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Page "Digraph (orthography)" ¶ 47
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Similarly and has
Similarly, holding large feasts and giving large donations has been seen as ways of demonstrating one's resources.
Similarly, around the 3rd century BC, the Brāhmī script developed ( from the Aramaic abjad, it has been hypothesized ).
Similarly, the design technique has progressed from paper-and-ruler based manual design to computer-aided design, and now to computer-automated design ( CAutoD ), which has been made possible by evolutionary computation.
Similarly, the international community has largely refused to recognize secessionist regions, while keeping some states such as Cyprus and Taiwan in diplomatic recognition limbo.
Similarly, positron emission tomography ( PET ) has shown reactivation of the hippocampus in slow-wave sleep ( SWS ) after spatial learning.
Similarly, the buyer of a Put option has the right to sell a certain quantity of an underlying asset, at a specified price on or before a given date in the future, he however has no obligation whatsoever to carry out this right.
Similarly, the Covenant Code ( the law code in Exodus 20: 22-23: 33 ) has notable similarities in both content and structure with the Laws of Hammurabi.
Similarly, it is argued that such competition has helped in higher education, with publically funded universities directly competing with private universities for tuition money provide by the Government, such as the GI Bill and the Pell Grant in the United States.
Similarly Michael Pollan has argued that the wilderness ethic leads people to dismiss areas whose wildness is less than absolute.
Similarly, the ancient metaphysical and unfalsifiable idea of the existence of atoms has led to corresponding falsifiable modern theories.
Similarly but looking at phenotypic IQ, Meisenberg has argued that both higher GDP and IQ independently reduce fertility.
Similarly, it has enabled new crops like apples, strawberries, broccoli, cauliflower, cabbage, and carrots to be grown and for the cultivated areas of the country to be extended although even now only about 1 % of Greenland is considered arable.
Similarly, gnomes are contrasted to elves, as in William Cullen Bryant's Little People of the Snow ( 1877 ), which has " let us have a tale of elves that ride by night, with jingling reins, or gnomes of the mine " ( cited after OED ).
Similarly, reaction between indium and hydrogen has not been observed, but both indium ( I ) and indium ( III ) hydrides are known.
Similarly, naturally occurring arches of stone are formed by weathering away bits of stone from a large concretion that has formed previously.
Similarly, a city has three parts Socrates uses the parable of the chariot to illustrate his point: a chariot works as a whole because the two horses ’ power is directed by the charioteer.
Similarly, the movement has spread to Puerto Rico, a country where many of its residents have moved to New York, Miami and Chicago over the years.
Similarly, this lack of waste heat generation has been observed to sometimes cause significant problems with street traffic signals and airport runway lighting in snow-prone areas.
Similarly faceted classification schemes are more difficult to use for shelf arrangement, unless the user has knowledge of the citation order.
Similarly, tourism accounts for close to 15 % of the annual revenue, as the Principality of Monaco also has been a major centre for tourism ever since the famed casino was established in 1856.
Similarly, Clark notes that Dr. Michael D. Swords has speculated that the Barker / Bender Men in Black case ( occurring shortly after the CIA-directed Robertson Panel issued its recommendations to spy on civilian UFO groups ) might have been a psychological warfare experiment.
Similarly, it has been used by Walkers Crisps for a special-edition flavour and has introduced, with local Dorset bakery Fudges, Marmite Biscuits in the UK.

Similarly and digraph
* Similarly, the digraph < wh > may be aspirated as or, resulting in realizations such as < which >, found in no other English accent ( except in certain parts of Scotland ).
Similarly, the Saintongeais dialect of French has a digraph jh that is pronounced in words that correspond to in standard French.

Similarly and
Similarly with f / ph ⟩, the latter from Greek phi.
Similarly with alien clusters such as Greek initial ps in psychology and mn in mnemonic, and the much rarer clusters in chthonic and phthalate.

Similarly and is
Similarly in Illinois there is Lincoln country to be seen -- his tomb and other landmarks.
Similarly, at the opposite end of the market cycle, towards the end of an intermediate or major decline, usually while the bottom is being formed on the price chart, it is characteristic that an increase is noticed in odd-lot selling again alerting the chartist that a bottom is becoming a greater likelihood.
Similarly, the American Cancer Society ( ACS ), the Arthritis and Rheumatism Foundation, and the BBB have each stated lately that medical quackery is at a new high.
Similarly, a girl who graduates with a good working knowledge of stenography and the use of clerical machines and who is able to get a job at once may wish to improve her skill and knowledge by a year or two of further study in a community college or secretarial school.
Similarly, the Italian verb corresponding to ' spell ( out )', compitare, is unknown to many Italians because the act of spelling itself is rarely needed: Italian spelling is highly phonemic.
Similarly, Helen Keller stated that " Life is either a daring adventure or nothing.
Similarly, although a subset of the real numbers that is not Lebesgue measurable can be proven to exist using the axiom of choice, it is consistent that no such set is definable.
Similarly, all the statements listed below which require choice or some weaker version thereof for their proof are unprovable in ZF, but since each is provable in ZF plus the axiom of choice, there are models of ZF in which each statement is true.
Similarly in St Peter: " Christ .. Who verily was foreordained before the foundation of the world, but was manifest in these last times for you " ( 1 Peter 1: 20 ), and " But the end of all things is at hand " ( 1 Peter 4: 7 ).
Similarly, the subset order ⊆ on the subsets of any given set is antisymmetric: given two sets A and B, if every element in A also is in B and every element in B is also in A, then A and B must contain all the same elements and therefore be equal:
Similarly, in the Greek Magical Papyri, the term " Aion " is often used to denote the All, or the supreme aspect of God
Similarly, " suprarenal " is derived from supra-( Latin, " above ") and renes.
Similarly the freehold of a benefice, on the death of the incumbent, is said to be in abeyance until the next incumbent takes possession.
Similarly, the use of excessively high doses ( often the result of polypharmacy ) continues despite clinical guidelines and evidence indicating that it is usually no more effective but is usually more harmful.

Similarly and pronounced
Similarly, the Welsh versions " Meical " and " Meic " are pronounced in the same way as their corresponding English analogues.
Similarly, the local version of " you " is pronounced, rhyming with " now ".
Similarly in South India " Coffee " will be pronounced kaafi, " Copy " will be kaapi etc.
* Similarly the English past tense morpheme is written-ed regardless of whether it is pronounced as, or.
Similarly, õõ ( two vowels together ; both are pronounced ) at one end of the country was written õe at the other end, õuu was õu, and the-gi ending was written-ki.
Similarly, Japanese traditionally does not have the sound / v /, instead approximating it by / b /, but today / v / is sometimes used in pronunciations for example, " violin " can be pronounced either or, with ( literally " voiced u "+" a ") representing / va /.
* Similarly, the svarabhakti (" helping vowel ") that is used in some consonant combinations in Gaelic and Scots is sometimes used, so that " film " may pronounced " fillum ".
Similarly, constant names are prefixed with "" ( pronounced " hash-dollar ").
Similarly, the voiceless post-alveolar affricate is pronounced as a voiceless post-alveolar fricative between two vowels:
Similarly, im meaning " butter " is pronounced in Munster, Southern Connacht and northern Scotland ( and Manx ), but in Ulster and Southern Scottish.

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