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Page "Book of Nahum" ¶ 11
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comes and conclusion
Church, Ministry and Sacraments in the New Testament Paternoster Press: 1993, p. 95 </ ref > Jalland comes to a similar conclusion and locates the change from the " polyepiscopacy " of the house churches in Rome to monepiscopacy as occurring before the middle of the second century.
* 1943 – World War II: The Battle of Stalingrad comes to conclusion as Soviet troops accept the surrender of 91, 000 remnants of the Axis forces.
Hengist holds counsel, considers several strategies, yet comes to the conclusion that the Saxons should rather make a show of peace.
Yom Kippur comes to an end with the blowing of the shofar, which marks the conclusion of the fast.
He reviewed the collection of poems for the 2 June 1816 Examiner, and, in his analysis, he attacked the fragmentary nature of the work and argued, " The fault of Mr Coleridge is, that he comes to no conclusion ... from an excess of capacity, he does little or nothing " and that the poem revealed that " Mr Coleridge can write better nonsense verse than any man in English.
Yom Kippur comes to an end with a recitation of Shema Yisrael and the blowing of the shofar, which marks the conclusion of the fast.
However Durdey comes to the conclusion that the decisive factors were to use his " vast inheritance " to provide himself with a house that was " impressive, dominant and suitable for Cheshire's greatest landowner ".
His 1963 paper treats, like Doob ( 1949 ), the finite case and comes to a satisfactory conclusion.
Socrates comes to the conclusion that this is absurd and therefore he discards the birdcage analogy.
In his book The Silence of God: the Answer of the Buddha, Raimundo Panikkar analyzes the fourteen unanswerable questions in the context of Buddhist-Christian dialogue, and comes to the conclusion that the Buddha's position can best be described as " transcendental apophaticism ," i. e., a position in which the transcendent ( in this case, nirvana ), is defined through negation.
Wadsworth comes to the conclusion that he knows who the murderer is, and runs through a frantic, madcap re-enactment of the entire evening with the guests in tow.
The British philologist Denys Page comes to the following conclusion about Alcman's dialect in his influential monograph ( 1951 ):
Upon his return to Constantinople at the successful conclusion of peace talks, Stilicho was promoted to comes stabuli and later to general ( magister militum ).
Grant comes to the firm conclusion that King Richard was totally innocent of the death of the Princes.
The case finally comes to a conclusion as the mob led by their main Sparta connection Lewis Alvin Epp orders Lana ’ s farm house burnt down after she refuses to be bought out giving them access to Sparta ’ s south side.
In " Parasites Lost ", due to his incompetence as a physician, he comes to the conclusion that Fry, who is frequently injured, is a hypochondriac, an accusation he makes when Fry sits before Zoidberg with a pipe through his chest.
" The parable, though, is more condensed than the allegory: a single principle comes to bear, and a single moral is deduced as it dawns on the reader or listener that the conclusion applies equally well to his own concerns.
When they examine the plane's tail and each see different registration numbers, Sheckly comes to a conclusion: the plane is not real but merely an illusion.
However, she comes to the conclusion that the number is exactly the same either way.
If parliament comes to a different conclusion during the second reading, a third reading will be held at least three days later, repeating the debate and vote, and may adopt the amendments from the second reading or finally dismiss the bill.
Eliot Slater comes to the same conclusion in his statistical examination of the vocabulary of all three Henry VI plays, arguing that 1 Henry VI was written either immediately before or immediately after 3 Henry VI, and so must have been written last.
As the ringing grows louder, the narrator comes to the conclusion that it is the heartbeat of the old man coming from under the floorboards.
Starfleet comes to the conclusion that Gowron is in fact a changeling through faulty information leaked to Odo.
Chow and Su each nurse suspicions about their own spouse's fidelity ; each comes to the conclusion that their spouses have been seeing each other.

comes and with
In the last pages of the book Sibylla comes to Rome to seek an audience with the great Pope and to give her confession.
While my memory holds with relentless tenacity, as I cannot too often stress, to my wrongs, when it comes to my shames, it gestures and jokes and toys with chronology like a prestidigitator in the hope of distracting me from them.
If Jews are identified as a religious body in a controversy that comes before a national or international tribunal, it is obviously compatible with the goal of human dignity to protect freedom of worship.
Edward Rawson, secretary of the colony of Massachusetts Bay, described him as `` a man whose spirit was stark drunk with blasphemies and insolence, a corrupter of the truth, a disturber of the peace wherever he comes ''.
With the knowledge that the kingdom comes by obedience to the moral law in our relations with all people, we have a firm intellectual grasp on both the means and the ends of our lives.
he usually draws some kind of comparison with the jazz tradition and the poem he is reading -- for instance, he draws the parallel between a poem he reads about an Oriental courtesan waiting for the man she loves, and who never comes, and the old blues chants of Ma Rainy and other Negro singers -- but usually the comparison is specious.
Many home-bound subway riders utilizing the Flushing-Main Street express are daily confronted with the sight of the local departing from the Woodside station as their express comes to a stop, leaving them stranded and strained.
We said there that it was necessary `` that a registrant be given an opportunity to rebut ( the Department's ) recommendation when it comes to the Appeal Board, the agency with the ultimate responsibility for classification ''.
This comes not alone from high-set, high-rep training, but from certain definition-specialization exercises which the champion selects for himself with the knowledge of exactly what works best for him.
I fingered it and had the feeling of adequacy that comes with the right texture, tilth and body.
When winter comes be ready with additional mulch.
If we fail to develop the means to hunt down and destroy the enemy's military force with extreme care and precision, and if war comes in spite of our most ardent desires for peace, our choice of alternatives will be truly frightening.
Majestic Pick comes next, with a mile in 2:30-:33.2.
single-shot Remington 514C ( around $20 ), which comes with a 21-inch barrel and a short -- 12-1/2-inch -- stock ; ;
Then it is marked on the inside where it comes in contact with the transom, frames, keelson and all the battens.
The American Automobile Association, computing the cost for two people to vacation by automobile, comes up with an average daily expenditure figure of $29.
When it comes to rate of early growth, the Indian python leads with a figure of about 3 feet 6 inches per year for the first two years, more or less.
and for this statement the best evidence comes within the five years following the publication of Utopia, when Martin Luther elaborates a new perception of the nature of the Divine's encounter with man.
The final example of the failure to use available evidence, though evidence of a different kind from that which has so far been considered, comes from Fromm's treatment of some other writers who have dealt with the same themes.
If one characteristic distinguishes Boris Godunov, it is the consistency with which every person on the stage -- including the chorus -- comes alive in the music.
As the knack gradually comes back to him, his rhythm becomes steadier, with the rigid monotony of an unskilled reader.
Maybe an entire scene comes into consciousness, with action and motion, or a static view: `` a house under a pine tree, with a little stone path going up to the door ''.
The knowledge that most Americans have of folklore comes through contact with commercial propagandists and a few energetic amateurs and collectors.

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