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Some Related Sentences

Merely and being
Merely being aware of kindness in oneself and others is also associated with greater well-being.
Merely being traded is insufficient, it must be a full listing, and this excludes AIM ' PLUS-quoted and PLUS-traded market segments, but PLUS itself is acceptable ; shares in unquoted companies ; warrants ; futures and options.
* Senior party: Merely being the first to file the application does not grant a party legal protection.

Merely and possession
Merely walking or hunting on land does not establish actual possession.

Merely and is
Merely having a mental image of some sort is not the all-important consideration.
Merely remaining silent in face of protracted questioning is insufficient to assert right.
Merely passing money from one person to another, so long as it is done with the intent to disguise the source, ownership, location or control of the money, has been deemed a financial transaction under the law.
Merely exploiting the replicative abilities of existing cells is insufficient, because of limitations in the process of protein biosynthesis ( also see the listing for RNA ).
Merely snatching the property from the victim's person is not sufficient force unless the victim resists or one of the items is attached or carried in such a way that a significant amount of force must be used to free the item from the victim's person.
Acknowledging that, the court stated " Merely informing a former employer's customers of a change of employment, without more, is not solicitation.
* Sartwell, C. ( 1991 ): < cite > Knowledge is Merely True Belief </ cite > in < cite > American Philosophical Quarterly </ cite > 28.
* Sartwell, C. ( 1992 ): Why Knowledge is Merely True Belief in < cite > The Journal of Philosophy </ cite >, Vol.
Merely locking the bike frame to the wheel is not recommended because, although it cannot be rolled away, the entire bicycle can still be lifted and carried away.
Merely pointing out that the plaintiff could have sued somewhere else is not sufficient to succeed on an FNC motion.
" Merely having to endure a criminal prosecution is no such irreparable harm.
Merely opening up a business to the public is not state action, but the performance of a " public function " ( a function that has been traditionally and exclusively performed by the state ) is state action ( Marsh v. Alabama, 326 U. S. 501 ( 1946 ));
Merely placing products in the " stream of commerce " is insufficient to provide minimum contacts with the states where the products end up.
Merely having a disability is not sufficient for eligibility.
Merely leaving them on the curb for the garbage man to collect, Brennan argued, should not be found to remove that expectation of privacy, for “ scrutiny of another's trash is contrary to commonly accepted notions of civilized behavior .”

Merely and for
Merely giving a treatment can have nonspecific effects, and these are controlled for by the inclusion of a placebo group.
Merely ' exhibiting ' the gun was thought to be a scare, which would spare the expedition for problems with troublesome natives.
In 1994 he went to Harvard as Artist in Residence at the Carpenter Center for the Visual Arts and published Merely Connect, which he had written with Salman Rushdie during a series of portrait sittings.
Merely seconds from death, Keough reforms and apologizes to Iruga for everything.
" He wrote screenplays for a number of important or popular films, including: The Docks of New York ( 1928 ), Thunderbolt ( 1929 ), Merely Mary Ann ( 1931 ), Shanghai Express ( 1932 ), Bombshell ( 1933 ), Mutiny on the Bounty ( 1935 ), Come and Get It ( 1936 ), Only Angels Have Wings ( 1939 ), To Have and Have Not ( 1944 ), The Big Sleep ( 1946 ) and Nightmare Alley ( 1947 ).

Merely and
Merely ruin the industry, what s left of it ; and surely the owls are beginning to see it !”

Merely and potential
Merely inserting an object like a probe into a plasma changes the density, temperature, and potential at the sheath edge and perhaps everywhere.

being and possession
The Butler Lordship of Burrishoole continued into the late 14th century when Thomas le Botiller was recorded as being in possession of Akkyll & Owyll.
It was not an overseas possession but national soil, much like Alaska or Hawaii are US National soil despite being ' discontinuous '.
It is the analogous possession of an existence that allows them to be identified as being ; therefore, being is an analogous predication.
In 1897, the shoal became a French possession, later being placed under the administration of a commissioner residing in Réunion in 1968.
The sale was completed in November 1851, the price being £ 32, 000, and Prince Albert formally took possession the following autumn.
The superficial consistency of most beetles ' morphology, in particular their possession of elytra, has long suggested that the Coleoptera are monophyletic, but there is growing evidence that this is unjustified, there being arguments for example, in favour of allocating the current suborder Adephaga their own order, or very likely even more than one.
His mother was imprisoned by Somoza's National Guard for being in possession of " love letters " which the police stated were coded political missives.
Often, the same set of degrees is used for higher doctorates, but they are distinguished as being honoris causa: in comprehensive lists, the lettering used to indicate the possession of a higher doctorate is often adjusted to indicate this, for example, " Hon.
* slinging – a player slung to the ground in a tackle ( although in the AFL these days, if a player loses possession of the ball while they are being thrown, the tackler will often get penalised for " holding the man ".
The play will begin with the snap of the ball ( typically but not exclusively to the quarterback ), and it will end when the effort by the offensive squad to advance the ball has either succeeded in scoring, or has been frustrated by the ball being downed before the aim of the offensive play is accomplished, or by the defensive squad having managed to come into possession of the ball without first downing it.
For the purposes of the rules, all players on the team in possession of the ball are attackers, and those on the team without the ball are defenders, yet throughout the game being played you are always " attacking " your goal and " defending " the opposite goal .< ref > Anders, ELizabeth.
It often marks a noun as being the possessor of another noun ; however, it can also indicate various other relationships than possession: certain verbs may take arguments in the genitive case, and it may have adverbial uses ( see Adverbial genitive ).
Du Maurier's work inspired a substantial body of ' Female Gothics ,' concerning heroines alternately swooning over or being terrified by scowling Byronic men in possession of acres of prime real estate and the appertaining droit de seigneur.
Illegal possession or sale of firearms may result in a minimum punishment of 3 years in prison, with the maximum being the death penalty.
In May 1995, Busey was arrested for cocaine possession after being hospitalized for an overdose of cocaine and GHB.
This was to be based on utilitarian principles ; he said: " Every man has a right to that, the exclusive possession of which being awarded to him, a greater sum of benefit or pleasure will result than could have arisen from its being otherwise appropriated.
When coming to Kubla Khan, he pointed out: " instead of being content to have written finely under the influence of laudanum, recommends ' Kubla-Khan ' to his readers, not as a poem, but as ' a psychological curiosity ' ... Every lover of books, scholar or not, who knows what it is to have his quarto open against a loaf at his tea ... ought to be in possession of Mr. Coleridge's poems, if it is only for ' Christabel ', ' Kubla Khan ', and the ' Ancient Mariner '.
A further link is supplied by the Zulu belief that the magician's familiar is really a transformed human being ; when he finds a dead body on which he can work his spells without fear of discovery, the wizard breathes a sort of life into it, which enables it to move and speak, it being thought that some dead wizard has taken possession of it.
In some cases, they may never leave the house, instead being formally sold while remaining in the original owner's possession in a locked cabinet until they can be repurchased after the holiday.
After being defeated in 1898 in the Spanish-American War and losing possession of the Philippine Islands, Spain sold the Palau archipelago to Imperial Germany in the 1899 German-Spanish Treaty.
It can also be likened to a jealousy competition ( jealousy being the central theme in Shakespeare's play ), since players engulf the pieces of the opponent, thereby turning them to their possession.
In 1171 Rhys made peace with King Henry and was confirmed in possession of his recent conquests as well as being named Justiciar of South Wales.

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