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One and legacies
One of the most burdensome legacies of the Soviet era is widespread environmental pollution.
One of Adams ' most important legacies is his massive diary, which he began at age 11 with the simple entry " A journal, by me, J. Q. A.
One of Descartes ' most enduring legacies was his development of Cartesian or analytic geometry, which uses algebra to describe geometry.
One of his most lasting legacies was his significant role in the creation of 5 national parks, 18 national monuments, and 150 National Forests, among other works of conservation.
One of the legacies of the indigenous peoples was the word Guiana, often used to describe the region encompassing modern Guyana as well as Suriname ( former Dutch Guiana ) and French Guiana.
One of Sun's major legacies was the creation of his political philosophy of the Three Principles of the People.
One of his most notable legacies was the establishment of the International Centre for Mathematical Sciences.
One of the great legacies of Ghirlandaio is that he is commonly credited with having given some early art education to Michelangelo, who cannot, however, have remained with him long.
One of Muawiyah's most controversial and enduring legacies was his decision to designate his son Yazid as his successor.
One of the greatest legacies of the admiral was the disruption of the Japanese supply line.
One of the most important legacies of the New Army was the professionalization of the military and perhaps introduction of militarism to China.
One of Xiaowen's enduring legacies was the establishment of the equal-field system in China, a system of government-allotted land that would last until the An Shi Rebellion in the mid Tang Dynasty ( 618 – 907 ).
One of Cabrera's most famous and most bitter legacies was allowing the entry of the United Fruit Company into the Guatemalan economical and political arena.
One of the legacies of King Sweyn was a fundamental change in Danish society which had been based on whether a person was free or a bondsman.
One of her resulting legacies was her pioneering work towards European Union legislation on hazardous chemical substances.
One of the few legacies of Gilfillan's life is An Address to the Rev.
One of the legacies of this artistic tradition is the local architecture, particularly the use of mudbrick as a building material.
One of the legacies of the war in Upper Canada is strong feelings of anti-Americanism which persist to this day and form an important component of Canadian nationalism.
One of the biggest legacies of the Navy presence was to be the dredging of Lake Montauk so that it replaced Fort Pond as Montauk's dock.
One of Charcot's greatest legacies as a clinician is his contribution to the development of systematic neurological examination, correlating a set of clinical signs with specific lesions.
One of Commoner's lasting legacies is his four laws of ecology, as written in The Closing Circle in 1971.
One of Hajibeyov's greatest legacies was bringing forward the idea of establishing a professional music school.
* Hamiduddin Farahi: One of the lessons of this surah is that a lot of people see historical sites, which are a sign of destroyed nations. So when we see the legacies ; the Pyramids, the Mountain homes of Thamud, and the great buildings and nations of power who have died-we realise that Allah destroyed them through time. This is a reminder of ; Inna al insaana la fee Khusrin-surely man is in loss. Allah replies to such people ;
One of his greatest legacies to the development of the Bahá ' í administrative system, however, was his will and testament, wherein he describes several new institutions.

One and guilds
One of the most important legal documents of the city, an agreement between the Ulm patricians and the trade guilds (), dates from 1397.
One subject that is quite characteristic of Dutch Baroque painting is the large group portrait, especially of civic and militia guilds, such as Rembrandt van Rijn's Night Watch.
One of the first guilds developed in London, England, known as the Worshipful Company of Clockmakers ; the group formed after a small number of foreign-trained clockmakers spent time working in London.

One and elevated
The Oral Torah is the primary guide for Jews to abide by these terms, as expressed in tractate Gittin 60b, " the Holy One, Blessed be He, did not make His covenant with Israel except by virtue of the Oral Law " to help them learn how to live a holy life, and to bring holiness, peace and love into the world and into every part of life, so that life may be elevated to a high level of kedushah, originally through study and practice of the Torah, and since the destruction of the Second Temple, through prayer as expressed in tractate Sotah 49a " Since the destruction of the Temple, every day is more cursed than the preceding one ; and the existence of the world is assured only by the kedusha ... and the words spoken after the study of Torah.
One anecdote relates to the elevated section passing through
One of the commoners elevated in this way by the king was Peder Schumacher, named Count Griffenfeldt by Christian V in 1670 and high councillor of Denmark in 1674.
One insular species, the Giant Hoopoe of Saint Helena, is extinct, and the Madagascar subspecies of the Hoopoe is sometimes elevated to a full species.
One particular foe was Adalberon, archbishop of Reims whom Otto I had elevated to the powerful archbishopric of Reims.
One of the main questions that needs to be answered is: if autism is an extreme of the male brain, then is it the result of elevated fetal testosterone ( FT ), abnormalities in androgen receptors or the genes controlling FT, or sexually dimorphic gene expression unrelated to FT?
One proposed subspecies, Christinus marmoratus alexanderi Storr, has been elevated by some authorities to the rank of species.
The decision elevated the club from National League One to compete in Super League XIV from 2009.
One monarch late in the dynasty, Wahibre Ibiau, may have been a former vizier elevated to the office.
One study published in the American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology involved several hundreds of women and found that " women with a short period of cohabitation ( less than 4 months ) who used barrier methods for contraception had a substantially elevated risk for the development of pre-eclampsia compared with women with more than 12 months of cohabitation before conception ".
One unusual feature was an offset wing design, with the right wing root attaching to the wing's tilted center section ( elevated above the fuselage, as on all parasol-wing designs ) and lower than the left wing root, to allow the wings to be quickly folded up.
One piece of structure, the elevated portion of the Franklin Avenue Shuttle, built in 1896 and 1905, was extensively rebuilt in 1999.
One of the most damaging aspects of brain trauma and other conditions, directly correlated with poor outcome, is an elevated intracranial pressure.
One of the simplest designs consists of nothing more than a drinking glass placed upside down above a piece of bait, its rim elevated by a coin stood on edge.
" The Holy Catholic Apostolic Roman Church believes and professes that there is one living and true God, Creator and Lord of heaven and earth, omnipotent, eternal, immense, incomprehensible, infinite in intellect and will and in all perfection Who, being One, singular, absolutely simple and unchangeable spiritual substance, is to be regarded as distinct really and in essence from the world most blessed in and from Himself, and unspeakably elevated above all things that exist, or can be conceived, except Himself.
One of those staircases is built adjacent to the platform instead of directly on it and connected to the station house with a wooden elevated passageway.
One judge, Samuel Blatchford, was elevated directly from the Southern District of New York to the Supreme Court of the United States.
One of the reverse faults, the north-south trending 10 mile ( 16 km ) long Buck Mountain Fault, elevated what is today the central part of the Teton Range.
One of the most important person in the politics of the town was András L. Áchim, who founded a peasants ' party and succeeded in having Békéscsaba elevated to the rank of " city with council ".
Sportscars returned once more in 1956, before in 1957 the Pescara race was elevated to a round of the Formula One World Championship.
One is on elevated surface, adjacent to the concourse level.
One of a number of double team moves in which one parter holds the victim in a bear hug while the other partner either runs or dives at the elevated victim and impacts him in the chest, neck, or face, driving him backwards into the ground in the process.
One wrestler would apply a bear hug and elevate the opponent while the other wrestler executed a flying body press from the top rope, driving the opponent to the ground from an elevated height.
One wrestler would apply a stalling vertical suplex and elevate the opponent while the other wrestler executed a flying attack like a flying crossbody block or a missile dropkick from the top rope, driving the opponent to the ground from an elevated height.

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