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Motives and are
Many of his works are central to modern rhetorical theory: A Rhetoric of Motives ( 1950 ), A Grammar of Motives ( 1945 ), Language as Symbolic Action ( 1966 ), and Counterstatement ( 1931 ).
" Similarly, Kenneth Burke explains Korzybski's kind of semantics contrasting it, in A Grammar of Motives, with a kind of Burkean poetry by saying " Semantics is essentially scientist, an approach to language in terms of knowledge, whereas poetic forms are kinds of action ".
Motives of this kind are called Artin motives.
Motives for collection of articles, such as Tipu's Tiger, are seen by literary historian Barrett Kalter as having a social and cultural context.
Some other works are " The Motives of Eloquence: Literary Rhetoric in the Renaissance ", Style: An Anti-Textbook, Literacy and the Survival of Humanism, and The Electronic Word: Democracy, Technology, and the Arts ( 1995 ).

Motives and include
Motives for class passing might include:
Motives include getting rid of political dissidents or " correcting " what they see as the court's mistake.
Motives for making them include allowing more debate, delaying the enactment of the legislation, or just sometimes a straightforward attempt to make the initiator of the legislation give up.
Motives for open-air preaching include, to glorify God and to fulfill the command to preach and make God's word known.
Motives include political and personal vendettas.
Programs include Local Motives featuring live, in-studio performances from local bands, Blunt Youth Radio Project, Home Dad a weekly half hour talk show about family related issues, Lesbian Radio a weekly 90 minute feminist music and talk show, and Sound Ecology a political talk show.

Motives and ;
A fine sense of timbre and idiomatic writing is characteristic, as is a sense of humour ; the fugal section of the Fantasy on Motives of Burt Bacharach, for example, juxtaposes melodic ideas from Bacharach ’ s " Raindrops Keep Falling on My Head " and Niccolò Paganini ’ s Caprice No. 24 ; the introduction musically spells out Bacharach ’ s name.
* Tennyson Jesse, Fryniwyd-Murder and Its Motives, Heinemann 1924 ; see edition put out by ( Garden City, New York: Doubleday & Co .-Dolphin Books, 1924, 1958, 1965 ), 240p., Chapter IV: " Murder for Jealousy-Mrs. Pearcey ", p. 154-183.

Motives and ),
" A typology of social entrepreneurs: Motives, search processes and ethical challenges ", Journal of Business Venturing, 24 ( 5 ), pp. 519 – 532.
Literary critic and philosopher Kenneth Burke first coined and described the expression " scapegoat mechanism " in his books Permanence and Change ( 1935 ), and A Grammar of Motives ( 1945 ).
), Motives in Fantasy, Action and Society.
* Motives ( film ), a 2004 thriller film
* Morals From Motives ( 2001 ), Oxford University Press.
The proof of its publication only remains in two tracts, A Booke of the Seuen Planets, or Seuen wandring motives of William Alablaster's wit, by John Racster ( 1598 ), and An Answer to William Alabaster, his Motives, by Roger Fenton ( 1599 ).
He published Sermons ( 1874 ), including most of his " heretical " utterances, Truths for To-day ( 2 vols, 1874 – 1876 ), Motives of Life ( 1879 ), and Club Essays ( 1881 ).

Motives and positive
Due to its rarity, the album is less popular amongst Self fans than Subliminal Plastic Motives, but critical reception remained positive.

Motives and &
In July 1998 the Rutgers University journal " Society " published papers from a " Symposium on Secession and Nationalism at the Millennium " including the articles " The Western State as Paradigm " by Hans-Herman Hoppe, " Profit Motives in Secession " by Sabrina P. Ramet, " Rights of Secession " by Daniel Kofman, " The Very Idea of Secession " by Donald Livingston and " Secession, Autonomy, & Modernity " by Edward A. Tiryakian.

Motives and ).
Motives vary from demanding the release of certain inmates ( notably IC-814 ) to highlighting the grievances of a particular community ( notably AF 8969 ).
This challenge occurred while Kant was still alive, and his response was the essay On a Supposed Right to Tell Lies from Benevolent Motives ( sometimes translated On a Supposed Right to Lie because of Philanthropic Concerns ).
Michael Slote is UST Professor of Ethics at the University of Miami and is author of From Morality to Virtue ( 1992 ) and Morals From Motives ( 2001 ).
Dramatism " invites one to consider the matter of motives in a perspective that, being developed from the analysis of drama, treats language and thought primarily as modes of action " ( Grammar of Motives xxii ).

are and relevant
`` We were requested by the Secretary General, as I understand it, to discuss with you such matters as appear to us to be relevant, and we are not of course either a formal group or a committee in the sense of being guided by any rules or regulations of the Secretariat.
What are the relevant data??
If the raw population figures are crucially relevant, then it is idle to think of liberation, as idle as to suppose that Poland might liberate Russia.
Thus, although the agenda of external assistance in the economic sphere are cumulative, and many of the policies suggested for nations in the earlier stages remain relevant, the basic purpose of American economic policy during the later stages of development should be to assure that movement into a stage of self-sustaining growth is not prevented by lack of foreign exchange.
Over a relatively short period of time, usually about four to twelve weeks, the worker must be able to shift the focus, back and forth, between immediate external stressful exigencies ( `` precipitating stress '' ) and the key, emotionally relevant issues ( `` underlying problem '' ) which are, often in a dramatic preconscious breakthrough, reactivated by the crisis situation, and hence once again amenable to resolution.
Here I do not speak of military power where our advantage is obvious and overwhelming but of political power -- of influence, if you will -- about which the relevant questions are: Is Soviet influence throughout the world greater or less than it was ten years ago??
Most acids encountered in everyday life are aqueous solutions, or can be dissolved in water, and these two definitions are most relevant.
In most developed countries, only qualified persons — those with the appropriate licensure, certification, or registration with a relevant body, often governmental — are legally permitted to practice architecture.
Alternatively, if characters ' attribute ranks are close, the weaker character can try to change the relevant attribute by changing the nature of the conflict.
For example, if two characters are wrestling the relevant attribute is Strength ; a character could reveal a weapon, changing it to Warfare ; they could try to overcome the other character's mind using a power, changing it to Psyche ; or they could concentrate their strength on defense, changing it to Endurance.
Diacritics are usually disregarded ( this is usually not relevant for English anagrams ), and standard orthography is to be used.
Another line of defense is to maintain that abstract objects are relevant to mathematical reasoning in a way that is non causal, and not analogous to perception.
Examples of relevant biological information processes studied in the early days of bioinformatics are the formation of complex social interaction structures by simple behavioral rules, and the information accumulation and maintenance in models of prebiotic evolution.
Separate account records are maintained for petty cash, accounts payable and receivable, and other relevant transactions such as inventory and travel expenses.
Wolf trials are still a regular part of the hunting diploma for all Russian sightdog breeds of the relevant type, either singly or in pairs or trios, in their native country.
Following the move on harmonisation of the standard in Europe, some British Standards are gradually superseded or replaced by the relevant European Standards ( EN ).
Today, however, this is less relevant since most countries are parties to at least one such agreement.
This phenomenon is known as nonverbal person agreement or nonverbal subject agreement and the relevant markers are always established as deriving from cliticised independent pronouns.
The user enters pronunciations that are converted into relevant Chinese characters.
While the reliability of this mechanism has not yet been studied for all relevant crop species, recent results in tobacco plants are promising, showing a failed containment rate of transplastomic plants at 3 in 1, 000, 000.
But in such cases, those eligible are also sometimes seen as " citizens " of the relevant state, province, or region.
Moreover, planners need to determine the types of client information that are most relevant, and how best to employ them.
As more than half of cancer patients are elderly, this adverse effect is only relevant for a minority of patients.
At any point in history, in any location, rhyming slang can be seen to incorporate words and phrases that are relevant at that particular time and place.

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