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"" and ":
* Caldwell, Ellen M. "" Banish All the Wor ( l ) d ": Falstaff's Iconoclastic Threat to Kingship in I Henry IV.
* Hostetter, Carl F. "" Si man i-yulmar n ( g ) win enquatuva ": A Newly-Discovered Tengwar Inscription.
"" Ye Knew Your Duty, But Ye Did It Not ": The Epistolary Rhetoric of Sarah Grimké.
"" Tragedy Laugh On ": Comic Violence in Titus Andronicus ", Renaissance Drama, 10 ( 1979 ), 71 92
"" Lend me thy hand ": Metaphor and Mayhem in Titus Andronicus ", Shakespeare Quarterly, 40: 3 ( Autumn, 1989 ), 299 316
"" Wilderness of Tigers ": Structure and Symbolism in Titus Andronicus ", Essays in Criticism, 10 ( 1960 ), 275 289
"" The gnawing vulture ": Revenge, Trauma Theory, and Titus Andronicus ", Shakespeare Quarterly, 53: 1 ( Spring, 2002 ), 21 52
"" The swallowing womb ": Consumed and Consuming Women in Titus Andronicus ", in Valerie Wayne ( editor ), The Matter of Difference: Materialist Feminist Criticism of Shakespeare ( Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1991 ), 129 51
In reciprocal contrast, " in both Caesar and Cleopatra we see very active wills and energetic pursuit of goals ".< ref > James, Max H. "" The Noble Ruin ": Antony and Cleopatra.
"" On the Famous Voyage ": Ben Jonson and Civic Space.
** " McMillan & Wife ": season 2, episode 3, entitled "" Cop of the Year "".
* Williamson, Marilyn L. "" When Men Are Rul'd by Women ": Shakespeare's First Tetralogy ", Shakespeare Studies, 19 ( 1987 ), 41 59
"" A short report and not otherwise ": Jack Cade in 2 Henry VI ", in Ronald Knowles ( editor ), Shakespeare and Carnival: After Bakhtin ( London: Macmillan, 1998 ), 13 37
* Williamson, Marilyn L. "" When Men Are Rul'd by Women ": Shakespeare's First Tetralogy ", Shakespeare Studies, 19 ( 1987 ), 41 59
* Williamson, Marilyn L. "" When Men Are Rul'd by Women ": Shakespeare's First Tetralogy ", Shakespeare Studies, 19 ( 1987 ), 41 59
"" Were man but constant, he were perfect ": Constancy and Consistency in The Two Gentlemen of Verona ", Stratford-Upon-Avon Studies, 14 ( 1972 ), 31 57
"" Frequenter legere ": the propagation of literacy, education, and Divine Wisdom in Caesarius of Arles.
* Putzi, Jennifer "" Tattooed still ": The Inscription of Female Agency in Elizabeth Stoddard's The Morgesons " Legacy-Volume 17, Number 2, 2000, pp. 165 173 University of Nebraska Press
• William D. Rogers, "" Power " to " Law ": It's Not as Bad as All That ", 23 Wisconsin Journal Of International Law, 1, at 39-47.
"" el brujo es un coyote ": Taxonomies of Trauma in Cormac McCarthy's Blood Meridian.
Karina rendered the song in Spanish as " Concierto para enamorados " in 1966: that same year Alma Cogan made a German translation of " A Lover's Concerto ": " So Fängt Es Immer An "-her final recording-and also Kai Lind recorded the Finnish rendering "" Aamukonsertto ".

"" and Men
* Simcha Raz, Angel Among Men: Impressions from the Life of Rav Avraham Yitzchak Hakohen Kook Zt "" L, translated ( from Hebrew ) Moshe D. Lichtman, Urim Publications 2003.
" King Henry I's " Old Men "" The Journal of British Studies, Vol.

"" and Andronicus
But others believe that "" referred simply to the work's place in the canonical arrangement of Aristotle's writings, which is at least as old as Andronicus of Rhodes or even Hermippus of Smyrna.

"" and ",
He uses the Latin " Cogito ergo sum " in the later Principles of Philosophy ( 1644 ), Part 1, article 7: "" At that time, the argument had become popularly known in the English speaking world as " the '' argument ", which is usually shortened to "" when referring to the principle virtually everywhere else.
The "" (" Song of Germany ", ; also known as "" or " The Song of the Germans "), has been used wholly or partially as the national anthem of Germany since 1922.
It survives in this fixed form from the days of Old English ( having undergone, however, phonetic changes with the rest of the language ), in which it was constructed as "" + " me " ( the dative case of the personal pronoun ) + " thinks " ( i. e., " seems ", < Old English thyncan, " to seem ", a verb closely related to the verb thencan, " to think ", but distinct from it in Old English ; later it merged with " think " and lost this meaning ).
The word " marble " derives from the Greek "" ( mármaron ), from "" ( mármaros ), " crystalline rock ", " shining stone ", perhaps from the verb "" ( marmaírō ), " to flash, sparkle, gleam ".
* Vertical bar, sometimes called " pipe ", the ASCII character ""
This play went into NFL Lore as "" One Yard Short ", or simply " The Tackle.
"" For East Prussia, Truso played the same role as Haithabu ( Slesvig ) or Hedeby for north-western Germany or Slavic Vineta for Pomerania ", Gimbutas has observed.
meaning " quod erat demonstrandum " or by one of the tombstone marks "" or "" meaning " End of Proof ", introduced by Paul Halmos following their usage in magazine articles.
The name might mean " Yah ( weh ) has concealed ", " whom Yah ( weh ) has hidden ", or "" Yah ( weh ) lies in wait "".
* 2003: English soprano Sarah Brightman sampled " Un bel dì vedremo " in her song " It's a beautiful day ", included in her album Harem ; that song in turn was a cover of the 2000 song "" Ein schöner Tag " on the album Weltreise by the German band Schiller.
Unit names are common nouns and use the character set and follow the grammatical rules of the language concerned for example "", "" but to aid universality, each unit has a symbol that is independent of language, for example " km ", " V " etc.
As a proof text, at least in regard to Shemini Atzeret evening, the Gemara brings the text at Deuteronomy 16: 15: "" (" v ' hayyita akh sameaḥ ", " and you shall be completely happy ").
"" Power, Nietzsche and the Greeks: Foucault ’ s Leçons sur la volonté de savoir ", Berfrois, July 2011.

"" and ),
In some versions ( but not in the original Atlas version ), for the sake of easy typing it was possible to strop keywords by placing a "" sign in front of them, for example the keyword < code >< u > endofprogramme </ u ></ code > could be typed as or
The first known use of the word ball in English in the sense of a globular body that is played with was in 1205 in in the phrase, "" The word came from the Middle English bal ( inflected as ball-e ,-es, in turn from Old Norse böllr ( pronounced ; compare Old Swedish baller, and Swedish boll ) from Proto-Germanic ballu-z, ( whence probably Middle High German bal, ball-es, Middle Dutch bal ), a cognate with Old High German ballo, pallo, Middle High German balle from Proto-Germanic * ballon ( weak masculine ), and Old High German ballâ, pallâ, Middle High German balle, Proto-Germanic * ballôn ( weak feminine ).
Only a few compositions that Satie took seriously remain from this period: Jack in the Box, music to a pantomime by Jules Depaquit ( called a "" by Satie ),, a short comic opera on a serious theme, text by Lord Cheminot, The Dreamy Fish, piano music to accompany a lost tale by Lord Cheminot, and a few others that were mostly incomplete, hardly any of them staged, and none of them published at the time.
The example program from that book prints "" ( without capital letters or exclamation mark ), and was inherited from a 1974 Bell Laboratories internal memorandum by Brian Kernighan, Programming in C: A Tutorial, which contains the first known version:
In the Septuagint, all instances of the word " Yehoshua " are rendered as "" ( Iēsoūs ), the closest Greek pronunciation of the Aramaic " Yeshua " (, ).
After the death of former president of Estonia Lennart Meri on 14 March 2006, journalist Argo Ideon from Eesti Ekspress proposed to honor the president's memory by naming Tallinn Airport after him "" ( Lennart Meri International Airport ), drawing parallels with JFK Airport, Paris-Charles de Gaulle Airport, Istanbul-Atatürk Airport etc.
The Caelian Hill was also called Querquetulanus, from " quercus "" ( oak ), nd " Fagutal " ( pointing to beech-woods, from " fagus " meaning " beech ").
"" (, or ), meaning to smarten up, style or improve something, has become commonplace more recently, having been used on the TV series Queer Eye for the Straight Guy and What Not to Wear.
The Chinese name of the island, "" (" Taiwan "), derives from an aboriginal term ; in the past ( from the 16th century ), the island has been called " Formosa " ( from Portuguese: Ilha Formosa, " Beautiful Island ") by the west.

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