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has and thrived
He has thrived on all he has gone through and looks the makings of a good little race horse.
Latin rap ( as well as its subgenre of Chicano rap ) has thrived along the West Coast, Southwest and Midwestern states with little promotion due to the large Latino populations of those regions.
Knighton has written: ' From its reporting of these two disasters to the metropolis in which he thrived, Pepys's diary has become a national monument.
Show jumping in its current format appeared in 1912, and has thrived ever since, its recent popularity due in part to its suitability as a spectator sport which is well adapted for viewing on television.
The Cabernet grape variety has thrived in a variety of vineyard soil types, making the consideration of soil less of concern particularly for New World winemakers.
This twig was planted and thrived, and legend has it that all of England's weeping willows are descended from this first one.
It has been argued that the suppression of the English monasteries and nunneries contributed as well to the spreading decline of that contemplative spirituality which once thrived in Europe, with the occasional exception found only in groups such as the Society of Friends (" Quakers ").
The area has thrived since the 1850s as a health resort because of its location near a chalybeate spring.
The town has long thrived on the sea, and is also known for being the home of most of the year-round stores on the island, including Cumberland farms, the only store opened past 11: 30 in the winter.
For years, West Wendover has thrived under a lucrative gambling industry in Nevada, which has generated tax revenue for city services and better schools.
Croton-on-Hudson's economy has historically thrived on the Metro North train station that up until 1968 served as the point at which northbound trains would exchange their electric engines for other modes of conveyance.
The town dates back to approximately AD 600, and over the centuries has thrived as an agricultural centre ; as the location of Alnwick Castle and home of what were in mediaeval times the most powerful northern barons, the Earls of Northumberland ; as a staging post on the Great North Road between Edinburgh and London, and latterly as a modern rural centre cum dormitory town.
It has since thrived, especially in the more rural areas of the country.
In an era of financial instability for many American orchestras, the San Francisco Symphony has thrived under Michael Tilson Thomas both financially and artistically.
The town has survived and thrived.
Since MathWorld has returned, PlanetMath has still thrived.
Outside the mainstream, the fetishistic subculture of specialized bondage magazines and videos that has thrived since the late 1970s is a variation on the damsel in distress of literature, but with one major difference.
CHADS economy has not thrived since the revolution.
Since then, the adaptable Cooper's Hawk has thrived.
The town has long thrived as a seaport and is now also a seaside resort with a popular beach that can be reached on foot or by a narrow gauge railway that runs partway alongside the mile-long sea wall north of the harbour.

has and on
The Brahmaputra has its headwaters in the tableland of the world, the towering white headwalls of the Himalayas that are unknown to man as any other space on the planet.
Prieur has gout and depends on Louis' pills and bleedings.
But in our case -- and neither my wife nor I have extreme views on integration, nor are we given to emotional outbursts -- the situation has ruined one or two valued friendships and come close to wrecking several more.
For last-ditch emergencies SAC has alternate command posts on KC-135 jet tankers.
He has designed a matching backdrop and costumes of points of color on white for Mr. Cunningham's Summerspace, so that dancers and background merge into a shimmering unity.
I believe that what I do has some effect on his actions and I have learned, in a way, to commune with drunks, but certainly my actions seem to resemble more nearly the performance of a rain dance than the carrying out of an experiment in physics.
This prohibition on love has an especially poignant relation to art ; ;
He is a widower, his three children are dead, he has no one left on earth ; ;
also he is a drunk, and has lost his job on that account.
To carry out this exalted conception the author has combined the vivid realism and imaginative power we have noticed in his early poetry and carried them out on a grand scale.
If the man on the sidewalk is surprised at this question, it has served as an exclamation.
As time has passed and science has progressed, the speed of military vehicles has increased, the range of missiles has been extended, the use of target-hunting noses on the projectiles has been adopted, and the range and breadth of message sending has increased.
It has moved on various levels, it has been clamorous and confused.
Obviously there has been no agreement on what American conservatism is, or rather, what it should be.
This combined experience, on a foundation of very average, I assure you, intelligence and background, has helped me do things many well-informed people would bet heavily against.
The son and heir of a prominent family marries a girl who has tell-tale shadows on the half-moons of her finger nails.
Research, on the other hand, has shown many stepmothers to be eminently successful, some far better than the real mothers.
No consideration of risk urges itself upon him now: for this is what the mind does with the ideas on which it has not properly focussed.
And when we consider the tenuous hold tradition has on existence, any weakening of that hold constitutes a crisis of existence.

has and vision
Precisely at the moment when it has lost its vision the mind of the community turns out from itself in a search for the ontological standard whereby it can measure itself.
On the other hand, the bright vision of the future has been directly stated in science fiction concerned with projecting ideal societies -- science fiction, of course, is related, if sometimes distantly, to that utopian literature optimistic about science, literature whose period of greatest vigor in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries produced Edward Bellamy's Looking Backward and H. G. Wells's A Modern Utopia.
Thus science is the savior of mankind, and in this respect Childhood's End only blueprints in greater detail the vision of the future which, though not always so directly stated, has nevertheless been present in the minds of most science-fiction writers.
Considering then the optimism which has permeated science fiction for so long, what is really remarkable is that during the last twelve years many science-fiction writers have turned about and attacked their own cherished vision of the future, have attacked the Childhood's End kind of faith that science and technology will inevitably better the human condition.
They echo the words with which he has described his own vision of the dying child who `` trembles and begs for mercy -- and there is no mercy ''.
Though no longer able to turn out his protoplasmic pen-and-ink sketches ( several old favorites are scattered through the present volume ) Thurber has retained unimpaired his vision of humor as a thing of simple, unaffected humanness.
In contrast to Newton's vision of wretchedness as his willful sin and distance from God, wretchedness has instead come to mean an obstacle of physical, social, or spiritual nature to overcome in order to achieve a state of grace, happiness, or contentment.
Peter has a vision in which a voice commands him to eat a variety of impure animals.
The human eye has a characteristic called Persistence of vision.
Daniel has a lengthy vision ( 10: 1-12: 13 ) in the third year of Cyrus king of Persia, around 536 BCE, regarding conflicts between the " King of the North " and the " King of the South " (= Egypt, 11: 8 ).
* The final temple vision, in which Ezekiel is transported to Jerusalem and sees a new commonwealth centered around a new Temple to which God's glory has returned ( Ezekiel 40-48 )
Like Isaiah, the book has a vision of the punishment of Israel and creation of a " remnant ", followed by world peace centred on Zion under the leadership of a new Davidic monarch ; the people should do justice, turn to Yahweh, and await the end of their punishment.
Like the vision of Banquo's lineage, the banquet scene has also been the subject of criticism.
Chicano identity has expanded from its political origins to incorporate a broader community vision of social integration and nonpartisan political participation.
The prophet has a vision of the angel Gabriel, who tells him, " Seventy weeks are determined for your people and for your holy city ( i. e., Israel and Jerusalem ).
" 65: 17 The author of Revelation has a corresponding vision: " I saw a new heaven and a new earth, for the first heaven and the first earth had passed away.
A theme in the development of this field has been to duplicate the abilities of human vision by electronically perceiving and understanding an image.
Computer vision has also been described as the enterprise of automating and integrating a wide range of processes and representations for vision perception.
Some flee Chapterhouse, notably Sheeana, who has a vision of her own, and is joined by Duncan.
Mitter has observed that, ironically, today's China is closer to Chiang's vision than to Mao Zedong's.
When she is six years old, Laura has a vision of a beautiful visitor in her bedchamber.
It has applications that include probability, statistics, computer vision, image and signal processing, electrical engineering, and differential equations.
Consilience has its roots in the ancient Greek concept of an intrinsic orderliness that governs our cosmos, inherently comprehensible by logical process, a vision at odds with mystical views in many cultures that surrounded the Hellenes.
Theoretically, Henry doesn't know that he has seen a barn, despite both his belief that he has seen one being true and his belief being formed on the basis of a reliable process ( i. e. his vision ), since he only acquired his true belief by accident.

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