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too and features
He is defined by Thomas Carlyle as " a failure of a Fritz ," with " features " of a Frederick the Great in him, " but who burnt away his splendid qualities as a mere temporary shine for the able editors, and never came to anything, full of fire, too much of it wildfire, not in the least like an Alcibiades except in the change of fortune he underwent ".
If these two features of the language coincide too frequently, they overemphasize each other and the hexameter becomes sing-songy.
Slight, he was about 5 ' 6 " with dark brown curls, a florid complexion and features which James Boswell thought were " rather too largely and strongly limned.
Murray also discussed the murder of the Archbishop of Canterbury, Thomas Becket, claiming to show that he too was a pagan by saying that his death " presents many features which are explicable only by the theory that he also was the substitute for a Divine King " ( Murray 171 )
The number of features should not be too large, because of the curse of dimensionality ; but should contain enough information to accurately predict the output.
One issue is that fonts do not actually scale linearly at small sizes ; features of the glyphs will become proportionally too large or small and they start to look wrong.
Feeling the basic game was too boring, Alcorn added features to give the game more appeal.
The theory proposed considered to be the most likely evolution of running is of early humans ' developing as endurance runners from the practice of persistence hunting of animals, the activity of following and chasing until a prey is too exhausted to flee, succumbing to " chase myopathy " ( Sears 2001 ), and that human features such as the nuchal ligament, abundant sweat glands, the Achilles tendons, big knee joints and muscular glutei maximi, were changes caused by this type of activity ( Bramble & Lieberman 2004, et al .).
The new house features a set of automatically operated blinds that prevent it overheating when the sun is too hot for the plants together with a system that blows a continuous stream of cool air over the plants.
While the surface of Venus is far too hot and features atmospheric pressure at least 90 times that at sea level on Earth, its massive atmosphere offers a possible alternate location for colonization.
The point is that if a system is too complicated to use, then many of its features will go unused because no one has the time to learn how to use them.
The University of Newcastle upon Tyne, formerly King's College in the University of Durham, features St Cuthbert's Cross on its arms, originally granted in 1937, too.
One group of supplementary features are not actual cloud formations but rather precipitation that falls when water droplets that make up visible clouds have grown too heavy to remain aloft.
Tables such as employment statistics are published each week and there are special statistical features too.
Like the Boston pianos, Essex pianos incorporate some of the features of Steinway pianos too like a wider tail design, an all-wood action with Steinway geometry with rosette-shaped hammer flanges, and reinforced hammers with metal fasteners.
Methylation-specific testing is important to confirm the diagnosis of PWS in all individuals, but especially those who are too young to manifest sufficient features to make the diagnosis on clinical grounds or in those individuals who have atypical findings.
However, the bike also featured other innovative features including an engine with oval shaped cylinders, and eventually succumbed to the problems associated with attempting to develop too many new technologies at once.
Significant too is, where Jesus heals a man in a process that is slow and involves saliva ; Mark Goodacre suggests both these features make it a passage more likely to be omitted than added, implying Mark wrote first.
Since Ogmios has both features he too possesses great wisdom and great power.
It too features playground equipment for the younger children.
One way of doing so was booking features only and avoiding the expenses of shorts, which were considered unnecessary and too expensive.
While these guidelines can be violated, by committing too many violations one risks departing from the defining features of the dance.
Eurogamer's Tom Bramwell acknowledged the variety and thematic features of the boards, but thought they were too large, resulting in a " glacial pace " when coupled with the on-board animations.
In cases where spelling takes account of grammatical features these too may become inconsistent.

too and sharp
They had my mother's opinion of him: that he was too sharp or a little too good to be true.
Cranberries are normally considered too sharp to be eaten plain and raw, as they are not only sour but bitter as well.
For Dunedin, George Smith Duncan further developed the Hallidie model, introducing the pull curve and the slot brake ; the former was a way to pull cars through a curve, since Dunedin's curves were too sharp to allow coasting, while the latter forced a wedge down into the cable slot to stop the car.
Strobe tuner pedals indicate whether a guitar string is too sharp or flat.
As the audience grew too old for advertisers, the radio stations that carried these formats saw a sharp loss of ratings and revenue.
His wit was very sharp, too sharp for the administration, which stopped a periodical he had started, The Pen-Viper, after the first issue.
Before the end of the first century BC trade routes had changed ; Delos was replaced by Puteoli as the chief focus of Italian trade with the East, and as a cult-centre too it entered a sharp decline.
This proved too sharp for safe operation of SRT cars, which didn't have a reason to turn around, and the loop was replaced by a Spanish solution-like crossover.
One is that we were both too caught up in what we were respectively doing — we didn't spend all that much time together ; the other, to be completely honest, is that I'm fairly unjudgmental and I found Bernard's capacity for pretty sharp putting-down of people he thought were stupid unacceptable.
If you go too slow or make too sharp a turn, the snowmobile will sink.
He was surrounded with spies who reported, none too accurately, the ministers somewhat sharp criticisms of the emperor's acts ; he had even had the supreme presumption to advise Alexander not to take the chief command in the coming campaign.
Around 1691 Keith decided that Quakers had strayed too far from orthodox Christianity and began to have sharp disagreements with his fellow believers.
Police investigation found that Adamson's wounds were too sharp and bloodless to have been caused by an animal, and concluded that she had been murdered.
The sharp distinction Holmes draws between law and morals had a powerful impact on the thought of most Legal Realists – although it too was construed in a variety of ways.
" He concedes however that the distinction is not too sharp.
A population may not be able to climb a very sharp peak if the mutation rate is too high, or it may drift away from a peak it had already found ; consequently, reducing the fitness of the system.
The Rosedale Valley phase was not used for the subway, as the curve between each phase-as well as the curve to the west at Parliament Street-was considered too sharp for the subway.
Wolfram von Eschenbach, who tells the same story in his Parzival, asks his audience not to judge Kay too harshly, as his sharp words actually serve to maintain courtly order.
Critics occasionally reprimanded him, too, for striving to maximise the excitement factor of his performances by holding on to top notes longer than necessary and by sometimes pushing them sharp.
For many nationalists on the other hand, the adoption of a conciliatory approach to the " hereditary enemy " involved too sharp a deviation from traditional thinking.
Poorly designed speed bumps often found in private car parks ( too tall, too sharp an angle for the expected speed ) can be hard to negotiate in vehicles with low ground clearance, such as sports cars, even at very slow speeds.

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