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More and widely
But to return to the main line of our inquiry, it is doubtful that Utopia is still widely read because More was medieval or even because he was a martyr -- indeed, it is likely that these days many who read Utopia with interest do not even know that its author was a martyr.
Utopia is still widely read because in a sense More stood on the margin of modernity.
" More remarkable is the evidence that by the end of the second century Jude was widely accepted as canonical.
More than 40 volumes of music appeared between 1725 and 1740 and these were widely distributed across Europe, owing to Telemann's numerous contacts in various countries.
More recent research has shown that this " magical number seven " is roughly accurate for college students recalling lists of digits, but memory span varies widely with populations tested and with material used.
More widely over the last 40 years, a massive increase in fertilizer use together with the increased availability of semi-dwarf varieties in developing countries, has greatly increased yields per hectare.
* More recently a very different meaning of the term has become widely used in management.
More specifically, tobacco refers to any of various plants of the genus Nicotiana, ( especially N. tabacum ) native to tropical America and widely cultivated for their leaves, which are dried and processed chiefly for smoking in pipes, cigarettes, and cigars ; it is also cut to form chewing tobacco or ground to make snuff or dipping tobacco, as well as other less common preparations.
More widely, alums are double sulphate salts, with the formula, where A is a monovalent cation such as potassium or ammonium and M is a trivalent metal ion such as aluminium or chromium ( III ).
More widely, passive solar technologies include the solar furnace and solar forge, but these typically require some external energy for aligning their concentrating mirrors or receivers, and historically have not proven to be practical or cost effective for widespread use.
More generally, the term " standard " can be applied to any popular song that has become very widely known within mainstream culture.
The second adaptation was the classic 1958 British drama film A Night to Remember starring Kenneth More, which is still widely regarded as " the definitive cinematic telling of the story.
More widely known is a tradition that Tāne was trying to find himself a wife, but at first he found only non-human females and fathered insects, birds, and plants.
* More than 100 heads of state took part in UN world summit on sustainable development, during which the Bush administration was widely criticized for its environmental policies.
More widely, the Alnwick district boasts a wealth of sporting and leisure facilities, including football, cricket, rugby, rambling, rock climbing, water sports, cycling and horse riding.
More recently, DNA fingerprinting by Ferdinand Regner indicated that one parent of Riesling is Gouais Blanc, known to the Germans as Weißer Heunisch, a variety that, while rare today, was widely grown by the French and German peasantry of the Middle Ages.
More than 75 % of the range of the European Green Woodpecker is in Europe, where it is absent from some northern and eastern parts and from Ireland, Greenland and the Macaronesian Islands, but otherwise distributed widely.
More than 50 are officially recognized in France compared to only 25 of the much more widely planted cabernet sauvignon.
More than three decades after her death, she is widely regarded as the greatest female singer in Arabic music history.
More than just being a leaving certificate, the Abitur is widely regarded as a matter of personal prestige as well.
More widely, however, his legacy has tended to be unjustly neglected.
More than 79, 000 people were killed at Majdanek ( 59, 000 of them Polish Jews ) during the 34 months of its operation .</ ref > The last major, widely publicized prosecution of 16 SS members from Majdanek ( Majdanek-Prozess in German ) took place from 1975 to 1981 in West Germany.
Their slogan, which is Latin, Plus esse, quam simultatur translates to Mere at være, end at synes (" More to be, than to seem ") in Danish, meaning that the soldier's capabilities do not have to be widely recognized or boasted-they are only more effective if unknown.
More recently, Northumbrian folk music, and particularly the use of the Northumbrian pipes, has become one of the liveliest and most widely known subgenres of folk music in Britain., with artists like fiddler Nancy Kerr, piper Kathryn Tickell and Rachel Unthank and the Winterset gaining international reputations.
More modern theorists like Empey ( 1967 ) argue that the system of values, norms and beliefs can be disorganized in the sense that there are conflicts among values, norms and beliefs within a widely shared, dominant culture.

More and term
More recent IUPAC recommendations now suggest the newer term " hydronium " be used in favor of the older accepted term " oxonium " to illustrate reaction mechanisms such as those defined in the Brønsted – Lowry and solvent system definitions more clearly, with the Arrhenius definition serving as a simple general outline of acid – base character.
More generally, one curve is a curvilinear asymptote of another ( as opposed to a linear asymptote ) if the distance between the two curves tends to zero as they tend to infinity, although usually the term asymptote by itself is reserved for linear asymptotes.
More recently, the term has been applied to a game, typically played by groups of friends to determine who rides beside the driver in a car.
More recently, with the advent of personal computing, and the growth of home recording, the term computer music is now sometimes used to describe any music that has been created using computing technology.
More recently, Dakin and Wichmann derive it from another Nahuatl term, " chicolatl " from eastern Nahuatl, meaning " beaten drink ".
The term " Gnosticism " does not appear in ancient sources, and was first coined by Henry More in a commentary on the seven letters of the Book of Revelation, where More used the term " Gnosticisme " to describe the heresy in Thyatira.
More recently the term " cigarette boat " has replaced the term " rum-runner " when similar boats were used to smuggle cigarettes between Canada and the United States.
More recently, ethnic conflicts in Bosnia and Herzegovina and genocide in Rwanda have been described as mass-based hate crimes, but the term " hate crime " did not really begin to be used until after World War II and the end of most major government-sanctioned racial cleansing projects that had been linked with official fascism.
More broadly the term is used in a wide number of contexts for an image, picture, or representation ; it is a sign or likeness that stands for an object by signifying or representing it either concretely or by analogy, as in semiotics ; by extension, icon is also used, particularly in modern culture, in the general sense of symbol — i. e. a name, face, picture, edifice or even a person readily recognized as having some well-known significance or embodying certain qualities: one thing, an image or depiction, that represents something else of greater significance through literal or figurative meaning, usually associated with religious, cultural, political, or economic standing.
The English term was first used by Henry More ( 1614 – 1687 ).
More specifically, the term describes the modernist movement in the arts, its set of cultural tendencies and associated cultural movements, originally arising from wide-scale and far-reaching changes to Western society in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
More generally, the term motion signifies a continuous change in the configuration of a physical system.
More operating system code was moved out of the kernel and into user space, resulting in a much smaller kernel and the rise of the term microkernel.
More recently, several art historians, most prominently musicologist Richard Taruskin, have applied the term " ontogeny becomes phylogeny " to the process of creating and recasting art history, often to assert a perspective or argument.
More recently, the term ontogeny has been used in cell biology to describe the development of various cell types within an organism.
More directly, it is a shortened version of the term letters patent, which was a royal decree granting exclusive rights to a person, predating the modern patent system.
More narrow definitions will not include any of the world religions and restrict the term to local or rural currents not organized as civil religions.
More specifically, Helge von Koch showed in 1901 that, if and only if the Riemann hypothesis is true, the error term in the above relation can be improved to
More recently the term rhetoric has been applied to media forms other than verbal language, e. g. Visual rhetoric.
More generally, the term is used to characterize syntax as being designed for ease of expression, for instance list comprehension in Python.

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