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Matching and .
Matching photographs in oval frames of Mme Bonenfant and an elderly man who must be Alix's grandfather.
Matching funds also can be obtained for procurement of such items as radios, sirens and rescue trucks, he said.
Matching the characters in the film Withnail and I has become an accepted drinking game, although the levels of consumption required for a single player are hazardous.
Matching the theory's prediction to observational results for planetary orbits ( or, equivalently, assuring that the weak-gravity, low-speed limit is Newtonian mechanics ), the proportionality constant can be fixed as κ = 8πG / c < sup > 4 </ sup >, with G the gravitational constant and c the speed of light.
Matching funding is provided by the NREN project partners connected to the network.
* Matching Rules — Provide information about how to make comparisons against attribute values.
* Matching Rule Uses — Indicate which attribute types may be used in conjunction with a particular matching rule.
It would later be reworked for the album The Monty Python Matching Tie and Handkerchief.
In the audio version on The Monty Python Matching Tie and Handkerchief ( MT & H ) album and other live and recorded versions, Cleese also mentions Greek feta.
) Although the fictitious faculty first appeared in the Bruces sketch in the TV show Monty Python's Flying Circus, the song itself was not included, making its debut on the album Matching Tie and Handkerchief as a coda for the sketch.
The reason for the confusion is that existing live recordings of the song ( included in the Monty Python Live at the Hollywood Bowl film and on the albums Live at Drury Lane and Live at City Center ) have the " Schopenhauer and Hegel " version, while the studio recording on Matching Tie and Handkerchief features the " Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel " version.
Matching Nintendo's Game Boy, Sega chose not to use regional lockout on Game Gear cartridges, meaning that any system could play any games regardless of the country they were released in.
* Supplemental Offer and Acceptance Program, for medical students who were not initially matched with U. S. residencies by the National Resident Matching Program
However, this idea was dropped when the band discovered that the Monty Python comedy troupe had executed the very same idea three years earlier with their Matching Tie and Handkerchief album.
However, etiquette for what to wear in public in transit to and from black tie occasions was stiffer in earlier eras and remain an option: Matching overcoats are usually black, charcoal, or dark blue, and traditionally of the Chesterfield style.
However, in February 2009 the Federal Election Commission found no violation of the law because McCain permissibly withdrew from the Matching Payment Program and thus was released from his obligations.
Matching the impedance of the antenna to the impedance of the feed line is typically done using an antenna tuner.
Matching beds of ancient tillites on opposite sides of the south Atlantic Ocean provided early evidence for continental drift.
( Matching accounts of this meeting come from Halley and Abraham De Moivre to whom Newton confided.
The company is best known for its Pantone Matching System ( PMS ), a proprietary color space used in a variety of industries, primarily printing, though sometimes in the manufacture of colored paint, fabric, and plastics.
According to the episode " Principal Charming ", his name was Ralph Melish, which is a reference to the Monty Python sketch " The Adventures of Ralph Melish: Hot Dog and Knickers " from The Monty Python Matching Tie and Handkerchief.
* The British comedy troupe Monty Python mention Tess of the d ' Urbervilles on their 1973 comedy record album Monty Python's Matching Tie and Handkerchief on the track " Novel Writing ", in which Thomas Hardy writes Return of the Native before a live audience.
Matching the effect to the model was accomplished through trial-and-error guesswork.

necklace and bracelet
The chief ornaments made and worn by them are Nath ( nose gay ), Katmala ( necklace ) Kangan ( bracelet ), and Pazeb ( anklets ).
Other items in the collection include diamond dress ornaments made for Catherine the Great, bracelet clasps once belonging to Marie Antoinette, and the Beauharnais emerald necklace presented by Napoleon to his adopted daughter Hortense de Beauharnais in 1806.
Having newborn babies wear an azabache ( a gold bracelet or necklace with a black or red coral charm in the form of a fist ), is believed to protect them from the evil eye.
In 1997 the Royal Albert Memorial Museum, Exeter, England, returned Trugernanner's necklace and bracelet to Tasmania.
In 1997 the Royal Albert Memorial Museum, Exeter, returned Trugernanner's necklace and bracelet to Tasmania.
གཟ ི།; pronounced " zee "; alternative spelling: gzi ) is a bead stone of mysterious origin worn as part of a necklace and sometimes as a bracelet.
She then bites her favorite necklace in half and gives one half to her, as a " best friends for life " bracelet.
The phone entry ( or entries ) should supplement or complement written ( such as wallet, bracelet, or necklace ) information or indicators.
Inside the coconut is a nectarine seed strung onto a necklace and a bracelet made of thorns.
If the person gifted chooses to accept the courtship, she then agrees to always wear the necklace and bracelet and never remove them until it can be mutually agreed upon to form a lasting relationship together.
A medical alert panic button or medical alarm is an electronic device worn on a bracelet or necklace as part of a medical alert system.
Wallis also works closely with Cancer Research UK and launched a charity charm bracelet in 2005 and charm necklace in 2007 designed by international designers and celebrities such as Scarlett Johansson and Kate Moss to raise funds for the charity.

necklace and .
About all that remains to be said is that the present selection, most of which appeared first in The New Yorker, comprises ( as usual ) a slightly unstrung necklace, held together by little more than a slender thread cunningly inserted in the spine of the book.
Her name was Sabella, and the strip of seaweed around her neck was an emerald necklace the King gave her as a token of his undying love.
The other gods tricked Hera into letting her go by offering her a necklace, nine yards ( 8 m ) long, of amber.
Abhinavagupta likens it to the string of a jeweled necklace ; while it may not be the most appealing for most people, it is the string that gives form to the necklace, allowing the jewels of the other eight rasas to be relished.
A drilled shell is also used to construct the necklace.
In Norse mythology, Brísingamen ( from Old Norse brisinga " flaming, glowing " and men " jewellery, ornament ") is the necklace of the goddess Freyja.
... since Hama bore offto the shining city the Brosings ' necklace, Gem-figured filigree.
However, this saga makes no mention of the great necklace.
Possibly the Beowulf poet was confused, or invented the addition of the necklace to give him an excuse to drag in a mention of Eormanric.
In any case, the necklace given to Beowulf in the story is not the Brísingamen itself ; it is only being compared to it.
Freyja is so wrathful that all the Æsir ’ s halls beneath her are shaken and the necklace Brísingamen breaks off from her neck.
When this woman wanted to buy a golden necklace ( no name given ) forged by four dwarves ( named Dvalinn, Alfrik, Berling, and Grer ), she offered them gold and silver but they replied that they would only sell it to her if she would lie a night by each of them.
She came home afterward with the necklace and kept silent as if nothing happened.
King Odin commanded Loki to steal the necklace, so Loki turned into a fly to sneak into Freyja's bower and stole it.
When Freyja found her necklace missing, she came to ask king Odin.
She said yes, and got that necklace back.
When Högni comes to fight Heðinn on an island, Hildr comes to offer her father a necklace on behalf of Heðinn for peace ; but the two kings still battle, and Hildr resurrects the fallen to make them fight until Ragnarök.
There was also a silver pendant, which represents a woman with a broad necklace around her neck.
This kind of necklace was only worn by the most prominent women during the Iron Age and some have interpreted it as Freyja's necklace Brísingamen.
Freyja's necklace Brisingamen features prominently in Betsy Tobin's novel Iceland, where the necklace is seen to have significant protective powers.
The plumage can vary in Britain from almost pure white to black, but is usually shades of brown, with a pale ' necklace ' of feathers.

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