Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Secondary education" ¶ 53
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

has and common
The idea of national responsibility thus has become a common feature of the nations of the non-Soviet world.
The Charles Men has a tremendous range of characters, of common folk even more than of major figures.
Now this concern for the freedom of other peoples is the intellectual and spiritual cement which has allied us with more than forty other nations in a common defense effort.
`` History has this in common with every other science: that the historian is not allowed to claim any single piece of knowledge, except where he can justify his claim by exhibiting to himself in the first place, and secondly to any one else who is both able and willing to follow his demonstration, the grounds upon which it is based.
History has demonstrated many times that concerts of nations based solely on the negative spur of common danger are unlikely to survive when the external danger ceases to be dramatically urgent.
The New York Central has pointed out that this control, if approved by the Interstate Commerce Commission, would give the combined C. & O. - B. & O. Railroad a total of 185 points served in common with the New York Central.
By dealing with common landscape in an uncommon way, Roy Mason has found a particular niche in American landscape art.
only seldom is it so simple as to be a matter of his obviously parroting some timeworn axiom, common to our culture, which he has evidently heard, over and over, from a parent until he experiences it as part of him.
This carryover right has a number of things in common with a net operating loss carryover.
We come upon a rabbit that has been caught in one of the brutal traps in common use.
It is no common thing for a listener ( critical or otherwise ) to hear a singer `` live '' for the first time only after he has died.
But then, Mario Lanza was no common singer, and his whole career, public and non-public, was studded with the kind of unconventional happenings that terminate with the appearance of his first `` recital '' only when he has ceased to be a living voice.
A common criticism has been that many social science scholars ( such as economists, sociologists, and psychologists ) in Western countries focus disproportionately on Western subjects, while anthropology focuses disproportionately on the " other "; this has changed over the last part of the twentieth century as anthropologists increasingly, also study Western subjects, particularly variation across class, region, or ethnicity within Western societies, and other social scientists increasingly take a global view of their fields.
The analysis of variance has been studied from several approaches, the most common of which uses a linear model that relates the response to the treatments and blocks.
In the common law, an answer is the first pleading by a defendant, usually filed and served upon the plaintiff within a certain strict time limit after a civil complaint or criminal information or indictment has been served upon the defendant.
In Western countries, a bead frame similar to the Russian abacus but with straight wires and a vertical frame has been common ( see image ).
While most everyone has an experience with anxiety at some point in their lives, as it is a common reaction to real or perceived threats of all kinds, most do not develop long-term problems with anxiety.
Although panic attacks are not experienced by every person who has anxiety, they are a common symptom.
The family has a worldwide distribution, and is most common in the arid and semi-arid regions of subtropical and lower temperate latitudes.
The most common criticism of HH Price's afterlife hypothesis has come from the religious community as his suggestions are not consistent with traditional Christian teaching, nor the teachings of any other monotheistic religion.
Agrarianism has two common meanings.
However, the availability of commercially farmed abalone has allowed more common consumption of this once rare delicacy.
A common theory about the building is that the rounded feature to the left of centre, terminating at the top in a turret and cross, represents the lance of Saint George ( patron saint of Catalonia, Gaudi's home ), which has been plunged into the back of the dragon.
Because of the mountain slopes, terracing has been a common practice.

has and programme
Then, following the programme he outlined in his talk at the 1958 International Congress of Mathematicians, he introduced the theory of schemes, developing it in detail in his Éléments de géométrie algébrique ( EGA ) and providing the new more flexible and general foundations for algebraic geometry that has been adopted in the field since that time.
This has brought their dealership programme to 120 dealers in 28 countries.
According to a 2008 television programme, presented by Griff Rhys Jones,the flame has only been extinguished once, by a drunken Mexican football supporter on the night that France beat Brazil here in Paris ,” most likely referring to the 1998 FIFA World Cup Final.
Since the launch of Breakfast in 2000, the programme has been simulcast on both BBC One and BBC News, replacing the individual breakfast news programmes that had been run by both channels.
Cheddar is twinned with Felsberg, Germany and Vernouillet, France, and it has an active programme of exchange visits.
New characters were introduced, such as Terry Duckworth ( Nigel Pivaro ), Curly Watts ( Kevin Kennedy ), Martin Platt ( Sean Wilson ), Reg Holdsworth ( Ken Morley ) and the McDonald family ; one of whom, Simon Gregson, started on the show as Steve McDonald a week after his 15th birthday, and has been in the programme ever since.
The BBC Radio programme, Desert Island Discs, in which guests usually choose their favourite songs, has heard 45 participants select a Dylan Thomas recording.
Egypt has been one of the leading recipients among the Mediterranean partners in terms of total funds received from the MEDA programme, the principal financial instrument of the European Union for the implementation of the Euro-Mediterranean Partnership.
What began as a programme of marginal acts has become the largest arts festival in the world, with 1867 different shows being staged in 2006, in 261 venues.
Since the beginning of the restoration, an extensive archaeological programme has been carried out.
Kraepelin in general has been described as a ' scientific manager ' and political operator, who developed a large-scale, clinically oriented, epidemiological research programme.
The state has a programme where the number of jobs decreases by attrition: for two retirees, only one new employee is hired.
Approximately 20 % of the network is suitable for commercial boats of over 1000 tonnes and the VNF has an ongoing programme of maintenance and modernisation to increase depth of waterways, widths of locks and headroom under bridges to support France's strategy of encouraging freight onto water.
Capacity building including a leadership programme, employee rotation and a new junior professional programme has been established.
The island also has a school wrestling league organized by the council and a programme to promote this sport in clubs.
The administration committed more money to the NHS raising it to almost the same level of funding as the European average and as a result, there has been a large expansion and mordernisation programme and waiting times are now much more acceptable than they once were.
Macquarie University also has the largest student exchange programme in Australia.
Since 1963, the programme has continued at Kostroma Moose Farm, which had a herd of 33 tame moose as of 2003.
After a patient has been on a maintenance programme for a period, they will be offered the opportunity to move over to a Methadone reduction programme.
Historically the army has been poorly trained ; however Australia has recently made this the focus of the Enhanced Defence Partnership programme, supplying training, advisors and equipment.
Trips are made to locales such as Edinburgh, Scotland, and the programme has a series of formal halls, which are described as " three-course candlelit meals " serving " interesting " fare in Pembroke's historic dining hall.
With Pulitzer prizewinners and MacArthur Fellows leading its liberal-arts programme, the relative newcomer ( founded in 1891 ) has proved more than a match for its illustrious Ivy League rival.

0.089 seconds.