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Some Related Sentences

One and key
One of the key challenges in glass cockpits is to balance how much control is automated and how much the pilot should do manually.
One could " hotkey " from one operating system to the next using the Alt-Tab key combination.
One key differentiation for AppleTalk was it contained two protocols aimed at making the system completely self-configuring.
He added two key members to his stock company, Albert Austin and Eric Campbell, and embarked on a series of elaborate productions — The Floorwalker, The Fireman, The Vagabond, One A. M. and The Count.
One of the key priorities of the reform of the military is make it more ethnically diversified.
One of the asymmetric algorithm types, elliptic curve cryptography, or ECC, appears to be secure with shorter keys than those needed by other asymmetric key algorithms.
One of the key tasks of constitutions within this context is to indicate hierarchies and relationships of power.
One solution made use of a grid of hexagonal keys with symbols inscribed into dimples in the keys that were either in the center of a key, across the boundary of two keys, or at the joining of three keys.
One minimal chordic keyboard example is Edgar Matias ' Half-Qwerty keyboard described in patent circa 1992 that produces the letters of the missing half when the user simultaneously presses the space bar along with the mirror key.
One of the key goals of the council was to combat the heresy of the Cathars.
One of the key aims was to make the data independent of the logic of application programs, so that the same data could be made available to different applications.
One key challenge is the management of municipal solid waste.
One of the key thinkers of the Midlands Enlightenment, he was also a natural philosopher, physiologist, slave trade abolitionist,
One of the key reasons for the success of the IBM PC ( and the PC clones that followed it ) was the active ecosystem of third-party expansion cards available for the machines.
One of the earliest public key encryption applications was called Pretty Good Privacy ( PGP ).
One of the key persons who greatly influenced fascism, the French revolutionary syndicalist Georges Sorel was greatly influenced by anarchism and contributed to the fusion of anarchism and syndicalism together into anarcho syndicalism.
One key element is the Global Rinderpest Eradication Programme, which has advanced to a stage where large tracts of Asia and Africa have now been free of the cattle disease rinderpest for an extended period of time.
One of the key features of graphic design is that it makes a tool out of appropriate image selection in order to possibly convey meaning.
One key distinction is the purpose for the practice ; handloaders often seek smaller batches of high-quality ammunition, whereas reloaders are said to make large quantities of ammunition that does not need to be of as high quality but at least one authority ( McPherson ) holds that a better distinction for these connotations is that, regardless of quantity, handloads tend to be of generally high quality while reloads tend to be merely functional.
One of the key economic challenges was Iraq's immense foreign debt, estimated at $ 125 billion.
One of Icon's key concepts is that control structures are based on the " success " or " failure " of expressions, rather than on boolean logic, as in most other programming languages.
One of the earliest such reformers was Robert Owen, known for his pioneering efforts in improving conditions for workers at the New Lanark mills, and often regarded as one of the key thinkers of the early socialist movement.
One of the key features of the first computer-controlled ICBM, the Minuteman missile, was that it could quickly and easily use its computer to test itself.
One of the key internal arguments against the total authenticity of the Testimonium is that the clear inclusion of Christian phraseology strongly indicates the presence of some interpolations.

One and clauses
One of the most important restrictions of SAT is HORNSAT, where the formula is a conjunction of Horn clauses.
Meanwhile, international delegates proposed three additional clauses, which were adopted: One or more days for weekly rest ; equality of laws for foreign workers ; and regular and frequent inspection of factory conditions.
Clause one is a " vesting clause ," similar to other clauses in Articles One and Three, but it vests the power to execute the instructions of Congress, which has the exclusive power to make laws ; " To make all laws which shall be necessary and proper for carrying into execution the foregoing powers, and all other powers vested by this Constitution in the government of the United States, or in any department or officer thereof.
John A. Bingham, the member of Congress who is known to have been chiefly responsible for the language of Section One when it was drafted by the Joint Committee in 1866, had, during the previous decade and as early as 1856-1859, employed not one but all three of the same clauses and concepts he later used in Section One.
One of the three main clauses of the Cairo Declaration was that " all the territories Japan has stolen from the Chinese, such as Manchuria, Formosa, and The Pescadores, shall be restored to the Republic of China ".
One of the least known facts about Dulwich is that certain houses, in a direct line from North Dulwich Station towards West Dulwich station, have clauses in their Title Deeds protecting the right to build an underground railway beneath their property-it has of course still to be built, 140 years later.
It was filmed in 1992-93 but premiered on Channel One only in November 2006, as there were disputes concerning the Italian studio that was co-producing over unfavourable clauses in his contract, which left the tapes locked in a bank vault, even after his death aged 74 of a heart attack.
One of the disciplines in which ceteris paribus clauses are most widely used is economics, in which they are employed to simplify the formulation and description of economic outcomes.
One issue regarded the language used in clauses 1 to 7, which was described by Lord Mayhew of Twysden as " uncertain in its effects and would leave the position of most hereditary Peers uncertain if the Bill was enacted.
One can form a 2-satisfiability instance at random, for a given number n of variables and m of clauses, by choosing each clause uniformly at random from the set of all possible two-variable clauses.
One of the clauses of Paparanic's will was that Haddock, on accepting the ship, should also fulfil his current obligations and thus they set off for Athens to deliver some carpets.
In the United States, the Speech or Debate Clause in Article One of the United States Constitution provides for parliamentary privilege based on Westminster, and many state constitutions provide similar clauses for their state legislatures.
One of the clauses of that agreement was Geffen being able to sign any band of their choosing from Drive-Thru's roster.
One of the principles stated in the Declaration was that a psychiatrist must not take part in compulsory psychiatric treatment in the absence of mental disease, and the Declaration also included other clauses which could be considered as heaving a bearing on the political abuse psychiatry.
One traditional scheme for classifying English sentences is by the number and types of finite clauses:
One with two or more independent clauses and one or more dependent clauses is referred to as a compound-complex sentence.
One example is clauses requiring advertising materials to credit the copyright holder.

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