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One and puts
One effect of the proposal, which puts a premium on population instead of economic strength, as in the past, would be to take jobs from European nations and give more to such countries as India.
One sub-type adds to one end, and takes off from the other, its opposite takes and puts things only on one end.
One estimate puts the human brain at about 100 billion ( 10 < sup > 11 </ sup >) neurons and 100 trillion ( 10 < sup > 14 </ sup >) synapses.
One estimate puts at least 1, 000 pirates in the Bahamas in 1713, outnumbering the 200 families of more permanent settlers.
) One study puts the average time for diagnosis at 2. 9 years, having observed a range from three months to 20 years in their sample population.
One easy trick for legacy code to adopt a more efficient model without major changes to its source code is simply to set the sleep parameter passed to WaitNextEvent to a very large value — on OS X, this puts the thread to sleep whenever there is nothing to do, and only returns an event when there is one to process.
One system gives him a long reign of twenty years (), which puts his starting date in 752 BC.
One Norse saga called Eymund's saga ( a part of Yngvars saga víðförla ), with remarkable details, puts on Yaroslav the blame of his brother Burizlaf's murder.
One system, Endocinch, puts stitches in the LES to create little pleats that help strengthen the muscle.
One of her interview subjects ( self-defined as shy ) puts this point of view even more strongly:
One drawing by Tolkien, if to scale, would have made Thangorodrim 35, 000 ft high, and the statement that it lay 150 leagues ( 450 Númenórean miles ) north of Menegroth puts it too far away for some of the action in The Silmarillion to make sense ; a distance of 150 – 200 miles would have been more consistent.
One minute into the division the Speaker puts the question to the House again.
One of the stage managers recalls that he looked visibly unhealthy (" gray-faced ", as she puts it ) and complained of not feeling too good, while another says she was surprised by his request for champagne before the start of the show, as he had always been known for completely abstaining from drink before his concerts.
One simply puts the CD into the drive, powers up the computer and ensures that the CD drive is selected for boot before the hard drive.
Greenfield is best known for his 2006 book Everyware: The dawning age of ubiquitous computing ( ISBN 0-321-38401-6 ), which has been called " groundbreaking " by Bruce Sterling: " One puts it down with a strange conviction that web-designers have transcended geekdom and achieved Zen soulfulness.
One puts the eggs directly in the cooker and whisks during the heating and not before.
One can run XDM on the remote system so that a user can log in to the remote computer via a window on the Cygwin / X system and then the remote system puts up web browsers, terminal windows, and the like on the Cygwin / X display.
One informed estimate puts their number between 30, 000 and 40, 000.
One estimate puts the number at 2, 077.
One day, while Will and Lyra are picnicking in the wood near their camp, Lyra puts a fruit to Will's lips.
Each time he serves McCabe's claret, he corrects the English pronunciation of Maurice ( Morris ) to the French ( Maur-ees ), and each time Prentiss puts him down with a verse like " One man by circumstance is in splendour set ; whilst another irons pants in a laundrette.
One estimate puts the human brain at about 100 billion neurons and 100 trillion synapses.
One estimate puts the age at 169 ± 7 million years ( Middle Jurassic ).
" " One is not born, but rather becomes, a woman ", or as Toril Moi puts it " a woman defines herself through the way she lives her embodied situation in the world, or in other words, through the way in which she makes something of what the world makes of her ".
One of Hakuin's major concerns was the danger of what he called " Do-nothing Zen " teachers, who upon reaching some small experience of enlightenment devoted the rest of their life to, as he puts it, " passing day after day in a state of seated sleep ".

One and burden
One additional lane would then be directional with the traffic burden and effectively increase the traffic carrying capability of the East River Drive by fifty percent.
One suggestion is that beasts of burden used to pull carts along, and these channels would guide the carts and prevent the animals from straying.
One can be denounced for doing so by neighbors or ill-wishers, and the burden is then effectively on the user or grower to prove that the material is for personal use only.
One aspect of the Poor Law that continued to cause resentment was that the burden of poor relief was not shared equally by rich and poor areas but, rather, fell most heavily on those areas in which poverty was at its worst.
One of the conditions was that the collection was to be examined by Dr. R. Bowdler Sharpe and personally packed by him, apart from raising Dr. Sharpe's rank and salary due to the additional burden on his work caused by his collection.
One was the use of cast iron tools and beasts of burden to pull plows, and the other was the large-scale harnessing of rivers and development of water conservation projects.
One of the vital instruments which facilitated long distance trade was portage and the domestication of beasts of burden.
One of the biggest opponents of foreclosures is the Western Cape Anti-Eviction Campaign which sees foreclosures as unconstitutional and a particular burden on vulnerable poor populations.
One assumes that perusing a larger number of choices imposes a cognitive burden on the individual.
One advantage of listening mode is that the server site does not have to configure its firewall / NAT to allow access on port 5900 ( or 5800 ); the burden is on the viewer, which is useful if the server site has no computer expertise, while the viewer user would be expected to be more knowledgeable.
One goal of these entities is to reduce the burden of paperwork for medical staff and recoup lost efficiencies caused by workload saturation, paving the way for further practice growth.
One study estimated that ingestion of house dust accounts for up to 82 % of our PBDE body burden.
One evening when she went to milk the cows, she said that a stranger with a knapsack spoke to her, explained what was going on in her house, comforted her, then produced a bundle of plates from his knapsack, turned the leaves for her, showed her the engravings, exhorted her to faith in bearing her burden a little longer, then suddenly vanished with the plates.
One reason for their decline has been the reduction in areas available for running the events, and the increasing burden on organisers to ensure that the rally will not cause a nuisance to any residents affected.
One major difference from battles in other theatres of the war was the burden of the wounded on their unit.
" " It requires that the stigmatized individual cheerfully and unselfconsciously accept himself as essentially the same as normals, while at the same time he voluntarily withholds himself from those situations in which normals would find it difficult to give lip service to their similar acceptance of him ..." One has to convey the impression that the burden of the stigma is not too heavy yet keep himself at the required distance.
One of the most common uses for a multi is to act as a beast of burden, a " mule ", for a main character.
One reason for this is that it rises from hollow and watery places, so that the heat that is raising it, bearing as it were too heavy a burden cannot lift it to a great height but soon lets it fall again.
And the originals — however lasting, however beautiful — constitute a terrible burden ... this time the old songs have been recast sweetly, without that self-defeating aggression, in what sounds suspiciously like a spirit of fun ... Many of the more recent ones, like ' Oh, Sister ,' ' One More Cup of Coffee ( Valley Below )', both from the album Desire and ' Shelter from the Storm ,' from Blood on the Tracks are vastly improved, as if, when they were first recorded, they hadn't been fully thought through.
One DALY can be thought of as one lost year of ' healthy ' life and the burden of disease as a measurement of the gap between current health status and an ideal situation where everyone lives into old age free of disease and disability.
One of the key aspects of this effort has been the creation of a management system designed to enable service providers or value added resellers to lift the burden of security management from the end users while at the same time delivering additional services such as automatic security and software updates, content filtering, anti-virus and more.
Melisande and Phèdre make a deal: if Phèdre will promise to find Imriel, Melisande will give her the location of the lost tribe of Dan, whose elders know the Name of the One God, allowing Phèdre to free Hyacinthe of his terrible burden.
One of the most important restrictions on prosecutors, however, is against shifting the burden of proof, or implying that the defense must put on evidence or somehow prove the innocence of the defendant.
One method to improve population health is population health management ( PHM ), which has been defined as “ the technical field of endeavor which utilizes a variety of individual, organizational and cultural interventions to help improve the morbidity patterns ( i. e., the illness and injury burden ) and the health care use behavior of defined populations ”.

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