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was and inevitable
He was unable to send any more help to his allies on the Continent, and during the next few years many of them, left to resist French pressure unaided, surrendered to the inevitable and made their peace with Philip.
the result was his inevitable bedazzlement through, ignorance.
Well, the odious little toad went along chivying animals and humans who couldn't retaliate, and in due course, as was inevitable, overreached himself.
Doubtless it was inevitable that differences of opinion should arise about the methods for applying these policies.
This reasoning was also as inevitable as anything could be.
To many experts, this trend was inevitable.
The President knew that a confrontation with Mr. Khrushchev sooner or later probably was inevitable and even desirable.
Here was another human who understood the stupidity of quarreling with the inevitable.
Cursed with a shaky management and dissatisfied stockholders, it was ripe for amalgamation, and Freddy's instinct was to keep growing by stock mergers and small expenditure of cash, and never mind inevitable consequences.
`` But it was inevitable!!
The rule, as was inevitable, was subject to frequent violations ; but it was not until the foundation of the Cluniac Order that the idea of a supreme abbot, exercising jurisdiction over all the houses of an order, was definitely recognized.
This was almost inevitable since, with the notable exception of the generals ( strategoi ), each office could be held by the same person only once.
The inevitable result was the speedy resignation of William Hague in the election aftermath.
As was typical of Caesar he gambled and began discreetly thinning his already depleted ranks of men then repositioned them as a fourth line to support his cavalry against the inevitable assault by the much larger Pompeian cavalry.
Though Beaux was an individualist, comparisons to Sargent would prove inevitable, and often favorable.
The traditional staples thesis, advocated by scholars such as S. A. Saunders, looks at the resource endowments of the Maritimes and argues that it was the decline of the traditional industries of shipbuilding and fishing that led to Maritime poverty, since these processes were rooted in geography, and thus all but inevitable.
He was ever mindful of the inevitable loss of life and suffering that would be experienced on an individual level by the troops under his command and their families.
The result was the inevitable confusion with customers upset that a particular piece of software was not available for the Disk system that they had.
' King Richard ' was powerless to prevent the inevitable, although leading at half time, the Geelong kicked five goals to three points in the third quarter to set up victory by 11 points.

was and capoeira
In Rio the use of capoeira was getting so problematic that the colonial government established severe physical punishments to its practice.
In his book, Matthias Röhrig Assunção provided ample data from police records, dating back to the 1800s, demonstrating that capoeira was an " important reason " to detain slaves and " free coloured individuals.
In little time, in 1890, the recently proclaimed Brazilian Republic decreed the prohibition of capoeira in the whole country, as things were pretty chaotic in the Brazilian capital and many police reports would demonstrate that capoeira was an undeserved advantage in a fight.
The art of capoeira, after brief freedom, was once again condemned and repressed.
In Mestre Bimba's Capoeira Regional, batizado was the first time a new student would play capoeira following the sound of the berimbau.
Determining styles in capoeira is a very tough task, since there was never a unity in the original capoeira, or a teaching method before the decade of 1920.
The name Angola was finally immortalized by Mestre Pastinha at February 23, 1941, when he opened the Centro Esportivo de capoeira Angola ( CECA ).
In capoeira, a Brazilian martial art, the slaves had nicknames to protect them from being caught, as practicing capoeira was illegal for decades.
The berimbau was eventually incorporated into the practice of the Afro-Brazilian martial art capoeira, where it commands how the capoeiristas move in the roda.
The first capoeira academy in Newark, New Jersey Capoeira Arts Center, was founded by Mestre Cigano of Grupo Liberdade de Capoeira in 1996.
Forced to defend against repeated attacks by Portuguese colonists, the warriors of Palmares were expert in capoeira, a martial arts form that was brought to & enhanced in Brazil by Africans circa the 16th century.
Manoel dos Reis Machado, commonly called Mestre Bimba (; born November 23, 1899, Salvador, Brazil – February 5, 1974 ), was a mestre ( a master practitioner ) of the Afro-Brazilian martial art capoeira.
He started learning capoeira when he was 12 years old, with a Capitão da Companhia Baiana de Navegação ( Navigation Captain ) from Estrada das Boiadas ( present day Bairro da Liberdade ) in Salvador, called Bentinho, even though in those days capoeira was still being persecuted by the authorities.
It was then that Bimba started to restore movements from the old capoeira ( not Angola ), added movements from an extinct African fighting style called Batuque-a type of martial art that he learned from his father ( of which his father was a champion ), as well as introducing movements created by himself.
Bimba was the 1st to create a method of teaching to help facilitate learning because until then, capoeira was only learned by watching and participating in the roda.
This was the beginning of the development of capoeira regional.

was and practitioners
One of the earliest 20th century practitioners of this method was The Mills Brothers whose early recordings of the 1930s clearly stated on the label that all instrumentation was done vocally.
For some practitioners alchemy was an intellectual pursuit, and over time they got better at it.
In the House of Commons of the United Kingdom on January 19, 1996, health minister Gerald Malone noted that the title doctor had never been restricted to either medical practitioners or those with doctoral degrees in the UK, commenting that the word was defined by common usage but that the titles " physician, doctor of medicine, licentiate in medicine and surgery, bachelor of medicine, surgeon, general practitioner and apothecary " did have special protection in law.
The term empirical was originally used to refer to certain ancient Greek practitioners of medicine who rejected adherence to the dogmatic doctrines of the day, preferring instead to rely on the observation of phenomena as perceived in experience.
Best known for his tales of mystery and the macabre, Poe was one of the earliest American practitioners of the short story and is considered the inventor of the detective fiction genre.
The term was used of the Empiric school of ancient Greek medical practitioners, who rejected the doctrines of the ( Dogmatic school ), preferring to rely on the observation of phenomena.
Whilst the general public was not aware of nature observation ( formally conducted as field research ) during the 1930s, practitioners of the hobby went on to become the pioneers of the conservation movement that flourished in the UK from 1965 onwards ; a movement that eventually became a global political movement within a generation's timespan.
In each of these, a Reichskammer ( Reich Chamber ) was established, co-opting leading figures from the field ( usually not known Nazis ) to head each Chamber, and requiring them to supervise the purge of Jews, socialists and liberals, as well as practitioners of " degenerate " art forms such as abstract art and atonal music.
Tatsuo Yamada, who established " Nihon Kempo Karate-do ", was interested in Muay Thai because he wanted to perform karate matches with full-contact rules since practitioners are not allowed to hit each other directly in karate matches.
MATLAB was first adopted by researchers and practitioners in control engineering, Little's specialty, but quickly spread to many other domains.
Dr. Jordan's work " The Romance in Your Name " was the first to provide a fairly comprehensive system for identifying key numerological influences in one's name and birth date and remains a seminal interpretive guide for practitioners today.
In Western culture, the contemporary concept of a police paid by the government was developed by French legal scholars and practitioners in the 17th and early 18th centuries, notably with Nicolas Delamare's Traité de la Police (" Treatise on the Police "), first published in 1705.
In the ancient priesthood before the Tang, the priest was called Jijiu (" libationer " p. 550 ), with both male and female practitioners selected by merit.
In 1956, the American Association of Cost Engineers ( now AACE International ; the Association for the Advancement of Cost Engineering ) was formed by early practitioners of project management and the associated specialties of planning and scheduling, cost estimating, and cost / schedule control ( project control ).
After the publication of a manual in the 18th century, raku ware was also made in numerous workshops by amateur potters and tea practitioners in Kyoto, and by professional and amateur potters around Japan.
He was apprenticed for short periods to several medical practitioners: at 13 to his brother-in-law John Cooke in Coventry, who passed him on to Thomas Chandler, notable for his experiments using mesmerism for medical purposes.
In 1989, taekwondo was the world's most popular martial art in terms of number of practitioners.
One source has estimated that as of 2009, taekwondo was practiced in 123 countries, with over 30 million practitioners and 3 million individuals with black belts throughout the world.
Platon Kerzhentsev was one of its principal practitioners.
Gould said that the most positive review of the first edition of The Mismeasure of Man was by the British Journal of Mathematical & Statistical Psychology, which reported that " Gould has performed a valuable service in exposing the logical basis of one of the most important debates in the social sciences, and this book should be required reading for students and practitioners alike.
For example, what scholars call Tantric Shaivism was known to its practitioners as the, Tantric Buddhism has the indigenous name of the Vajrayana, and Tantric Vaishnavism was known as the.
William E. Swing the URI Charter was developed through a series of international conferences and consultation with transformative organizational design practitioners David Cooperrider and Diana Whitney.

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