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Some Related Sentences

Similarly and English
Similarly, the ancient English word for bird was " brid ".
Similarly, Hindi-Urdu speakers might unconsciously apply their native ' v-w ' allophony rules to English words, pronouncing war as var or advance as adwance, which can result in intelligibility problems with native English speakers.
Similarly, the monument erected to Chiang's memory in Taipei, known in English as Chiang Kai-shek Memorial Hall, was literally named " Chung Cheng Memorial Hall " in Chinese.
Similarly, during the English Civil War rope-tension drums would be carried by junior officers as a means to relay commands from senior officers over the noise of battle.
Similarly, the English kipe denotes a basket used to catch fish.
" Similarly, English poet Anna Seward had a devoted friendship to Honora Sneyd, who was the subject of many of Seward's sonnets and poems.
Similarly, the Welsh versions " Meical " and " Meic " are pronounced in the same way as their corresponding English analogues.
Similarly, in 1975, war broke out in Angola after the country gained independence from Portugal, Nigeria, a member of the English Commonwealth of Nations, mobilized its diplomatic influence in Africa in support of the MPLA.
Similarly, a 2009 article in the Oxfordian journal Brief Chronicles noted that Francis Meres, in Palladis Tamia compares 17 named English poets to 16 named classical poets.
Similarly Cornwall was a British kingdom before it became an English county.
Similarly, Belgium took no direct influence from the Statute or English copyright theory, but Joris Deene of the University of Ghent identifies an indirect influence " at two levels "; the criteria for what constitutes copyrightable material, which comes from the work of English theorists such as Locke and Edward Young, and the underlying justification of copyright law.
Similarly in Malaysia, the Malaysian legal system is based on the English common law.
Similarly the loss of in English soften, hasten, castle, etc.
Similarly, Afrikaners ( and Cape Coloureds ), both descendant of mainly Dutch settlers, tend to pronounce English phonemes with a strong Afrikaans inflection.
Similarly, the English term " splenetic " is used to describe a person in a foul mood.
Similarly, while some believe that racket came about as a misspelling of racquet, racket is in fact the older spelling: it has been in use in British English since the 16th century, with racquet only showing up later in the 19th century as a variant of racket.
Similarly, the Old English poem Seafarer speaks of the high stone walls that were the work of giants.
Similarly, & was regarded as the 27th letter of the English alphabet, as used by children ( in the USA ).
Similarly, the name of Arundel could just as well derive from Old English earndæl or ærndæl, meaning ' eagle dell ' and ' dwelling dell ' respectively.
Similarly, when Joan reveals her plan to turn Burgundy against the English, Alençon declares, " We'll set thy statute in some holy place / And have thee reverenced like a blessed saint " ( 3. 3. 14 – 15 ).
Similarly, " et semper " is often rendered " and ever shall be ", giving the more metrical English version
Similarly, even though scuba stands for " self-contained underwater breathing apparatus ", a phrase like " the scuba gear " would probably not be considered pleonastic because " scuba " has been reanalyzed into English as a simple adjective, and is no longer used as a noun.
Similarly, a Salishan language equivalent of the English sentence “ It was John who called ” would not require the assumption that the listener knows that someone called.

Similarly and satirical
Similarly, he has been dubbed " The Creator " by the satirical sports website Ramon Hernandez Put Down The Gun, and is considered complementary to Justin Tuck, who is known as " The Destroyer.

Similarly and tract
Similarly, in linguo-labial consonants the tongue contacts the upper lip with the upper lip actively moving down to meet the tongue ; nonetheless, in this gesture the tongue is conventionally said to be active and the lip passive, if for no other reason than the fact that the parts of the mouth below the vocal tract are typically active, and those above the vocal tract typically passive.
Similarly, when the Protector set up a House of Lords, Prynne expanded the tract in defence of their rights which he had published in 1648 into an historical treatise of five hundred pages.

Similarly and 1599
Similarly, the melancholic Jaques in As You Like It ( 1599 – 1600 ) asserts, after the fashion of Heraclitus, that " All the world's a stage, And all the men and women merely players.

Similarly and translated
Similarly, the Greek ( hippeus ) is commonly translated " knight "; at least in its sense of the highest of the four Athenian social classes, those who could afford to maintain a warhorse in the state service.
Similarly, in the Dominican Republic, a person is told to ask for a " tenteallá " ( tente allá, translated to " keep you there ").
Similarly to budō, bujutsu is a compound of the roots bu ( 武 ), and jutsu ( 術: じゅつ ), meaning technique Thus, budō is most often translated as " the way of war ", or " martial way ", while bujutsu is translated as " science of war " or " martial craft.
Similarly, the Dutch florin and consequently the guilder were also translated as.
Similarly, the tongue of Dale, from which came the names of the Dwarves of Durin's house, was translated by Old Norse, a language related to Old English and modern English as Dalish was related to Rohirric and Westron.
Similarly, the Confederacy chose Deo vindice as its motto, often translated as " God will vindicate us.
( Similarly, French existentialist Jean-Paul Sartre titled a play about three damned sinners, Huis Clos, translated into English as " No Exit ".
Similarly, the lightweight spaceship is said to have a speed of, as it takes four generations for a given state to be translated by two cells.
Similarly in Jeremiah 2: 18 it is translated geon (" earthy ").
Similarly in winter, beers such as fuyumonogatari ( translated as " The Winter's Tale " on the can ) appear.
Similarly, referring to a child by a respectful term ( Hasegawa-sama ) as by a company referring to a client might be translated as the somewhat archaic " Master Hasegawa ".

Similarly and from
Similarly, further desegregation may come from suits pending in three Tennessee cities, Chattanooga, Knoxville, and Memphis.
Similarly, around the 3rd century BC, the Brāhmī script developed ( from the Aramaic abjad, it has been hypothesized ).
Similarly, an article ( written from an in-universe perspective ) in the Call of Cthulhu tabletop role-playing game speculates that it may be a corruption of Abd Al-Azrad, which it claims translates to The Worshipper of the Great Devourer.
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, " suprarenal " is derived from supra-( Latin, " above ") and renes.
Similarly, in 1971, Alistair Campbell stated that the apologue technique used in Beowulf is so infrequent in the epic tradition aside from when Virgil uses it that the poet who composed Beowulf could not have written the poem in such a manner without first coming across Virgil's writings.
Similarly, given any element y of Y, there is a function f < sub > y </ sub >, or f (·, y ), from X to Z, given by f < sub > y </ sub >( x ) := f ( x, y ).
Similarly, the total mass inside a sphere containing a black hole can be found by using the gravitational analog of Gauss's law, the ADM mass, far away from the black hole.
Similarly, the influences of philosophers such as Sir Francis Bacon ( 1561 – 1626 ) and René Descartes ( 1596 – 1650 ), who demanded more rigor in mathematics and in removing bias from scientific observations, led to a scientific revolution.
Similarly, the COO role is highly contingent and situational, as the role changes from company to company and even from CEO to successor CEO within the same company.
Similarly, Polish railroad worker Jan Grzebski woke up from a 19-year coma in 2007.
Similarly, the consolidated Teutonic laws of the Germanic tribes, included a complex system of monetary compensations for what courts would consider the complete range of criminal offences against the person, from murder down.
Similarly, the Economic and Financial Affairs Council is composed of national finance ministers, and they are still one per state and the chair is held by the member coming from the presiding country.
Similarly, the men of the Mountain Land from north of Kabol-River equivalent to medieval Kohistan ( Pakistan ), figure in the army of Darius III against Alexander at Arbela with a cavalry and fifteen elephants.
Similarly, stratification requires knowledge of the relative sizes of different population strata which are derived from census enumerations.
Similarly, holes diffuse from P to N leaving behind fixed negative ionised dopants near the junction.
Similarly so, researchers note the potential for costly delay if developers spend too much time attempting to coerce hesitant test users from participating.
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 shortest war in recorded history, the Anglo-Zanzibar War of 1896, was brought to a swift conclusion by shelling from British battleships.
Similarly, " use your loaf ", meaning " use your head ", derives from " loaf of bread " and also dates from the late 19th century but came into independent use in the 1930s ..
Similarly, in three dimensions, the vector from the origin to the point with Cartesian coordinates can be written as:
Similarly, the tabla is tuned by hammering a disc held in place around the drum by ropes stretching from the top to bottom head.

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