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Often and referred
Often referred to simply as " contempt ," such as a person " held in contempt ," it is the judge's strongest power to impose sanctions for acts which disrupt the court's normal process.
Often, these expanded versions, also referred as " complete editions ", will have additions to the gameplay or additional game modes and features outside the main portion of the game.
Often logic " 0 " will be a lower voltage and referred to as " Low " while logic " 1 " is referred to as " High ".
Often referred to as fonds, meaning " foundations ", these base sauces, espagnole, velouté, and béchamel, are still known today.
Often referred to as Gaianism, or the Gaian Religion, this spiritual aspect of the philosophy is very broad and inclusive, making it adaptable to other religions: Taoism, Neo-Paganism, Pantheism, Judeo-Christian Religions, and many others.
Often incorrectly referred to as " the Vatican ", the Holy See is not the same entity as the Vatican City State, which came into existence only in 1929 ; the Holy See, the episcopal see of Rome, dates back to early Christian times.
Often referred to as the " Lost City of the Incas ", it is perhaps the most familiar icon of the Inca World.
Often referred to as the " Dhak Dhak Girl ", she is famous for her dance in the song " Dhak Dhak Karne Laga " from the film Beta.
Often the parishes are referred to simply by their common names.
Often simply referred to as centrifugal pumps.
Often referred to as a Shabbat scooter or Amigo Shabbat, it is manufactured by Zomet Institute in Israel, each Shabbat module application is individually inspected and certified by a Zomet representative.
Often referred to as Puget Sound's Largest Artist's Colony, Whidbey is home to numerous working artists, writers, and performers.
( Often referred to as DCER.
* Often referred to as " The World Series of Barbecue ", The American Royal Barbecue Contest is held each October in Kansas City, Missouri.
Often referred to as the " City of Popes " because of the presence of popes and antipopes from 1309 to 1423 during the Catholic schism, it is currently the largest city and capital of the département of Vaucluse.
Often, a multiplexer and demultiplexer are combined together into a single piece of equipment, which is usually referred to simply as a " multiplexer ".
Often referred to as " The Father of Naval Aviation ," Captain Henry C. Mustin ,( 1874 – 1923 ), an 1896 graduate of the U. S. Naval Academy, was the principal architect for the concept of the catapult launch.
Often they are referred to by their toxin producing capabilities, verocytotoxin producing E. coli ( VTEC ) or Shiga-like toxin producing E. coli ( STEC ).
Often on days when a legislature is not in session, the committees of each house meet and consider the bills that have been referred to them to decide if the assigned bills should be reported for further action.
Often referred to as the Waldensians ( or Waldenses ), they were distinct from the Albigensians or Cathari.
Often the term " Aztec " refers exclusively to the Mexica people of Tenochtitlan ( now the location of Mexico City ), situated on an island in Lake Texcoco, who referred to themselves as Mexica Tenochca or Cōlhuah Mexica.
Often very small farms used for intensive primary production are referred to by the specialization they are being used for, such as a dairy rather than a dairy farm, a piggery, a market garden, etc.
Often the breed is referred to as the Greyhound of the cats ( source: Animal Planet television series: " Cats 101 " episode :" Colorpoint Shorthair "), because of the sleek appearance and the galloping run characteristic of the breed.
Often referred to as " The Rock ," the small island was developed with facilities for a lighthouse, a military fortification, a military prison ( 1868 ), and a federal prison from 1933 until 1963.

Often and father
Often these books follow a formula where the first chapter involves Brown solving a case at the dinner table for his father, the local police chief in the fictional town of Idaville.
Often Zeus ( or Jupiter ) was considered the supreme, all-powerful and all-knowing, king and father of the Olympian gods.
Often refers to a sperm donor who, if anonymous, usually has no contact with the childA biological child of a man who, for the special reason above, is not their legal father, has no automatic right to financial support or inheritance.
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 called " the father of American landscape painting ," Inness is best known for these mature works that not only exemplified the Tonalist movement but also displayed an original and uniquely American style.
Often the children of corresponding German family are also interested to get in contact with the unknown war children of their father.
Often brings food to her father.
Often called the father of acid jazz, Smith lived to see that movement come to reflect Smith's organ style.
Often Rémi is hungry and has no roof over his head ; but in the animals, especially in Capi, he gains dear friends, and in Vitalis he finds the father he lacks.
: " Often there will be a price to be paid in welfare terms by the diminution of the children's contact with their father and his extended family.
Often it is the father who cares for the young, carrying it and bringing it to the mother only for nursing.
Often the children were criticized because of who their father was.
Often a man knows only one design, which has been transmitted to him by his father, who in his turn had had it from his father before him.
Often, the biological father is not recorded — even on the original birth certificate.
Often it involves something minor such as walking on the grass when no one is watching, ignoring a familial command because the father is far away, cutting timber when not permitted or ignoring the one-child policy.
Often called ' the father of the Newlyn School ', Forbes's painting A Fish Sale on a Cornish Beach ( 1885 ), brought national recognition to the eponymous art colony that had grown up around that fishing village in the far west of Cornwall.

Often and modern
Often dismissed as an unreliable tradition, it has been studied with attention by modern scholars, in particular Neil Christie, who see in it a possible record of a formal invitation by the Byzantine state to settle in northern Italy as foederati, to help protect the region against the Franks, an arrangement that may have been disowned by Justin II after Narses ' removal.
Often called " the first modern historian ", the English scholar Edward Gibbon wrote his magnum opus, The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire ( 1776 – 1788 ).
Often informal or formally intrinsic to local religious customs, this type of insurance has survived to the present day in some countries where a modern money economy with its financial instruments is not widespread.
* Adam Smith: Often said to have founded modern economics ; explained emergence of economic benefits from the self-interested behavior (" the invisible hand ") of artisans and traders.
Often called the first " modern Prime Minister ", he set both an example and a precedent for his successors.
Often not mentioned or included in the field of study of psychopharmacology today, are psychoactive substances not identified as useful in modern mental health settings or references.
Often, they simply made the patronymics the new family names, and modern Dutch patronymic-based surnames such as Jansen, Pietersen and Willemsen abound.
Often the " prehistoric " analogue to a modern machine uses an animal.
Often in modern weddings, the ceremony of removing a face veil after the wedding to present the groom with a virgin bride is skipped, since many couples have already entered into conjugal relations prior to their wedding day – the bride either wears no face veil, or it is lifted before the ceremony begins, but this is not always the case.
Often nineteenth century academic art still is seen as kitsch, although this view is coming under attack from modern art critics.
Often heard arguments against OSS are: the API is practically impossible to virtualize, it lacks support for modern audio features such as timer-based scheduling or proper surround sound support, inability of its developers to work with the Linux kernel community, lack of integration with modern kernel features such as the device model, too low-level interface, as well as general rejection of its design with moving a lot of signal processing code into the kernel.
Often decorated with lace or log cabin motifs in the early 1900s, the modern tea cosy has come back into fashion with the resurgence of loose leaf tea ateliers.
* Horseshoe – Often confused with the Handlebar Moustache, the horseshoe was possibly popularized by modern cowboys and consists of a full moustache with vertical extensions from the corners of the lips down to the jawline and resembling an upside-down horseshoe.
Often there is more than one bridesmaid: in modern times the bride chooses how many to ask.
Often that use has ceased to be relevant in the modern world but even if that's not the case, in the Victorian era and for some decades beyond, useful items were often decorated to a such a high degree that we can now appreciate them for their artistic or design merits.
Often the formal system will be the basis for or even identified with a larger theory or field ( e. g. Euclidean geometry ) consistent with the usage in modern mathematics such as model theory.
Often credited with defining the modern artist's book, Dieter Roth ( 1930 – 98 ), produced a series of works which systematically deconstructed the form of the book throughout the fifties and sixties.
Often the organization reviving the language chooses a particular dialect, even standardizes one from several variants, and adds new forms, mainly modern vocabulary, through neologisms, extensions of meaning for old words, calques from sibling languages ( Arabic for Modern Hebrew, Welsh and Breton for Cornish ), or plain borrowings from the modern international languages.
Often the subject of winter poems and tales, the Companions travel with St. Nicholas carrying with them a rod ( sometimes a stick and in modern times often a broom ) and a sack.
Often, as mentioned above, the initial scribe of a text often left notes for the rubricator of where rubrication would be necessary, a fact that helps the modern historian learn of the provenance of the manuscript.
Often only the aluminium drawers survived, which aren't typical of a modern kitchen.
Often tables in modern dining rooms will have a removable leaf to allow for the larger number of people present on those special occasions without taking up extra space when not in use.

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