Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Social Democratic Party of America" ¶ 11
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

rapidly and developed
In the 20th century, Military camouflage developed rapidly, especially during the First World War.
Clark also developed a method of rapidly spinning into his costume at super speed which became a trademark change, especially during the third and fourth seasons of the series, and extremely popular with the show's fans.
Its creation was directly attributed to the launching of Sputnik and to U. S. realization that the Soviet Union had developed the capacity to rapidly exploit military technology.
It became clear that some applications could be developed more rapidly by adding a higher-level programming language and methodology which would generate the equivalent of very complicated 3GL instructions with fewer errors.
This field is growing rapidly and new pharming uses are being discovered and developed.
European colonization of Africa developed rapidly in the Scramble for Africa of the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
The British realised the importance of the city as a military cantonment and as a port for exporting the produce of the Indus River basin, and rapidly developed its harbour for shipping.
Beginning to read and discuss the work of Marx with Li and other like-minded radicals at a Marxist Study Group, he eventually " developed rapidly toward Marxism " under Li's tutelage during the winter of 1918 – 19, looking for ways to combine it with ancient Chinese philosophies that would be applicable to modern China.
It was not until 1978 when Thomas and Christoph Cremer developed the first practical confocal laser scanning microscope and the technique rapidly gained popularity through the 1980s.
Model theory developed rapidly during the 1990s, and a more modern definition is provided by Wilfrid Hodges ( 1997 ):
When asked how he developed his mathematical abilities so rapidly, he replied " by studying the masters, not their pupils.
This barge was a Type A altered to carry and rapidly off-load the submersible tanks ( Tauchpanzers ) developed for use in Sea Lion.
The science became established in the 18th century as a result of Georges Cuvier's work on comparative anatomy, and developed rapidly in the 19th century.
The young bird was naked and blind when born, but grew and developed rapidly.
The ability of proteasome inhibitors to induce apoptosis in rapidly dividing cells has been exploited in several recently developed chemotherapy agents such as bortezomib and.
To end a siege more rapidly various methods were developed in ancient and medieval times to counter fortifications, and a large variety of siege engines were developed for use by besieging armies.
The group existed as a casual songwriting collective prior to its association with Crow, but rapidly developed into a vehicle for her debut album after her arrival.
Early in his career, Gould and Niles Eldredge developed the theory of punctuated equilibrium, in which evolutionary change occurs relatively rapidly, alternating with longer periods of relative evolutionary stability.
The city developed rapidly after World War II, but this trend was interrupted in 1963 when it was hit by a disastrous earthquake.
These two groups first appeared during the late Paleocene and early Eocene ( about 54 million years ago ), rapidly spreading to a wide variety of species on numerous continents, and have developed in parallel since that time.
In 1947, in view of the rapidly increasingly destructive consequences of modern warfare, and with a particular concern for the consequences and costs of the newly developed atom bomb, Albert Einstein famously stated, " I know not with what weapons World War III will be fought, but World War IV will be fought with sticks and stones.
The Walloon region, a major coal and steel-producing area, developed rapidly into the economic powerhouse of the country.
After Von Laue's pioneering research, the field developed rapidly, most notably by physicists William Lawrence Bragg and his father William Henry Bragg.
The Central Valley was becoming a heavily developed irrigation farming region, and cities along the state's Pacific coast and the Sacramento and San Joaquin rivers were growing rapidly, requiring ways to manage the river's water to prevent flooding ( and resulting economic loss ) on one hand, and to ensure a consistent supply of it on the other.

rapidly and colonization
In 1492, a Spanish expedition headed by Christopher Columbus reached the Americas, after which European exploration and colonization rapidly expanded.
Paraguay is a middle-income country that changed rapidly in the 1970s and 1980s as a result of hydroelectric development, agricultural colonization, construction, and cash crop exports.
But once colonization began, it proceeded rapidly.
Latte stones began to be used in about 800 A. D. and became increasingly more common until the arrival of Ferdinand Magellan in 1521 and Spanish colonization, when they fell rapidly out of use and were entirely abandoned by about 1700.

rapidly and forces
Particularly was this true when the norms previously applied were no longer satisfactory to many, when customs were rapidly changing as the forces of the new productivity were harnessed.
The boxes are rapidly failing and the surviving adults begin unloading them, but are killed when one of two rival forces of Tines seize the ship.
As the Red Army invaded Bulgaria in 1944 and installed a communist government, the armed forces were rapidly forced to reorganise following the Soviet model, and were renamed as the Bulgarian People's Army ( Bulgarska Narodna Armiya, BNA ).
Pol Pot's Khmer Rouge forces retreated rapidly to the Thai border.
" They noted that " the law of transformation of quantity into quality ", " holds that a new quality emerges in a leap as the slow accumulation of quantitative changes, long resisted by a stable system, finally forces it rapidly from one state into another ," a phenomenon described in some disciplines as a paradigm shift.
Generally speaking, military and police forces use semi-automatic pistols due to their high magazine capacities ( 10 to 17 or, in some cases, over 25 rounds of ammunition ) and ability to rapidly reload by simply removing the empty magazine and inserting a loaded one.
John had already begun to improve his Channel forces before the loss of Normandy and he rapidly built up further maritime capabilities after its collapse.
As the number of the Afghan armed forces is growing rapidly so is the need for more aircraft and vehicles.
This required very high tracking forces that rapidly wore out both the stylus and the record on lateral cut 78 rpm records.
In April 1946, the last French officers were forced to leave Syria due to sustained resistance offensives ; the Levantine Forces then became the regular armed forces of the newly independent state and grew rapidly to about 12, 000 by the time of the 1948 Arab − Israeli War, the first of four Arab − Israeli wars between 1948 and 1986.
In 1976, Saddam rose to the position of general in the Iraqi armed forces, and rapidly became the strongman of the government.
The film postulates a fictional war between NATO forces and the Warsaw Pact that rapidly escalates into a full-scale nuclear exchange between the United States and the Soviet Union.
The remaining two interactions, the weak and strong nuclear forces, decline very rapidly with distance ; their effects are confined mainly to sub-atomic length scales.
It rapidly became clear that the Boer forces presented the British forces with a severe tactical challenge.
If a flow cools relatively rapidly, significant contraction forces build up.
The numbers of Tito's Yugoslav partisans were roughly similar to those of the Polish and Soviet partisans in the first years of the war ( 1941 – 1942 ), but grew rapidly in the latter years, outnumbering the Polish and Soviet partisans by 2: 1 or more ( estimates give Yugoslavian forces about 800, 000 in 1945, to Polish and Soviet forces of 400, 000 in 1944 ).
For instance, a convection oven works by forced convection, as a fan which rapidly circulates hot air forces heat into food faster than would naturally happen due to simple heating without the fan.
The road was the main factor that allowed them to concentrate their forces sufficiently rapidly and keep them adequately supplied to become a formidable opponent.
The Queen returned to England with a small mercenary army in 1326 ; moving rapidly across England, the King's forces deserted him.
In January 1329 Isabella's forces under Mortimer's command took Lancaster's stronghold of Leicester, followed by Bedford ; Isabella – wearing armour, and mounted on a warhorse – and Edward III marched rapidly north, resulting in Lancaster's surrender.
This increase in water volume in the cytoplasm forces the coiled cnidae tubule to eject rapidly.
Frederick hurried up his forces from Silesia and marched as rapidly as possible on Dresden, winning the actions of Katholisch-Hennersdorf ( 24 Nov .) and Görlitz ( 25 Nov .).
The French, skillfully conducted and marching rapidly, joined forces once more, but their situation was critical, for only two marches behind them the army of the King of Sardinia was in pursuit, and before them lay the principal army of the Austrians.

0.857 seconds.