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Some Related Sentences

Moshing and is
Moshing is typical at hardcore shows.
Moshing has become very popular in the " club " scene and is used mainly in teenage clubs in the UK.
After being together as a band for four years, they recorded and released ( under their previous band name, Hinge ) their first EP in 1997 titled Cause Moshing is Good Fun under Psychodrama Records – the band's own label.
* Cause Moshing is Good Fun EP ( 1997 )

Moshing and dance
# REDIRECT Moshing # Origins of the dance
# REDIRECT Moshing # Origins of the dance
# REDIRECT Moshing # Origins of the dance
# REDIRECT Moshing # Origins of the dance
# REDIRECT Moshing # Origins of the dance
# REDIRECT Moshing # Origins of the dance

Moshing and .
included their mosh-criticizing song " Thank You for not Moshing ," which contained lyrics that suggested that at least some individuals in the mosh pit were simply bullies who were finding conformity in the violence.
* " Crowd Surfing and Moshing " on SafeConcerts. com ( includes information on injuries sustained )
* In " Noshing and Moshing ," the 15th episode of Freaks and Geeks, Neil performs the " S ' awriiiight " call and reply gag with his painted hand and a box.
as " Thank You For Not Moshing " with some minor lyrical changes.
In December 2006 the band announced they would be releasing a rarities compilation entitled Crouching Tiger, Moshing Panda and would include compilation tracks, out of print 7 "' s, and some songs that are not available on any albums.
* Freaks and Geeks ( 1999 ) playing " Jenna Zank " in episode: " Noshing and Moshing " ( episode # 1. 15 ) 10 / 17 / 2000

strict and sense
In the strict sense, however, agnosticism is the view that humanity does not currently possess the requisite knowledge and / or reason to provide sufficient rational grounds to justify the belief that deities either do or do not exist.
Frederick Henry Hedge wrote of the group's nature: " There was no club in the strict sense ... only occasional meetings of like-minded men and women ".
In some cases, the term admiralty is used in a wider sense, as meaning sea power or rule over the seas, rather than in strict reference to the institution exercising such power.
In the United Kingdom, bankruptcy ( in a strict legal sense ) relates only to individuals ( including sole proprietors ) and partnerships.
In strict play, the dealer then offers the deck to the previous player ( in the sense of the game direction ) for cutting.
In C, all executable code is contained within subroutines, which are called " functions " ( although not in the strict sense of functional programming ).
The spiritual teacher Meher Baba stated that " or the aspirant a life of strict celibacy is preferable to married life, if restraint comes to him easily without undue sense of self-repression.
Such acts of recognition of a saint were authoritative, in the strict sense, only for the diocese or ecclesiastical province for which they were issued, but with the spread of the fame of a saint, were often accepted elsewhere also.
For ' crannogs ' in the strict sense, typically this effort began on a shallow reef or rise in the lochbed.
( The system is not limited to alphabets in the strict technical sense ; languages that use a syllabary or abugida, for example Cherokee, can use the same ordering principle provided there is a set ordering for the symbols used.
Although it never uses the term, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints ( The Mormon Church ) is episcopal, rather than presbyterian or congregational, in the sense that it has a strict hierarchy of leadership from the local bishop up to a single prophet / president, believed to be personally authorized and guided by Jesus Christ.
It is impossible to delineate Illyrian tribes from Paleo-Balkans in a strict linguistic sense, but areas classically included under " Illyrian " for the Balkans Iron Age include the area of the Danube, Sava, and Morava rivers to the Adriatic Sea and the Shar Mountains.
Some of the less formal kinds of foods that foreigners typically associate with Japanese food may not fall under this washoku definition in this strict sense.
Elizabeth Letcher Pannill Stuart, Jeb's mother, who was known as a strict religious woman with a good sense for business, ran the family farm.
Therefore, one can find an economic analysis of the market of grapes in Russia, for example, which is not a market in the strict sense of general equilibrium theory monopoly.
In Veraguas, however, there remained a strict sense of submission to the Spanish Crown.
However, Whitehead is not an idealist in the strict sense.
taken in the strict sense.
** In a strict sense, the possessive pronouns are only those that act syntactically as nouns.
Lomas de Chapultepec is an example of an affluent suburb, although it is located inside the city and by no means is today a suburb in the strict sense of the word.
Thus, Unitarians contend that main-line Christianity does not adhere to strict monotheism but that they do, maintaining that Jesus was a prophet, and in some sense the " son " of God, but not God himself.
New Objectivity was not a strict movement in the sense of having a clear manifesto or set of rules.
An ideal solution can be said to follow Raoult's Law but it must be kept in mind that in the strict sense ideal solutions do not exist.
He expressed his misgivings in a letter to his wife: " There is too little drama here, and no movement ... To me, opera without drama, in the strict sense, is unnatural.
An alternative of access control in the strict sense ( physically controlling access itself ) is a system of checking authorized presence, see e. g. Ticket controller ( transportation ).

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