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Page "Leonard Bloomfield" ¶ 10
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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 source
Similarly, the source just below the top of the slit will interfere destructively with the source located just below the middle of the slit at the same angle.
If a laser is swept across a distant object, the spot of laser light can easily be made to move across the object at a speed greater than c. Similarly, a shadow projected onto a distant object can be made to move across the object faster than c. In neither case does the light travel from the source to the object faster than c, nor does any information travel faster than light.
Similarly, the word for " declension " and its many European cognates, including its Latin source declinatio come from the root * k ^ lei -, " to lean ".
Similarly, if funding is withdrawn part way through an experiment, and the analyst must work with incomplete data, this is a possible source of bias for classical methods but not for Bayesian methods, which do not depend on the intended design of the experiment.
Similarly, no knowledge can come to us of the different things here unless there is a source of this knowledge.
Similarly, he claimed that the anatase in the ink could have come from sand used to dry it ( the hypothetical source of the sand being gneiss from the Binnenthal area of Switzerland ) but his team had not examined the crystals microscopically, and Kenneth Towe responded that this was an essential test, given that crystal size and shape should clearly distinguish commercial anatase from anatase found in sand.
Similarly, lithotrophic organisms are often also autotrophic, using inorganic sources of electrons and CO < sub > 2 </ sub > as inorganic carbon source.
Similarly, specialised tools like SourceForge integrate project management software with source control ( CVS ) software and bug-tracking software, so that each piece of information can be integrated into the same system.
Similarly, fiducial points established during MRI can be correlated with brain images generated by magnetoencephalography to localize the source of brain activity.
Similarly, the Court upheld a ban on the growth of marijuana intended for medical use on the grounds that Congress could rationally conclude that this growth might make enforcement of drug laws more difficult by creating an otherwise lawful source of marijuana that could be diverted into the illicit market:
Similarly, the energy source staples vary widely within different parts of India, with its colder climate near Himalayas and warmer climate in its south.
Similarly, an acting man must have a source of dissatisfaction which he believes can be changed, otherwise he cannot act.
Similarly, the auditory system processes sound waves as they travel from their source, bounce off surfaces and enter the ears.
Similarly, in field effect transistors, and MOSFETs in particular, transconductance is the change in the drain current divided by the small change in the gate / source voltage with a constant drain / source voltage.
Similarly, Rankin was a constant source of revitalization and support to Fogal ’ s own political and legal efforts.
Similarly, an ideal voltage source cannot be connected to an ideal short circuit ( R = 0 ), since this would result a similar paradox of finite nonzero voltage across an element with defined zero voltage ( the short circuit ).
Similarly MESS is not considered to be open source software if appraised according to the criteria of the Open Source Definition.
Similarly, the Protestant Reformation called for renewed attention to the Bible as the primary source of Christian faith.
Similarly, in the 3rd century a shift away from direct revelation as a source of authority occurred, most notably against the Montanists.
Similarly, to ' UVC-enable " applications the source code is required from the developer and therefore permission from the owner.
Similarly, the Antilles represented the major source for European sugar and coffee, and it was a huge importer of slaves through Nantes.
Similarly, using phishing techniques or a Trojan horse to obtain identity data or to acquire any other data from an unauthorised source, or modifying the operating system files or some aspect of the computer's functions to interfere with its operation or prevent access to any data, including the destruction of files, or deliberately generating code to cause a complete system malfunction, are all criminal " modifications ".

Similarly and for
Similarly experience itself can be conventionalized so that people react to certain preconceived clues for behavior without awareness of the vitality of their experiential field.
Similarly, if the equivalents for the forms of a word do not vary, the equivalents need be entered only once with an indication that they apply to each form.
Similarly, higher levels of GNP do not, in themselves, provide grounds for raising prices, but they do relax some of the pressure on the industry so that it can raise prices higher for a given wage increase.
Similarly, in presenting still photographs of early jazz groups, the program allowed no time for a close perusal.
Similarly, the ancient English word for bird was " brid ".
Only then in fact was payment for assembly attendance, the central event of democracy ( Similarly for the period before the Persian wars, but for the very early democracy the sources are very meagre and it can be thought of as being in an embryonic state ).
Similarly, all output was scrutinized for a Control-D character ( ASCII 4 ), which BASIC programs would send before seemingly PRINTing a disk command to get DOS's attention ( the disk commands would not really get PRINTed but were intercepted by DOS and prevented from making it to the screen output ).
Similarly, intuitionists object to the existence property for classical logic, where one can prove, without being able to produce any term of which holds.
Similarly, Commando, released in 1989, uses a POKEY to generate in-game music while the TIA generates the game's sound effects for a total of 6 channels of sound.
Similarly desperate losses were suffered elsewhere on the front, in a disastrous day for the British Army ( approximately 19, 000 British soldiers were killed in a single day ).
Similarly, his text on poetic metre uses only Christian poetry for examples.
Similarly, frets on earlier balalaikas were made of animal gut and tied to the neck so that they could be moved around by the player at will ( as is the case with the modern saz, which allows for the microtonal playing distinctive to Turkish and Central Asian music ).
Similarly, if we limit the number of literals per clause to 2 and change the OR operations to XOR operations, the result is exclusive-or 2-satisfiability, a problem complete for SL = L.
Similarly, authors of fantasy role-playing games sometimes compile bestiaries as references, such as the Monster Manual for Dungeons & Dragons.
Similarly, when Jean de Schelandre wrote about Banquo in his Stuartide in 1611, he also changed the character by portraying him as a noble and honourable man — the critic D. W. Maskell describes him as “… Schelandre's paragon of valour and virtue ”— probably for reasons similar to Shakespeare's.
Similarly, different cultural attitudes, social organizations, economic models and legal frameworks are seen to account for why copyright emerged in Europe and not, for example, in Asia.
Similarly, one declarative sentence can refer to many propositions ; for instance, " I am hungry " changes meaning ( i. e. refers to different propositions ) depending on the person uttering it.
Similarly, Robert Nozick argues for a theory that is mostly consequentialist, but incorporates inviolable " side-constraints " which restrict the sort of actions agents are permitted to do.
Similarly, assault and violent robbery involved trespass as to the pater's property ( so, for example, the rape of a slave could become the subject of compensation to the pater as having trespassed on his " property "), and breach of such laws created a vinculum juris ( an obligation of law ) that only the payment of monetary compensation ( modern " damages ") could discharge.

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