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She emphasizes the legacy of the 1798 rebellion in Ireland and uses the novel to promote an Irish view of Irish history and prehistory.
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She and emphasizes
" She emphasizes that CI is directed not at all hostile actions against one's own countries, but those originated by foreign intelligence services ( FIS ), a term of art that includes transnational and non-national adversaries.
She emphasizes positive action and states that the surgery left her a " battle scar " that makes her feel sexier, as it is a memento of what she has survived.
For example, the sentence This little girl, the dog bit her has the same meaning as The dog bit this little girl but it emphasizes that the little girl ( and not the dog ) is the topic of interest ; one might expect the next sentence to be She needs to see a doctor, rather than It needs to be leashed.
She also emphasizes researching whatever city she plans to visit through the Internet and asking the local citizens for their recommendations.
She emphasizes that people need to listen to the entire album in order to understand its full meaning, rather than judging it by its cover, track listing, and the lyrics of the first several songs.
She characterises " a predatory ( rather than a passive ) female who is both betrayer and murderer "; and she emphasizes the connection between " shooting and sex.
She goes on to say that because the ORF emphasizes students read quickly and correctly they may be more focused on reading for speed than meaning.
She emphasizes that this film is not trying to be better or compete with Dogtown and Z-Boys, but rather is its own story from the perspective of the people going through the events when they were happening, instead of retelling them.
She is somewhat short even for a Japanese girl, very slender and wears her hair in a page-boy cut that emphasizes her large eyes.
She and legacy
She argues that the legacy of Christian misogyny was consolidated by the so-called " Fathers " of the Church, like Tertullian, who thought a woman was not only " the gateway of the devil " but also " a temple built over a sewer.
She believed changes in the law had afforded her daughter dignity that had been denied her before, and that she had been able to " help transform Sharon's legacy from murder victim to a symbol of victims ' rights ".
She showed little interest in her first husband's musical legacy, made no effort to catalogue Bizet's manuscripts and gave many away as souvenirs.
She was the most influential goddess throughout the legacy of Greece and was also adopted by Rome as their most important goddess, Fortuna, hence deriving the term, fortune.
She can do whatever she wants with what she inherited from her mother, but not with Onassis's legacy to the Greek people in memory of uncle, Alexander Onassis.
" She concludes that " Hume's most important legacy is the supposition that the justification of induction is not analogous to that of deduction.
She wrote to the literary critic Edmund Wilson, who had agreed to edit the book, musing on his legacy.
She lived on until 1183, endowing as her legacy a Benedictine abbey at the site of Santa Maria di Maniaca, constructed by Giorgio Maniace over a century prior, and a church at San Marco d ' Alunzio, Robert Guiscard's first castle in Sicily.
She paved a way for her own legacy and left two sons, no husband, innumerable lovers, a million and a quarter francs and a reputation as a tragic actress which has never been overshadowed.
She was impatient and unpredictable, unwilling to rely too heavily on one adviser However, her administration continued much of Peter I ’ s legacy.
She died in London on 26 Nov. 1896, bequeathing the greater part of her property, which had mostly come to her late in life by the legacy of a step-brother, to Newnham College, Cambridge.
She left her legacy by becoming the first woman to make the Australian pop charts with a local recording called ' Come Closer to Me '.
She carries on her famous ancestor's legacy of solving crimes through deductive reasoning while attending the prestigious Sussex Academy.
Chilton is a Distinguished Science Fellow at Syngenta Biotechnology, Inc., She began her corporate career in 1983 with CIBA-Geigy Corporation ( a legacy company of Syngenta ).
She was the first alumna to be elected president of the college, carrying on the legacy of her husband Dr. Albert E. Manley, who was the first African-American and male president of Spelman College from 1953 to 1976 .< ref >
She and 1798
She was followed by another girl, who died almost at once ; Joseph in 1796 ; and another son in 1798, who died in infancy.
She was an ex-merchant vessel, hired by the Navy between 1793 and 1794, and purchased outright in 1798.
She was born in 1798 in Brislington, near Bristol, the second child and only daughter of Mary Jane Vial Clairmont.
She was born Anne-Thérèse Guérin on October 2, 1798, in the village of Étables-sur-Mer in Brittany, France.
She was born in Riga, Livonia, Russian Empire as the daughter of an actor, Wilhelm Friedrich Seebach ( 1798 – 1863 ).
She ultimately lures the young groom away to join in the failed Irish Rebellion of 1798 against the British during the French Revolutionary Wars.
She returned to Paris in 1798, and on 17 October 1802 she married as his second wife Dom José Maria de Sousa Botelho Mourão e Vasconcelos ( Porto, 9 March 1758-Paris, 1 June 1825 ), Portuguese minister plenipotentiary in Paris, 2nd Lord of the Majorat of Mateus, firstly married in Lisbon on 23 November 1783 to Dona Maria Teresa de Noronha, of the Lords of the Majorat of os Apréstimos, by whom he had issue ( an only son, future 1st Count of Vila Real ).
She gave him two more children: Francis ( 1798 ) and in 1802 a daughter they named Sarah Meade Eggleston after his first wife.
She was born in Vienna to Hofrat Franz Sales von Greiner ( 1730 – 1798 ) and his wife Charlotte, née Hieronimus ( 1739 – 1815 ).
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