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Some Related Sentences

may and allude
Abdul is a common Arabic name component ( but never a name by itself ; additionally the ending-ul and the beginning Al-are redundant ), but Alhazred may allude to Hazard, a pun on the book's destructive and dangerous nature, or a reference to Lovecraft's ancestors by that name.
The meaning of the motto Fiel pero desdichado ( Faithful but unfortunate ) may allude to the first duke's father's inadequate compensation for his losses in the Civil War as a consequence of his loyalty to the king.
The phrase " little eyases " in the First Folio ( F1 ) may allude to the Children of the Chapel, whose popularity in London forced the Globe company into provincial touring.
Shakespeare may allude to the image when Lady Macbeth says to her husband, " Look like the innocent flower, but be the serpent under't " ( 1. 5. 74-5 ).. And the Porter's speech ( 1. 3. 1 – 21 ), in particular, may allude to the trial of the Jesuit Henry Garnet in spring, 1606 ; " equivocator " ( line 8 ) may refer to Garnet's defence of " equivocation ", and " farmer " ( 4 ) to one of Garnet's aliases.
The name William Pratt may allude to horror actor Boris Karloff, whose birth name was William Henry Pratt, and can also be understood as the British slang term " prat ", describing a person of arrogant stupidity.
Her films are also experimental in form ; most eschew synchronized sound, using voice over to allude to, rather than tell, a story ; spoken text is juxtaposed with images whose relation to what is said may be more-or-less indirect.
" Although Ovid does not name Inuus in his treatment of the Lupercalia, he may allude to his sexual action in explaining the mythological background of the festival.
Another kenning may allude to this myth: in Eilífr Goðrúnarson's Þórsdrápa, Thor is called " he who longs fiercely for Þrúðr " ( þrámóðnir Þrúðar ).
Therefore, the name may just allude to the place, where they then got slaughtered during the Saxon lunar blood month, which falls around November.
The Empress Adelaide, beatified by the Catholic Church, seems a likely historical person this card may allude to.
KYMAVR may allude to " Khem-our " ( black light ), a form of Horus mentioned in H. P. Blavatsky's Secret Doctrine.
The Bible does not allude to Shakespeare, though Shakespeare may allude to the Bible.
" The Gospel of John may also briefly allude to the same episode in John: 1 – 14.
Another source says the name was suggested by Allingham's husband Philip Youngman Carter, and may allude to the Jesuit martyr St. Edmund Campion.
The historical events the chansons allude to occur in the eighth through tenth centuries, yet the earliest chansons we have were probably composed at the end of the eleventh century: only three chansons de geste have a composition that incontestably dates from before 1150: the Chanson de Guillaume, The Song of Roland and Gormont et Isembart: the first half of the Chanson de Guillaume may date from as early as the eleventh century ; Gormont et Isembart may date from as early as 1068, according to one expert ; and The Song of Roland probably dates from after 1086 to c. 1100.
The eldest branch of the Fabii bore the cognomen Vibulanus, which may allude to an ancestral home of the gens.

may and literal
" A prisoner interviewed by Moyers explained his literal interpretation of the second verse: "' Twas grace that taught my heart to fear, and grace my fears relieved " by saying that the fear became immediately real to him when he realized he may never get his life in order, compounded by the loneliness and restriction in prison.
" Refusing to give a literal reading to the state-granted charter of the Southern Pacific Railroad, which specified that the company could " collect and receive such tariffs ... as it may prescribe, Hughes contended that this clause " necessarily implies that the charges shall be reasonable and does not detract from the power of the State ... to prescribe reasonable rates.
This identification may have been motivated in part by the fact that " quietism " is the literal translation of " hesychasm ".
Old English poets often place a series of synonyms in apposition, and these may include kennings ( loosely or strictly defined ) as well as the literal referent: Hrōðgar maþelode, helm Scyldinga [...] “ Hrothgar, helm (= protector, lord ) of the Scyldings, said [...]” ( Beowulf 456 ).
And because Luft means " air " and Waffe may be translated into English as either " weapon " or " arm ", " Air Arm " may be considered the most literal English translation of Luftwaffe ( cf.
The operand may be a processor register, a memory address, a literal constant, or a label.
The 1214 birth date assumes he was not being literal, and may have meant 40 years had passed since he matriculated at Oxford at the age of 13.
It may otherwise refer to literal goats, and the worship of such.
The soul-creationist's difficulty of God creating souls for such monsters may be why most later churchmen rejected the literal interpretation of Genesis 6 as referring to angels interbreeding with human women.
Scholars who have examined these claims tend to believe that while the slave songs may certainly have expressed hope for deliverance from the sorrows of this world, these songs did not present literal help for runaway slaves.
The progression may be symbolic rather than literal, as observed in Louis Cha's The Smiling, Proud Wanderer, where the young Linghu Chong progresses from childish concerns and dalliances into much more adult ones as his unwavering loyalty repeatedly thrusts him into the rocks of betrayal at the hands of his inhumane master.
A template may be as simple as some literal text, like
On traditional architectures, an instruction includes an opcode specifying the operation to be performed, such as " add contents of memory to register ", and zero or more operand specifiers, which may specify registers, memory locations, or literal data.
The literal meaning is explained in a 16th-century passage quoted by Du Cange as, " a marriage by which the wife and the children that may be born are entitled to no share in the husband's possessions beyond the ' morning-gift '".
For instance, some dreams are warnings of something about to happen — e. g. a dream of failing an examination, if one is a student, may be a literal warning of unpreparedness.
The acronym VLIW may also refer to Very Long Instruction Word, a CPU instruction set designed to load ( or copy ) a literal value count of inline machine code to the on-chip RAM for higher speed CPU decoding.
For example, a stubborn person may be described as being either strong-willed or pig-headed ; although these have the same literal meaning ( stubborn ), strong-willed connotes admiration for the level of someone's will ( a positive connotation ), while pig-headed connotes frustration in dealing with someone ( a negative connotation ).
* in many languages, may be used to define a literal anonymous array or list:
Only the period, however, may not end a quoted sentence when it does not also end the enclosing sentence, except for literal text:
In more difficult puzzles, the indicator may be omitted, increasing ambiguity between a literal meaning and a wordplay meaning.
However, clarity may also suffer from their use, as any figure of speech introduces an ambiguity between literal and figurative interpretation.
In other words, even though a chair may physically exist, individuals can only experience it through the medium of their own mind, each with their own literal point-of-view.

may and custom
He may have to depend upon custom service for specialized operations, such as spraying or threshing, and for these, he may have to wait his turn.
This effect may be understood as another case of custom or habit taking past experience and using it to predict the future.
CPU expansion boards may provide additional custom buses.
The location of the black stump may be some hypothetical location or may vary depending on local custom and folklore.
It may come from a custom in the late Roman / early Christian era, wherein metal boxes placed outside churches were used to collect special offerings tied to the Feast of Saint Stephen, which in the Western Church falls on the same day as Boxing Day.
This belief may relate to the ancient custom of trapping moose in steep-sided pits.
) It suggested fashion, and the changing custom of wearing fur garments, may be significant among these factors.
In a social context, a convention may retain the character of an " unwritten " law of custom ( for example, the manner in which people greet each other, such as by shaking each other's hands ).
DBMSs may be built around a custom multitasking kernel with built-in networking support, but modern DBMSs typically rely on a standard operating system to provide these functions.
This custom has been commented on in the British Medical Journal and may stem from the historical origins of the profession.
Two other objections that some Christians may have had to maintaining the custom of consulting the Jewish community in order to determine Easter are implied in Constantine's letter from the Council of Nicea to the absent bishops:
Voltaire also states that the Circassians used the inoculation from times immemorial, and the custom may have been borrowed by the Turks from the Circassians.
For practical filters, a custom design is sometimes desirable, that can offer the best tradeoff between different design criteria, which may include component count and cost, as well as filter response characteristics.
Farriers may forge custom shoes to help horses with bone or musculature problems in their legs, or fit commercially available remedial shoes.
Companies with custom application software may also have an applications team, who are responsible for development of any in-house software.
For states not party to such treaties, the work of the ILC may still be accepted as custom applying to those states.
While anyone may say this Kaddish, it has become the custom for mourners to say the Rabbinical Kaddish in addition to the Mourner's Kaddish.
Editing, custom software, and creative cinematography may address technical limitations.
However the non-Hasidic Haredi community of Jerusalem follows the custom that machine-made matzah may be used, with preference to the use of shmurah flour, in accordance with the ruling of Rabbi Yosef Chaim Zonnenfeld, who actually ruled that machine-made matzah may be preferable to hand made in some cases.
Many egg matzah boxes no longer include the message, “ Ashkenazi custom is that egg matzah is only allowed for children, elderly and the infirm during Passover .” Even amongst those who consider that enriched matza may not be eaten during Passover, it is permissible to retain it in the home.

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