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Often and older
Often these were older veterans.
Often — especially with older text editors — there is only one level of edit history remembered and successively issuing the undo command will only " toggle " the last change.
Often the older man takes the boy into his home as a ward or companion and helps him find a better job ( sometimes replacing a less honest or industrious boy ).
Often, older media contain words or phrases that were innocuous at the time of publication, but have a more obscene or sexual meaning today, such as " have a gay old time " from The Flintstones (" gay " means " happy " in this context ).
Often sold much older.
Often people who have congenital anosmia report that they pretended to be able to smell as children because they thought that smelling was something that older / mature people could do, or did not understand the concept of smelling but did not want to appear different from others.
Often, the father and older sons would go first, leaving the mother and the rest of the family behind until the male members could afford their passage.
Often, potassium deficiency symptoms first appear on older ( lower ) leaves because potassium is a mobile nutrient, meaning that a plant can allocate potassium to younger leaves when it is K deficient.
Often the epithet is the result of fusion of the Olympian divinity with an older one: Poseidon Erechtheus, Artemis Orthia, reflect intercultural equations of a divinity with an older one, that is generally considered its pendant ; thus most Roman gods and goddesses, especially the Twelve Olympians, had traditional counterparts in Greek, Etruscan, and most other Mediterranean pantheons, e. g. Jupiter as head of the Olympian Gods with Zeus, but in specific cult places there may even be a different equation, based on one specific aspect of the divinity.
Often hikikomori start out as school refusals, or futōkō ( 不登校 ) in Japanese ( an older term is tōkōkyohi ( 登校拒否 )).
Often first given by friends or an older family member, these nicknames are typically one syllable ( or worn down from two syllables to one ).
Often the centre of a city in older cities is full of historic, institutional, or cultural areas.
Often called " The foot of Canal Street ", at the riverfront the Canal Street Ferry offers a connection to the Algiers Point neighborhood, an older, 18th century portion of the larger Algiers area across the river.
Often, Bolos on garrison duty are older surplus or reserve units on loan, in which case their three-letter prefix is changed to " SOL ".
* Often an older, debilitated or immune compromised population.
Often, the older the sword, the more valuable it became.
Often, in older or traditional churches, this will be before a side altar.
Often, a high-resistance bleeder resistor is connected internally within the flyback transformer to ensure the charge is safely grounded when not in use, but many sets lack this, especially older models.
Often it is blended ( mixed ) with HFO ( heavy fuel oil ) for use in larger power stations as a way of reducing environmental impact while allowing the older, less efficient power stations to remain open in the face of ever-tightening emissions regulations.
Often used as the second female lead or the spunky older sister of " Wheezer " ( Bobby Hutchins ), Mary Ann's snappy delivery came in handy during the series ' somewhat rocky transition to sound.
Often when myasthenia gravis is diagnosed in older dogs the first symptom the dog may manifest is megaesophagus.
Often in the older days one singer would hang up a wreath as a challenge and as a reward for victory.
Often, he is not a complete newborn but is slightly older, because he is frequently shown standing on his own, barely walking, or having a small amount of head hair.

Often and cars
Often, but not always, passenger cars in a train are linked together with enclosed, flexible gangway connections that can be walked through by passengers and crew members.
Often these days art cars derive their inspiration from popular culture.
Often, Bristol races are the scene of the highest number of yellow-flag caution laps in the NASCAR season ; with so many cars in such a small space, contact is almost inevitable.
Often these were a copy of commercially available cars, such as Wickham and Fairmont.
Often, wire fox terriers are abandoned or surrendered for reasons that may include: running away instead of coming on a command ; chasing cars, bicycles, other dogs, etc.
Often tilting and high-speed cars are left in " trainsets " throughout their service.
Often die-cast replicas of the paint scheme cars are produced for the collector market.
Often, either by choice or to conform with local regulations, cars are parked in driveways in order to leave streets clear for traffic.
Often, the version of Boys ' Life geared towards older boys features buying guides for products such as cars, MP3 players, digital cameras, sunglasses, and more.
Often parts for which there is high demand are removed from cars and brought to the salvage yard's warehouse.
Often, the disadvantage of having the NASCAR race car in itself, with its heavier car, narrower tire, smaller ( compared to premium road-racing cars ) brakes, ( especially with inexperienced drivers ) pit stops, and most often longer races ( all NASCAR road course races are at least 200 miles / 322 kilometers or longer ) have hurt the " ringers ".
Often, on a net-leased car, there is no evidence of GATX ownership, although some net lease cars carry a GATX logo.

Often and from
Often, the instruction to be fetched must be retrieved from relatively slow memory, causing the CPU to stall while waiting for the instruction to be returned.
Often, such bonds have no particular orientation in space, since they result from equal electrostatic attraction of each ion to all ions around them.
Often, this type of compression is virtually indistinguishable from the original uncompressed sound or images, depending on the codec and the settings used.
Often the passage from one world or stage to the next is impelled by inner forces, a process of germination or gestation from earlier, embryonic forms.
Often, the solar plasma will fill these loops from one foot point and drain from the other ( siphon flow due to a pressure difference, or asymmetric flow due to some other driver ).
Often new requirements necessitated gathering, cleaning and integrating new data from " data marts " that were tailored for ready access by users.
Often such faiths hold out the possibility of divine retribution as well, where the divinity will unexpectedly bring evil-doers to justice through the conventional workings of the world ; from the subtle redressing of minor personal wrongs, to such large-scale havoc as the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah or the biblical Great Flood.
Often taken out of context, this act garnered negative attention from critics and some animal rights activists.
Often, the diplomat's visas are canceled ; and the diplomat and her or his family may be barred from returning to the United States.
Often strong men muscle the subject into a car and take him to a place where he is cut from everyone but his captors.
* Release Early, Release Often, excerpt from The Cathedral and the Bazaar, mirrored on personal site
Often ill for much of the winters and kept out of school, Edvard would draw to keep himself occupied, and received tutoring from his school mates and his aunt.
Often, people refer to a " biased estimate " or an " unbiased estimate ," but they really are talking about an " estimate from a biased estimator ," or an " estimate from an unbiased estimator.
Often the early phase, from 1. 8 to 1. 25 Ma, is considered to be a separate species, Homo ergaster, or it is seen as a subspecies of Homo erectus, Homo erectus ergaster.
* Often used as a means to bleed money from customers through lack of defining a deliverable
Often the training period-the costs of which are in great part covered by the initial fee-is too short in cases where it is necessary to operate complicated equipment, and the franchisee has to learn on his own from instruction manuals.
The original scores, which dated from 1804 when the composer was twelve, were found in the Library of Congress in Washington D. C. Often transcribed for string orchestra, these sonatas reveal the young composer's affinity for Haydn and Mozart, already showing signs of operatic tendencies, punctuated by frequent rhythmic changes and dominated by clear, songlike melodies.
Often it is possible to reform cases from similarly sized ammunition which is in production, and this is the most economical way of obtaining brass for obscure or out of production calibers.
Often inserts of this sort are done separately from the main action, by a second-unit director using stand-ins.
Often enormously complicated matters, ICJ cases ( of which there have been less than 150 since the court was created from the Permanent Court of International Justice in 1945 ) can stretch on for years and generally involve thousands of pages of pleadings, evidence, and the world's leading specialist public international lawyers.
Often the technology was purchased from Britain or British engineers and entrepreneurs moved abroad in search of new opportunities.
Often, the systems we put in place to keep us secure are keeping us from our more creative selves.

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