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Page "reviews" ¶ 502
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One and could
One of Greg's bombs hung up, and he was miles from the target before he could get rid of it.
One could see this chemical determinant as in itself a miracle.
One shawl was so tremendous that she could not wear it, so she draped it over the banister on the second floor, and it hung over the stairway.
One could shave in the reflection of its French-polished panels, and its axles were greased like those of roulette wheels.
One could also add to these analogies that steel loses its magnetism by heat, which proves that steel becomes a better conductor through a rise in temperature, just as electrical bodies do.
One woman -- she could have been either English or American -- went up to him and said, ' But you are the foreigners ' ''.
One could hear a very faint, ladylike sigh of relief.
One who could be linked to anti-Semitism only by overcoming his objections is scarcely a good specimen of the Jew-baiter throughout the ages.
One wrote: `` ( I am so hungry ) I could eat a rider off his horse & snap at the stirups ''.
One man, badly burned about the face and eyes by an arc welding torch, was blinded and could not find a doctor at the time.
One of the A.L.A.M. lawyers observed that if the Selden case had been tried under this simplified procedure, the testimony which filled more than a score of volumes, `` at a minimum cost of $1 a page for publication alone, could have been contained in one volume ''.
One of the most wholesome things you could schedule in your church would thus be a group confessional where people could admit of their inner tensions ''.
One frequently has the feeling that the order of their movement combinations could be transposed without notable loss of effect, there is too little suggestion of organic relationship and development.
One could say " I bought herbs from the apothecary ".
One argument given in favor of using the axiom of choice is that it is convenient to use it because it allows one to prove some simplifying propositions that otherwise could not be proved.
One could say, " The Moon's diameter subtends an angle of half a degree.
One could interpret this passage as being another example of the mainstream Christian belief in a general resurrection ( both for those in heaven and for those in hell ).
One could assume the new term was coined and adopted by Athenian democrats.
One reason that financial officials were elected was that any money embezzled could be recovered from their estates ; election in general strongly favoured the rich, but in this case wealth was virtually a prerequisite.
" The Chicago Daily Tribune called it “ One of the most spectacular crimes of the 20th century, and what is believed to be the first airplane kidnap murder on record .” Because it occurred somewhere over three Missouri counties, and involved interstate transport of a stolen airplane, it raised questions in legal circles about where, by whom, and even whether he could be prosecuted.
One could " hotkey " from one operating system to the next using the Alt-Tab key combination.
One example which could have been overlooked without historical records is the Mayan interest in the planet Venus.
( Musseli told friends she had not wanted to sell her home, but that Lerner urged her to cut her ties with her native city and that she entrusted Lerner with the proceeds of the sale, for investment in the U. S .) The daughter of a World War One French war hero and herself an unsung heroine of the Resistance, whose Corsican forebears were intimates of Napoleon Bonaparte, she later made Lerner the gift of a chateau in France after he declared to her that he wanted a French rural retreat where he could write.

One and hardly
One of these Daves, Dave Capisano, is unfamiliar to McCulloch, who sings " I hardly know him ", then looks vaguely uncomfortable for the rest of the song's lyricless measure.
One might argue, however, that a government would be hardly likely to present a bill which is so open to rejection.
One critic wrote to the Boston Transcript: “ The story could hardly, it would seem, give pleasure to any reader, and to many whose lives have been touched through the dearest ties by this dread disease, it must bring the keenest pain.
The theory produces a good deal but hardly brings one closer to the secrets of the Old One.
One ghost town in the Lake Sonoma Valley excavations was identified as Amacha, built for 100 people but hardly used.
One would, however, hardly agree that this captures the notion of being " much simpler ".
According to Robert L. Hutchings, " One can hardly doubt that if there had been a slower buildup of industry, the attack would have been successful and world history would have evolved quite differently.
One historian would conclude in 1893, " When we take into account the characteristics of the three men we can hardly resist the conclusion that Soulé, as he afterwards intimated, twisted his colleagues round his finger.
One hardly dared to wink
One could hardly ask for more.
All but one of the reviews was good .< ref >< u > Alvin Ailey: A Life In Dance </ u >, Jennifer Dunning ,( 1996 ): 64 .</ ref > One magazine praised the " superb dancers " but complained that " one technical and effective stunt follows another with hardly ever any sustained choreographic continuity.
One of the main pillars of REBT is that irrational and dysfunctional ways and patterns of thinking, feeling and behaving are contributing to much, though hardly all, human disturbance and emotional and behavioral self-and social defeatism.
" In this article, Stigler stressed the importance of information by writing, " One should hardly have to tell academicians that information is a valuable resource: knowledge is power.
One is hardly able to miss the large pillars facing you as you enter.
One could hardly create such a chart without the consent and assistance of the local people.
One yardstick of the relative cultural impact of the three companies is that the Butlins ' Redcoats ( a sort of hybrid of general staff, entertainer and steward ) are remembered more vividly than Pontins ' Bluecoats and Warners ' Greencoats whose uniform was based on the school blazer & tie worn by Captain Harry Warner as a schoolboy are hardly remembered at all.
One text states that " layers of railroad track are hardly ever called gandy dancers ," asserting, rather, that the job of the gandy dancer refers to " track examiners ", ascribing their responsibilities as " checking ties, bolts, track, and roadbed for necessary repairs.
One would hardly recognise the quiet and phlegmatic Siamese.
One of the more famous ad campaigns involved the claim that each ounce slice contained " five ounces of milk ", which makes them taste better than imitation cheese slices made mostly with vegetable oil and water and hardly any milk.
: One could hardly ignore the examples of analysis and its special case, the calculus.
One could still hardly speak of dense topographic, orographic and hydrological information.
One day, when his face began to swell from an infection, Tsangyang could hardly open his eye, two local diviners were summoned.
One wrote that the concerto was " hardly destined .. to become classical ".
A friend in later years, Claire Élisabeth de Rémusat, said of her: " One can hardly go further than Madame d ' Houdetot, I would say not so much in kindness as in benevolence.

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