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One and earliest
One of the earliest examples of almost modern factory layout, designed for easy material handling, was the Bridgewater Foundry.
One of the earliest group automorphisms ( automorphism of a group, not simply a group of automorphisms of points ) was given by the Irish mathematician William Rowan Hamilton in 1856, in his Icosian Calculus, where he discovered an order two automorphism, writing:
One of the earliest steps towards atomic physics was the recognition that matter was composed
One tablet from this period reads, "( From the earliest days ) no-one had made a statue of lead, ( but ) Rimush king of Kish, had a statue of himself made of lead.
One of the earliest was Paul Prudhomme, who in 1984 began the introduction of his influential cookbook, Paul Prodhomme's Louisiana Kitchen, by describing the over 200 year history of Creole and Cajun cooking ; he aims to " preserve and expand the Louisiana tradition.
One of the earliest 20th century practitioners of this method was The Mills Brothers whose early recordings of the 1930s clearly stated on the label that all instrumentation was done vocally.
One of the earliest historical facts is its membership in the League of Calauria ( Calaurian Amphictyony, ca.
One of the earliest forms of defense against assassins was employing bodyguards.
One of the earliest Christian martyrs in North America was Saint Peter the Aleut.
One of the earliest hard disk drives in personal computing history,
One of the earliest accounts relating to a large unknown freshwater animal was in 1818, when Hamilton Hume and James Meehan found some large bones at Lake Bathurst in New South Wales.
One of the earliest evidence of Hindu influence in Southeast Asia were stone pillars which bear inscriptions in the Pallava script found in Kutai along the Mahakam River in East Kalimantan, dating to around the second half of the 300s AD.
One of the earliest controversies to center on BJU was the break that occurred in the late 1950s between separatist fundamentalists and neo-evangelicals represented by the newly prominent evangelist Billy Graham.
One of the earliest articulations of the anthropological meaning of the term " culture " came from Sir Edward Tylor who writes on the first page of his 1897 book: “ Culture, or civilization, taken in its broad, ethnographic sense, is that complex whole which includes knowledge, belief, art, morals, law, custom, and any other capabilities and habits acquired by man as a member of society .” The term " civilization " later gave way to definitions by V. Gordon Childe, with culture forming an umbrella term and civilization becoming a particular kind of culture.
One of the earliest justifications involved the theory of natural law.
One of the earliest examples of a visual error appears in Charlie Chaplin's " The Property Man " of 1914.
One of his earliest surviving works, under the guidance of his anatomy teacher, Dimitrie Gerota, is a masterfully rendered écorché ( statue of a man with skin removed to reveal the muscles underneath ) which was exhibited at the Romanian Athenaeum in 1903.
One of the earliest references to couscous in France is in Brittany, in a letter dated January 12, 1699.
One of the earliest reliable records of this weapon in warfare is from an ambush, the Battle of Ma-Ling in 341 BC.
One of the earliest rifled cannon was the breech-loading Armstrong Gun — also invented by William George Armstrong — which boasted significantly improved range, accuracy, and power than earlier weapons.
One of the earliest references to the clavichord in England occurs in the privy-purse expenses of Elizabeth of York, queen of Henry VII, in an entry dated August 1502:
One of the earliest structured uses of dances may have been in the performance and in the telling of myths.
One of the earliest, and probably the most well-known, is DIN 476 — the standard that introduced the A-series paper sizes in 1922 — adopted in 1975 as International Standard ISO 216.
The earliest known example of a detective story was The Three Apples, one of the tales narrated by Scheherazade in the One Thousand and One Nights ( Arabian Nights ).

One and purely
One can check one's calculation by employing both approaches, though it is important to be aware that most chemical species exist between the purely covalent and ionic extremes.
In Judaism, God is One, the idea of God as a duality or trinity among gentiles may be Shituf ( or " not purely monotheistic ").
One may say that Diophantus was studying rational points — i. e., points whose coordinates are rational — on curves and algebraic varieties ; however, unlike the Greeks of the Classical period, who did what we would now call basic algebra in geometrical terms, Diophantus did what we would now call basic algebraic geometry in purely algebraic terms.
One consequence of this is that many spellings come to reflect a word's morphophonemic structure rather than its purely phonemic structure ( for example, the English regular past tense morpheme is consistently spelled-ed in spite of its different pronunciations in various words ).
One of the most vigorous and fruitful branches of mathematics [...] a paradise created by Cantor from which nobody shall ever expel us [...] the most admirable blossom of the mathematical mind and altogether one of the outstanding achievements of man's purely intellectual activity.
Emanation ex deo ( out of God ), confirms the absolute transcendence of the One, making the unfolding of the cosmos purely a consequence of its existence ; the One is in no way affected or diminished by these emanations.
One example is Irritable Bowel Syndrome ( IBS ) that was considered formerly as having purely mental causes, while subsequent research showed significant differences in the behaviour of the gut in IBS patients.
One of the arguments against using an OODBMS is that switching from an SQL DBMS to a purely object-oriented DBMS means that you may lose the capability to create application independent queries for retrieving ad-hoc combinations of data without restriction to access path.
One can use formal power series to prove several relations familiar from analysis in a purely algebraic setting.
" One might wish to design chindōgu for a number of reasons: for example, to improve one's mental sharpness ; to develop them as an art form ; or simply to revel in a purely creative act without having to worry about utility or making money.
One critical test is nevertheless to consider the induction from experience that the externally observable world does not seem, at first approach, to be directly manipulable purely by mental energies alone.
One of the primary forces behind the rise of pictorialism was the belief that straight photography was purely representational ‒ that it showed reality without the filter of artistic interpretation.
" As Moran writes: " One explanation of the goddess ' visit is that she was to heal the aged and ailing Egyptian king, but this explanation rests purely on analogy and finds no support in this letter ... More likely, it seems, is a connection with the solemnities associated with the marriage of Tušratta's daughter ; sf.
One of the most notable criticisms was Chomsky's argument that language could not be acquired purely through conditioning, and must be at least partly explained by the existence of internal mental states.
" We have two brain systems: One of them is linked to attachment and romantic love, and then there is the other brain system, which is purely sex drive.
If such an intermediate extension does exist, and if: F is finite, then if S is defined as in the previous paragraph,: F < sub > sep </ sub >=: F =: K. One known proof of this result depends on the primitive element theorem, but there does exist a proof of this result independent of the primitive element theorem ( both proofs use the fact that if is a purely inseparable extension, and if f in F is a separable irreducible polynomial, then f remains irreducible in K ).
One can define the Lie algebra of an algebraic group purely algebraically ( it consists of the dual number points based at the identity element ); and this theorem shows that we get a matrix Lie algebra.
"... One cannot continue in this country writing works which are based on purely western concepts ", wrote music critic David Rosolio in 1946.
One reason he cited was that Western fans experience a " more purely " visual experience as most Western fans cannot understand the Japanese language, the original language of most anime, and as a result " the visuals make a greater impact " on the senses.
However, he had a more purely romantic attitude towards Dana Scully ; when she was gravely ill in the episode ' One Breath ', Frohike appeared at the hospital in a tailored suit carrying a bouquet.
One side ( e. g., Fiorina, Abrams, and Pope's " Culture War " in 2005 and their 2008 response in the Journal of Politics ) argues that polarization is almost purely an elite, or " top-down " driven.
Because it is the nature of the One to be purely self-related, their relation to one another is in fact a non-relation, i. e., takes place externally in the Void.
One primary advantage to using purely persistent data structures is that they often behave better in multi-threaded environments.

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