th birthday.
( Incidentally, the date of Easter itself is fixed by an approximation of lunar cycles used in the Hebraic calendar, but according to the historian Bede the English name " Easter " comes from a pagan celebration by the Germanic tribes of the vernal ( spring ) equinox.
Incidentally by being king of Spain, he was also Roman ( Byzantine ) emperor in pretence through Andreas Palaiologos.
Incidentally, Bell used spin as his example, but many types of physical quantities — referred to as " observables " in quantum mechanics — can be used.
Incidentally, because of the limitations on speeds faster than the speed of light, notice that a rotating frame of reference ( which is a non-inertial frame, of course ) cannot be used out to arbitrary distances because at large radius its components would move faster than the speed of light.
Incidentally, Selkirk never set foot on Más Afuera, only on Más a Tierra.
Incidentally, the Automatic Ticket Counters with OS / 2 were more reliable than the current ones running a flavor of Windows.
Incidentally the name given to this process of a photon interacting with an electron in this way is Compton Scattering.
Incidentally, this relation is interesting also because it actually exhibits ζ ( s ) as a Dirichlet series ( of the η-function ) which is convergent ( albeit non-absolutely ) in the larger half-plane σ > 0 ( not just σ > 1 ), up to an elementary factor.
Incidentally, it seems to me that the expression " a predicate is predicated of itself " is not exact.
Incidentally, Thursday has its own icon showing either the Mystical Supper or the Washing of Feet, or both.
Incidentally, Groucho had heavy investments in Anaconda Copper and after the stock market crash of 1929 experienced a bout of depression as well as insomnia.
Incidentally this shows that a collection of representatives of simple left R modules is actually a set since it can be put into correspondence with part of the set of maximal left ideals of R.
Incidentally, this rejection of the hypothesis of a massless photon enabled him to doubt the hypothesis of the expansion of the universe.
Incidentally, males with a full mutation only pass on premutations to their daughters.
Incidentally, this causes him to look like an extraterrestrial giving Danny an idea for a prank.

term and
Now the most commonly understood meaning of the term ballad, sentimental ballads, sometimes called " tear-jerkers " or " drawing-room ballads " owing to their popularity with the middle classes, had their origins in the early Tin Pan Alley music industry of the later 19th century.
The term docetic should be used with caution, since its use is rather nebulous.
The ensuing debate reached an impasse as awareness grew that the very term docetism like gnosticism was difficult to define within the religio-historical framework of the debate.
* Niall Lucy points to the impossibility of defining the term at all, noting that: " While in a sense it is impossibly difficult to define, the impossibility has less to do with the adoption of a position or the assertion of a choice on deconstruction s part than with the impossibility of every is as such.
The term, recapitulation ,’ has come to embody Haeckel s Biogenetic Law, for embryonic development is a recapitulation of evolution.
He used this rather disparaging term in his 1830 novel Paul Clifford: He is certainly a man who bathes and lives cleanly ’, ( two especial charges preferred against him by Messrs. the Great Unwashed ).
His memo asked the staff to " use the term government-run health insurance ,’ or, when brevity is a concern, government option ,’ whenever possible ".
The term Hindu came to include persons professing any Indian religion ( i. e. Hinduism, Jainism, Buddhism or Sikhism ) after India became an independent country
In the English-speaking world, examples include the word bazinga from the CBS show The Big Bang Theory and, in Japanese, the term moe has come into common use among slang users to mean something extremely cute and appealing.
The term ' imperialism ' should not be confused with colonialism as it often is.
In 1998, the term open source was suggested as a substitute to free software because it avoided the ambiguous double-meaning of free in English and was not as value-laden as the term free software.
But Halliday s conception of grammar – or lexicogrammar ( a term he coined to argue that lexis and grammar are part of the same phenomenon ) – is based on a more general theory of language as a social semiotic resource, or a meaning potential ( see systemic functional linguistics ).
It may be questioned, though, whether active nihilism is indeed the correct term for this stance, and whether Nietzsche takes the problems nihilism poses seriously enough.
" One plausible view is that Nazōraean ( Ναζωραῖος ) is a normal Greek adaptation of a reconstructed, hypothetical term in Jewish Aramaic for the word later used in Rabbinical sources to refer to Jesus .< ref > G. F. Moore, Nazarene and Nazareth ,’ in The Beginnings of Christianity 1 / 1, 1920 pp. 426-432, according to which Hebrew Nôṣri the gentilic used of Jesus from the Tannaitic period onwards, would have corresponded to a hypothetical Jewish Aramaic * Nōṣrāyā, which would have in turn produced * N < sup >< span style =" font-size: 80 %"> e </ span ></ sup > ṣōrāyā.
The term nursery rhyme is used for " traditional " poems for young children in Britain and many other countries, but usage only dates from the 19th century and in North America the older Mother Goose Rhymes is still often used.
Cyberwar is a corresponding term which Arquilla and Ronfeldt propose to describe high-intensity information age conflicts.
in the early 80s, when feminists used the term political correctness, it was used to refer sarcastically to the anti-pornography movement s efforts to define a feminist sexuality ".
His astrological treatise, a work in four parts, is known by the Greek term Tetrabiblos, or the Latin equivalent Quadripartitum: Four Books ’.
Ptolemy's own title is unknown, but may have been the term found in some Greek manuscripts: Apotelesmatika, roughly meaning ' Astrological Outcomes ,' ' Effects ' or Prognostics ’.
" Grove Music Online also states that "... in the early 1960s term pop music competed terminologically with Beat music England, while in the USA its coverage overlapped ( as it still does ) with that of rock and roll ’.

0.220 seconds.