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Repeatedly and using
Repeatedly using the multiplicative property of φ and the formula for φ ( p < sup > k </ sup >) gives

Repeatedly and from
Repeatedly emerging victorious from these decisive wars has allowed Britain to influence world events with its policies and establish its self as great power and one of the world's leading military and economic powers.
Repeatedly rejected by the company's board and management, Perelman continued press forward with a hostile takeover raising his offer from an initial bid of $ 47. 50 per share until it reached $ 53. 00 per share.
Repeatedly, Mark's friends try to seduce her away from the investigation but Cordelia holds on, determined to succeed in her first solo case.
Repeatedly events from our collective memory are translated into his paintings.

Repeatedly and one
Repeatedly, one or two states defeated legislative proposals of major importance.
* Repeatedly going set will tend to make one unpopular, but so will playing so conservatively as to never go set.

Repeatedly and attacked
Repeatedly attacked by English raiders during the Wars of Scottish Independence, it was fortified during both World Wars to defend nearby Edinburgh.
Repeatedly, his works triggered public controversies, since Bernhard constantly attacked a typical Austrian manner of treating the Nazi past in simply ignoring what had happened.

Repeatedly and through
Repeatedly refusing evacuation, Sergeant Rivers continued to direct his tank's fire at enemy positions through the morning of 19 November 1944.

Repeatedly and by
Repeatedly defeated in battle by the Greeks, and plagued by internal rebellions that hindered their ability to fight the Greeks, after 449 BC Artaxerxes I and his successors instead adopted a policy of divide-and-rule.
Repeatedly apply the following until no monomial term of g is divisible by any of the a < sub > i </ sub >:
Repeatedly frustrated in his attempts to dismiss Grace by the umpire who refused to give him out, Kotright finally knocked two of Grace's stumps out of the ground.
Repeatedly sent into the field without adequate preparation by Ward's frantic sponsors, the poorly trained and ill-disciplined contingent stood virtually no chance of success against Li Xiucheng's seasoned troops.
Repeatedly frustrated by official inaction he attempted to hire private aircraft himself and threatened to publicise the government's inaction in the international press.
Repeatedly rated by Golf Digest to be among the top 50-75 public courses in the United States, Oak Mountain has hosted qualifying rounds for the Alabama Open.
Repeatedly thwarted in his attempts to return to the South by hastily positioned Union forces and state militia, Morgan eventually surrendered what was left of his command in northeastern Ohio.

Repeatedly and .
Repeatedly being wrong actually seemed to be an advantage, conferring some sort of puzzling magic glow upon the speaker.
Repeatedly Pelton asked Lindh if he wanted to call his parents or have Pelton do so, but Lindh declined.
Repeatedly destroyed and rebuilt, the city slowly declined and was abandoned in the Byzantine era.
# Repeatedly Merge sublists to produce new sublists until there is only 1 sublist remaining.
Repeatedly timing each period of a Kater pendulum, and adjusting the weights until they were equal, was time consuming and error-prone.
Repeatedly questioned, she stands solidly behind her outlandish story and continues to return to the cave as the lady has asked.
Repeatedly restored in the 17th, 19th and 20th centuries.
Repeatedly the club has supported its local rival 1860 Munich with gratuitous friendlies, transfers at favorable rates, and direct money transfers.
Repeatedly outmaneuvering the French, the Anglo-Allied army forced Joseph and Jourdan to fight at the Battle of Vitoria on 21 June 1813.
Repeatedly, Spann tried to draw the ruling powers ' attention to his authoritarian theory of a corporate state which, as he saw it, could, and should, be introduced immediately for the benefit of all.
Repeatedly the specialists on I Enoch have come out in favor of the Jewish nature and its first century CE origin, and probable pre-70 date.
Davenport and Armstrong ( 2004 ) lists several other studies and states: " Repeatedly, democratic political systems have been found to decrease political bans, censorship, torture, disappearances and mass killing, doing so in a linear fashion across diverse measurements, methodologies, time periods, countries, and contexts.
Repeatedly touching the putty to a drawing pulls ever more medium free, gradually lightening the work in a controlled fashion.
File: Dive hand signal Cramps. png | I have a cramp: Repeatedly clenching and unclenching fist, and point at cramped area
Repeatedly pressing the A or B buttons causes the Balloon Fighter to flap his arms and rise into the air.
Repeatedly refused an entrance visa, she decided to follow the example of BBC reporter John Simpson, who had crossed the border anonymously in a burqa.
Repeatedly mentioned is the promise of the Lord, " I will be your God and you will be my people " ( cf.

using and selective
* Cell and molecular biology: detection of colocalization using fluorescence-labelled antibodies for selective detection of the antigens of interest using specialized software, such as CoLocalizer Pro.
A relatively high-powered beam of light is mixed with the input signal using a wavelength selective coupler.
It will still degrade system performance but by using selective calling the user will not have to hear the noises produced by receiving the interference.
There is an increasing trend of using ICP-MS as a tool in speciation analysis, which normally involves a front end chromatograph separation and an elemental selective detector, such as AAS and ICP-MS. For example, ICP-MS may be combined with size exclusion chromatography and quantitative preparative native continuous polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis ( QPNC-PAGE ) for identifying and quantifying native metal cofactor containing proteins in biofluids.
Such rhetorical devices, discussed in more detail below, are: " ignoring the question " to divert argument to unrelated issues using a red herring ; making the argument personal ( argumentum ad hominem ) and discrediting the opposition's character, " begging the question " ( petitio principi ), the use of the non-sequitur, false cause and effect ( post hoc ergo propter hoc ), bandwagoning ( everyone says so ), the " false dilemma " or " either-or fallacy " in which the situation is oversimplified, " card-stacking " or selective use of facts, " false equivalence ", and " false analogy ".
Another procedure that the medical world is using today is known as selective reduction, i. e. the termination of one or more, but not all, of the fetuses.
Collins Pine ( a division of The Collins Companies ) has been in operation since the 1940s under a truly " sustained yield " management plan using selective harvesting.
Thus, Kramer concludes that there is no doubt modern Muslims effectively make use of the Quran, using Islamic tradition as a source on which antisemitism today feeds, but it is also a selective and distorting use.
In the novel, all government offices, including the President, Congress, and the Supreme Court, are filled by average citizens chosen using a form of selective service.
Searches can be sped up by using large amounts of domain specific pruning techniques, such as not considering moves where your opponent is already strong, and selective extensions like always considering moves next to groups of stones which are about to be captured.
Therefore using Dōgen Zenji to support a quietist and an anti-intellectual idea of shikantaza is a controversial tactic that relies on selective quoting of Dōgen Zenji.
Independent schools are generally academically selective, using the competitive Common Entrance Examination at ages 11 – 13.
In 2001, the media watchdog organization Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting criticized Stossel's reportage of global warming in his documentary, Tampering with Nature, for using " highly selective ... information " that gave " center stage to three dissenters from among the 2, 000 members of the UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, which recently released a report stating that global temperatures are rising almost twice as fast as previously thought.
It can also apply to adjustment of the tax base by using tax exemptions, tax credits, or selective taxation that creates progressive distribution effects.
Then Immediate set up a short-lived deal with United Artists, who issued two singles using the Immediate moniker ( E-1901, E-1902 ) before signing a deal with CBS to set up a new label series, which picked selective Immediate singles ( using product codes with the ZS7 prefix ) and albums ( using Z12 ) until they had a falling-out.
Some systems communicate using a two-way radio system's selective calling features.
In order to achieve the selective destruction of the target area using PDT while leaving normal tissues untouched, either the photosensitizer can be applied locally to the target area or photosensitive targets can be locally excited with light.
Ramachandran theorized that Different subtypes of number – colour synaesthesia ... are caused by hyperconnectivity between colour and number areas at different stages in processing ; lower synaesthetes may have cross-wiring ( or cross-activation ) within the fusiform gyrus, whereas higher synaesthetes may have cross-activation in the angular gyrus. Consistent with this model, Ramachandran's group found increased activity in color selective areas in synesthetes compared to non-synesthetes using fMRI.
Pharmacological treatments using selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors ( SSRIs ), mood stabilizers and opioid receptor antagonists, and other antidepressants along with cognitive behavioral therapy, have yielded positive results.
This capability allows communications receivers effectively to monitor many channels at once, perhaps using digital selective calling ( DSC ) techniques to decide when to open an audio output channel and alert users to incoming communications.
In Johnson's case, it is held that the authorities are using the Act's ambiguous language to justify a selective prosecution which amounts to harassment, based on their desire to deprive him of his title for racist reasons.

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