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Some Related Sentences

Jackobson and .
Basic work had been done under Eudell Jackobson of GM engineering, not at Chevrolet.
Eudell Jackobson of GM engineering pointed out one of the early problems with unexplained scuffing and discovered excessive pressure on the bore hones was causing the silicon to crack.

cites and examples
Sowell cites Bertrand Russell, Noam Chomsky and Edmund Wilson as paradigmatic examples of this phenomenon.
Rothkopf then cites genocide and massacres in Armenia, Russia, the Holocaust, Cambodia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Rwanda and East Timor as examples of culture ( in some cases expressed in the ideology of " political culture " or religion ) being misused to justify violence.
As examples of Biblical myths, Every cites the creation account in Genesis 1 and 2 and the story of Eve's temptation.
As examples, he cites the works of Cooper, Hawthorne, Melville, Twain, Hemingway, and Faulkner.
He cites as examples Hollywood coverage and the use of language in publications like Empire Magazine, as well as blockbuster dominance in multiplexes, but he also notes that this is an industrial matter: " The Full Monty was entirely financed and distributed by one of the US majors, Twentieth Century Fox, The praise went to Britain, but all the film ’ s profits went to America.
The Jargon File ( a. k. a. The New Hacker's Dictionary ), which is a glossary of internet slang maintained by Eric S. Raymond, differentiates kludge from kluge and cites usage examples predating 1962.
Foster cites Camilla and Diana, Artemis and Callisto, and Iphis and Ianthe as examples of female mythological figures who showed remarkable devotion to each other, or defied gender expectations.
Ulla Loumand cites Sleipnir and the flying horse Hófvarpnir as " prime examples " of horses in Norse mythology as being able to " mediate between earth and sky, between Ásgarðr, Miðgarðr and Útgarðr and between the world of mortal men and the underworld.
Pak Subuh's book " Susila Budhi Dharma " cites examples of situations in which testing may be useful, including self-training in terms of putting any benefits of the latihan into practice.
Professor of Political Science Michael Stohl cites the examples that include Germany ’ s bombing of London and the U. S. atomic destruction of Hiroshima during World War II.
Hardin also cites modern examples, including the overfishing of the world's oceans and ranchers who graze their cattle on government lands in the American West.
Mead cites as the gross evidence of the exclusively wave nature of both light and matter the discovery between 1933 and 1996 of ten examples of pure wave phenomena, including the ubiquitous laser of CD players, the self-propagating electrical currents of superconductors, and the Bose – Einstein condensate of atoms.
Author John MacDonald cites it as one of the greatest extant examples of the mastery of military logistics, stating, " probably his greatest military achievement, unsurpassed at the time, was the logistic repositioning, within twenty-four hours, of a whole army corps at the Battle of the Bulge.
Gardner mentions, among other examples of conjecture, Chaos, Co-ordinated, a science fiction story by John MacDougal, and cites Norbert Wiener as saying in his book Cybernetics that the human brain, just like a computing machine, probably works on a variant of the famous principle expounded by Lewis Carroll.
Priscian specifically cites Claudianus and Aemilianus as examples.
Ulla Loumand cites Hófvarpnir and the eight-legged horse Sleipnir as " prime examples " of horses in Norse mythology as being able to " mediate between earth and sky, between Ásgarðr, Miðgarðr and Útgarðr and between the world of mortal men and the underworld.
The film begins with a bugler playing " Taps " and an overlay of text stating that Americans have been accustomed to military victory, but cites Valley Forge and The Lost Battalion as examples of times where undermanned groups fought to the bitter end for America.
In the book " Icons of Horror and the Supernatural: An Encyclopedia of Our Worst Nightmares, Volume 1 ", author S. T. Joshi cites both Waluigi and Wario as examples of alter egos, also as evidence of how popular it is to feature such character archetypes.
In the book Icons of Horror and the Supernatural: An Encyclopedia of Our Worst Nightmares, Volume 1, author S. T. Joshi cites both Waluigi and Wario as examples of alter egos, also as evidence of how popular it is to feature such character archetypes ..
To illustrate what he means by defamiliarization, Shklovsky uses examples from Tolstoy, whom he cites as using the technique throughout his works: “ The narrator of ' Kholstomer ,' for example, is a horse, and it is the horse ’ s point of view ( rather than a person ’ s ) that makes the content of the story seem unfamiliar ” ( Shklovsky 16 ).
Elsewhere, in an article entitled " Inverted Totalitarianism " Wolin cites phenomena such as the lack of involvement of citizens in a narrow political framework ( due to the influence of money ), the privatization of social security, and massive increases in military spending and spending on surveillance as examples of the push away from public and towards private-controlled government.
In " The Anatomy Of Motive " John E. Douglas cites Charles Starkweather and Andrew Cunanan as examples of spree killers, while Jack Levin calls Cunanan a serial killerand Starkweather a mass murderer.
In support of his argument, Moore cites examples of notable figures who have become more sympathetic towards particular problems or situations when they have become personally affected themselves, including:
Among the examples of cooperation that he cites are Iraq's destruction of Samoud 2 missiles, which he calls " the most spectacular and the most important and tangible ".

cites and word
" Dickson-Wright further cites etymologist Walter William Skeat as further suggestion of possible Scandinavian origins: Skeat claimed that the hag – element of the word is derived from the Old Norse haggw or the Old Icelandic hoggva ( höggva in modern Icelandic ), meaning ' to hew ' or strike with a sharp weapon, relating to the chopped-up contents of the dish.
The Oxford English Dictionary cites the first recorded use of the word in the English language as a verb in 1661, in Edmund Hickeringill's Jamaca Viewed: " Some are slain, And their flesh forthwith Barbacu'd and eat.
" The dictionary cites " Chick-pea " in the mid-18th century ; the original word in English taken directly from French was chich, found in print in English in 1388 and became obsolete in the 18th century.
It is popularly believed, as cited by the Kuna Chamber of Commerce, that the translation of the name " Kuna " means " the end of the trail ", but Charles S. Walgamott cites the origin of the name as a Shoshone Indian word meaning " green leaf, good to smoke " ( see " Six Decades Back ", a memoir of Walgamott's adventures in the late 1800s in southern Idaho ).
" The Oxford English Dictionary also cites the use of the word in an advertisement for an unnamed car in The Motor dated 3 November 1920, " The Supreme development of the British super-car.
The OED cites the use of the word to 1297.
The Dictionary of Hiberno-English cites it as possibly a corruption of the word " Celt ".
The Oxford English Dictionary cites Lydgate with the earliest record of using the word " talent " in reference to a gifted state of natural ability.
To explain the metaphysics of sex, Evola cites the original meaning of the word " orgy " as " the state of inspired exaltation that began the initiatory process in the ancient Greek mysteries.
The Oxford English Dictionary cites this word as evolving slowly through roughly the last third of the 20th century, with the first cited reference being poet Jaime Carrero using neorriqueño in 1964 as a Spanish-language adjective combining neoyorquino and puertorriqueño.
Dante cites honorificabilitudinitate as a typical example of a long word in De Vulgari Eloquentia II.
The Oxford English Dictionary also cites an alternative Catalan definition that describes soot or a black smear, or a Portuguese root ( the Portuguese word máscara means ‘ mask ’, but a similar word, mascarra, means dark stain or smut ).< ref > There is even strong support for a possible source from the Arabic word maskharah or ‘ buffoon ’.
In The Managed Heart Hochschild cites the Czech novelist Milan Kundera, who writes that the Czech word “ litost ” refers to an indefinable longing, mixed with remorse and grief — a constellation of feelings with no equivalent in any other language.
Whiteness has so many different definitions that the word is “ nothing less than a moving target .” Arnsen moreover notes that whiteness studies scholars are entirely on the far left of the political spectrum, and suggests that their apparent vitriol towards white Americans is due in part to white workers not fulfilling the predictions of Marxist theory that the proletariat would overcome racial, national and class distinctions to unite and overthrow capitalism ; he cites as an example Roediger ’ s afterword to the seminal < I > Wages of Whiteness </ i > which asserts that the book was written as a reaction to “ the appalling extent to which white male workers voted for Reaganism in the 1980s .” Arnsen also argues that in the absence of supporting evidence, whiteness studies often relies on amateurish Freudian speculation about the motives of white people: “ The psychoanalysis of whiteness here differs from the ' talking cure ' of Freudianism partly in its neglect of the speech of those under study .” Without more accurate scholarship, Arnsen writes that “ it is time to retire whiteness for more precise historical categories and analytical tools .”
2 – 11, which Rufinus omitted, and in which he seemed to hear Eunomius himself speaking, gives in fact the doctrine of Eunomius so exactly that it frequently almost cites the Apologeticus ( c. 362 – 3 ) of that heretic word for word.
The Oxford English Dictionary's entry cites the earliest uses of the word from 1513, where it was found in the phrase widdersyns start my hair, i. e. my hair stood on end.
A North Carolina State University web page ( The Watauga Medal ) cites that the word " Watauga " is a Native-American word meaning " the land beyond ", however local reference to the name origin is attributed to the meaning " beautiful river " or " beautiful water ".
In identifying this name as the possible source of the word cry, the Oxford English Dictionary cites Varro.
Hooper cites Romans 14: 23 ( whatever is not faith is sin ), Romans 10: 17 ( faith comes from hearing the word of God ), and Matthew 15: 13 ( everything not " planted " by God will be " rooted up ") to argue that indifferent things must be done in faith, and since what cannot be proved from scripture is not of faith, indifferent things must be proved from scripture, which is both necessary and sufficient authority, as opposed to tradition.
Robert Caldwell, following Hermann Gundert, cites the word as an example of the omission of initial sibilants in the adoption of Indo-Aryan words into Dravidian languages.

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