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One and concrete
One hebephrenic women confided to me, `` I live in a world of words '', as if, to her, words were fully concrete objects ; ;
One young man, exhilarated to the point of insanity by liquor and the excitement of the moment, performed a perfect swan dive out of the stands at the Yale Bowl during the Yale-Army football game, landed squarely on his head on the concrete ramp below, and died at once.
On the west side of Hawkcraig Point there is a short concrete jetty that was used as part of the development of radio controlled torpedoes during World War One.
One might also call them bodies, or physical particulars, or concrete things, or matter, or maybe substances ( but bear in mind the word ' substance ' has some special philosophical meanings ).
One of the best-known thin-shell concrete structures in America is the Kresge Auditorium ( MIT ), which was designed by Saarinen.
One of the more effective housings, the GBU-28 used its large mass ( 2, 130 kg / 4, 700 lb ) and casing ( constructed from barrels of surplus 203 mm howitzers ) to penetrate 6 meters ( 20 ft ) of concrete, and more than 30 metres ( 100 ft ) of earth.
* One PAZ 672 came to Chile between 1970-1971 with the installation of the soviet KPD factory of concrete blocks for prefabricated buildings, in Quilpué.
One technique was to drive stakes into the ground to make a box and then fill the box with pozzolana concrete bit by bit.
One of the roles of military command is to translate policy into concrete missions and tasks, and to express them in terms understood by subordinates, generally called orders.
The new headquarters have been designed by Feilden Clegg Bradley Studios as Architect and Atelier One as Structural Engineer, and incorporates light shelves to distribute natural daylight around the 200 workstations, and concrete panels to absorb daytime heat, to provide the thermal mass that the lightweight wooden structure would otherwise lack.
One example: All Muslim schools of theology faced the dilemma of affirming Divine transcendence and Divine attributes, without falling into anthropomorphism on the one hand, or emptying Divine attributes, mentioned in scripture, of any concrete meaning on the other.
One concrete sign of the increased communication within the region is the establishment in 2006 of an IKEA warehouse in Haparanda, targeting customers 500 km away in Murmansk and northern Norway.
One defector reported that jailed football players were forced to kick a concrete ball after failing to reach the 1994 FIFA World Cup finals.
One platoon opened fire on the sentry and threw grenades into a concrete bunker believed to hold the triggering equipment for the bridge demolition charges, a second platoon began to assault a number of trenches and gun-pits on the eastern bank of the canal, and a third began moving towards the bridge.
One of the attractions on this trail is a concrete marker shows the exact line where New York and Pennsylvania meet.
One may not be able to offer any concrete assistance except empathy.
Saffron Walden is home to a concrete skate park One Minet Park, built by US company Dreamland.
Runway 15-33: One of the original runways constructed in 1929, this x concrete runway was lengthened to in 1936.
One view is that visual poetry is synonymous with concrete poetry.
It was built in the 1930s, But Henry Avenue Was extended in 1959 from Roxborough Ave to Andorra, includes several concrete arch bridges One Which crosses over the Wissahickon Creek & Lincoln Drive where it crosses into East Falls.
One cap over the still-polluted canal bed would be made of concrete.
One of the significant benefits of rammed earth is its high thermal mass ; like brick or concrete construction, it can absorb heat during the day and release it at night.
One of the gang members fired a shot at the sidewalk near Bacala's face and a concrete fragment injured his right eye.
One was to add ice to the wet concrete, which was the first application of this technique in Australia.

One and instance
One such instance has already been presented: his use of alienation.
One must be careful here ; for instance, some analyses count an addition of two numbers as one step.
One argument claims that this is an instance of " devolution " -- showing an evolutionary trend of decreasing complexity.
One may perform an inexact search ( using keywords, for instance ) and retrieve numerous " hits ," some of which will be on-target.
For instance, the name " Lord Sto Odin " in the story " Under Old Earth " is derived from the Russian words for " One hundred and one ", сто один.
One instance occurred in February 1988, when the government in Nagorno-Karabakh, a predominantly ethnic Armenian region in the Azerbaijan SSR, passed a resolution calling for unification with the Armenian SSR.
One can for instance acquire a shotgun license through a skeet shooting club but may only use it for clay pigeon shooting until an actual hunting examination has been passed.
One well known instance in the Miles Gloriosus is Sceledre, scelus.
One also speaks of field quantization, as in the " quantization of the electromagnetic field ", where one refers to photons as field " quanta " ( for instance as light quanta ).
One instance of deliberate security through obscurity on ITS has been noted: the command to allow patching the running ITS system ( altmode altmode control-R ) echoed as < tt >##^ D </ tt >.
This terminology may be muddled somewhat in other jurisdictions, for instance Europe, where terrestrial channels are commonly mapped from physical channels to common numerical positions ( i. e. BBC One does not broadcast on any particular " channel 1 " but is nonetheless mapped to the " 1 " input on most British television sets ).
One such instance was when the oil conglomerate Roxxon discovered that a small island in the South Atlantic had a foundation composed of vibranium.
For instance, the residents of Camp Skagway Number One included: William Howard Taft, who went on to become a U. S. President ; Frederick Russell Burnham, the celebrated American scout who arrived from Africa only to be called back to take part in the Second Boer War ; and W. W. White, author and explorer.
One can appreciate that the noise introduced by the first stage, for instance, is amplified by all of the stages whereas the noise introduced by later stages undergoes lesser amplification.
One notable instance was in May when the 6th Infantry received a reported sighting of Julio Cardenas, one of Villa's most trusted subordinates.
One may, for instance, say, " Peter, can you open the window?
One method uses friction to apply the needed torque: the gyroscope in a gyrocompass is not completely free to reorient itself ; if for instance a device connected to the axis is immersed in a viscous fluid, then that fluid will resist reorientation of the axis.
One instance of the schema is included for each formula φ in the language of set theory with free variables among x, w < sub > 1 </ sub >, ..., w < sub > n </ sub >, A.
For instance, the ceremony for conjuring a horse closely relates to the Arabic One Thousand and One Nights and French romances ; Chaucer ’ s The Squire's Tale also bears marked similarities.
One leader, for instance, Zhu Hongdeng ( Red Lantern Zhu ), started as a wandering healer, specializing in skin ulcers, and gained wide respect by refusing payment for his treatments.
One of the experimental methods for exploring physisorption potential energy is the scattering process, for instance, inert gas atoms scattered from metal surfaces.
One failing of his geographical descriptions is his imprecision, such as, for instance, when he overuses the noun « Caucasus » to refer to other nearby ranges.
One vase, for instance, depicts him as sinking down into the earth, upright, and buried at the waist ; this legend is described in the Metamorphoses as well, and implies that Caeneus is falling directly into Tartarus.
One could, for instance, portray conscious observers as moving through the block universe, in some physically inexplicable way, in order to account for the subjective sense of a flow of time.

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