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One and unifying
One might say that the period which saw the establishment of the unifying supremacy of the Burgundians in the Walloon country was a turning-point in their linguistic history.
The Woodsworth program will also offer the possibility of unifying students ' first year experience as students will be enrolled in special Woodsworth One Tutorial sections in their other Arts & Science courses.
One of his ten children, his second son Kim Wonsul, became a general during the time of King Munmu of Silla, and he was essential in unifying Silla.
One of the elegant aspects of the iAPX 432 architecture is that a dispatching port is actually just a communication port whose messages are process objects, thus unifying the operation of process dispatching and interprocess communication and simplifying the underlying implementation.
Promotional materials are also made as ideal as possible, for example the slogan " One World, One Dream " referring to a unifying ideal of " love for all mankind ".
One year later they would join forces with Octagon Koch Tavares, who had continued to organise the World Championships and events in South America, to form a single entity known as Beach Soccer Worldwide ( BSWW ), with the aim of unifying all major Pro Beach Soccer tournaments in the world under the same structure and providing representation of the sport to major sponsors, the media and FIFA.

One and characteristic
One characteristic of the spirit in community is its givenness.
One characteristic of American cooking is the fusion of multiple ethnic or regional approaches into completely new cooking styles.
One characteristic of the city is its painted gables, for which Aarau is sometimes called the " City of beautiful Gables ".
One characteristic of the Missileer ancestry was that the radar sent it mid-course corrections, which allowed the fire control system to " loft " the missile up over the target into thinner air where it had better range.
One of these was the property, an essential universal true of the species, but not in the definition ( in modern terms, some examples would be grammatical language, a property of man, or a spectral pattern characteristic of an element, both of which are defined in other ways ).
One characteristic style of music is his Night music, which he used mostly in slow movements of multi-movement ensemble or orchestral compositions in his mature period.
One characteristic that can be used to distinguish a small city from a large town is organized government.
One important characteristic of many normative moral theories such as consequentialism is the ability to produce practical moral judgements.
One characteristic shared by many clitics is a lack of prosodic independence.
Upham shows a balanced and complicated view of Cotton Mather such as this first mention: " One of Cotton Mather's most characteristic productions is the tribute to his venerated master.
One usage refers to a variety of a language that is a characteristic of a particular group of the language's speakers.
One rodent characteristic that can be highly visible in hamsters is their sharp incisors ; they have an upper pair and lower pair which grow continuously throughout life, so must be regularly worn down.
One result of these studies was that Lorenz " realized that an overpowering increase in the drives of feeding as well as of copulation and a waning of more differentiated social instincts is characteristic of very many domestic animals.
One characteristic feature is a tripartite singulative – collective – plurative number system, which Blench ( 2010 ) believes is a result of a noun-classifier system in the protolanguage.
One of the greater problems with Modernist-style of planning was the disregard of resident or public opinion, which resulted in planning being forced upon the majority by a minority consisting of affluent professionals with little to no knowledge of real ' urban ' problems characteristic of post-Second World War urban environments ; slums, overcrowding, deteriorated infrastructure, pollution and disease, among others ( Irving 1993 ).
One general characteristic of games that Wittgenstein considers in detail is the way in which they consist in following rules.
The particular characteristic of Proclus ' system is his insertion of a level of individual ones, called henads between the One itself and the divine Intellect, which is the second principle.
One such article was from the Daily Express, in which the interviewer noted " a lightening change came over her face ", which was the first public mention of the rapid changes in mood that became characteristic of her.
One Wobbly characteristic since their inception has been a penchant for song.
One striking and innovative characteristic of this opera has been noted:
One characteristic by which domestic and feral animals are differentiated is their coats.
One of the individuals was found to carry the F2a maternal lineage, and the other the D lineage, both of which are characteristic of East Eurasian populations.
One characteristic of Wing Tsun is its structured teaching system.
One of the principles of relational database design is that the fields of data tables should reflect a single characteristic of the table's subject, which means that they should not contain concatenated strings.

One and membranes
One of the reasons M-theory is so difficult to formulate is that the numbers of different types of membranes in the various dimensions increases exponentially.
One possible consequence of ideas drawn from M-theory is that multiple universes in the form of 3-dimensional membranes known as branes could exist side-by-side in a fourth large spatial dimension ( which is distinct from the concept of time as a fourth dimension )-see Brane cosmology.
One such an example is lactococcin G, which permeabilizes cell membranes for monovalent ions such as Na and K, but not for divalents ones.
One major difference between nitrocellulose and PVDF membranes relates to the ability of each to support " stripping " antibodies off and reusing the membrane for subsequent antibody probes.
One observer wrote, " One of the most striking of the complications was hemorrhage from mucous membranes, especially from the nose, stomach, and intestine.
One of the specific phospholipids found in the cellular membranes of many living things.
One or two additional membranes may enclose chloroplasts in algae.
One research use of the saponin class of natural products involves their complexation with cholesterol to form pores in cell membrane bilayers, e. g., in red cell ( erythrocyte ) membranes, where complexation leads to red cell lysis ( hemolysis ) on intravenous injection.
Space-filling models of sphingomyelin ( a ) and cholesterol ( b ). One key difference between lipid rafts and the plasma membranes from which they are derived is lipid composition.
One study suggests that the toxic mechanism of solanine is caused by the chemical's interaction with mitochondrial membranes.
One group of ferredoxins, originally found in chloroplast membranes, has been termed " chloroplast-type " or " plant-type ".
One important factor of their chemical properties such as lipid solubility results in the ability to pass through biological phospholipid membranes and bioaccumulate in the fatty tissues of living organisms.
One of a glycerophospholipid's functions is to serve as a structural component of cell membranes.

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