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Some Related Sentences

Some and provinces
Some Lutheran and many Anglican provinces commemorate him on the traditional Eastern feast day of 27 January.
Some provinces were more affected than others, including Maguindanao ( 82 %), Lanao del Norte ( 48 %) and Lanao del Sur ( 47 %).
Some of the oldest civilizations appeared circa 6000 BC in the coastal provinces of Chilca and Paracas, and in the highland province of Callejón de Huaylas.
Some quaestors were assigned to work in the City, while others were assigned to the staffs of generals or served as lieutenant governors in the provinces.
Some of these titles relate to governments below the national level ( e. g. states or provinces )
Some of the Netherland provinces were hostile to Maximilian, and they signed a treaty with Louis XI in 1482 that forced Maximilian to give up Franche-Comté and Artois to the French crown.
Some luxurious villas have been excavated in North Africa in the provinces of Africa and Numidia, or at Fishbourne in Britannia.
Some provinces cover only those in particular age groups ( usually, seniors ) and / or those on social assistance.
Some provinces allow a limited number of tests ( e. g., no more than once within a two-year period ).
Some provinces, including Ontario include some rehabilitation services for those in the home care program, those recently discharged from hospitals ( e. g., after a hip replacement ), or those in particular age categories.
Some poorer provinces had depended on state enterprises or on inefficient industries, such as sugar, which could not compete when trade was opened.
Some of the provinces that were later incorporated into France during the revolution were not formally part of the Kingdom of France.
Some of these provinces were not part of the Kingdom of France, and especially around the borders may have had a different extent than this map shows.
Some argued that the amending formula required the federal government to gain the approval of at least seven provinces with at least half the national population ( the standard procedure ).
Some U. S. states and provinces of Canada such as Alberta operate " owner liability " where it is the registered owner of the vehicle who must pay all such fines regardless of whether he was driving at the time of the offense, although they do release the owner from liability if he signs a form identifying the actual driver and that individual pays the fine.
Some provinces have more than one internal security zongdui due to the transferral of 14 PLA Divisions ( numbering 500, 000 personnel ) to the PAP during the late 1990s.
Some provinces also contain minor districts (" king amphoe "), which are smaller than the average district.
Some other provinces allow alternate minimum wage schedule for " liquor servers ".
Some Roman sources of the period suggest that Tiberius gave Piso secret instructions to thwart and control Germanicus, who had been sent to supervise all Eastern provinces.
Some picture stones and engravings on stone coffins, especially those from the area of modern Sichuan and Yunnan provinces, show two winged immortals playing Liubo on a mountain, usually as part of a larger scene depicting the Queen Mother of the West and various mythical animals.
Some of Tōru's descendants in particular settled the provinces and formed buke.
Some also live in the Yunnan, Guangdong, Guizhou and Hunan provinces.
Some analysts noted that the eliminated third-place challenger David Orchard drew his 25 % bulk of delegate supporters largely from the Western prairie provinces.
Some historians believe Jinnah intended to use the threat of partition as a bargaining chip in order to gain more independence for the Muslim dominated provinces in the west from the Hindu-dominated center.

Some and Anglican
Some of these churches are known as Anglican, such as the Anglican Church of Canada, due to their historical link to England ( Ecclesia Anglicana means " English Church ").
Some Eastern Orthodox Churches have issued statements to the effect that Anglican orders could be accepted, yet have still reordained former Anglican clergy ; other Orthodox churches have rejected Anglican orders altogether.
Some churches founded outside the Anglican Communion in the late 20th and early 21st centuries, largely in opposition to the ordination of openly homosexual bishops and other clergy are usually referred to as belonging to the Anglican realignment movement, or else as " orthodox " Anglicans.
Some Anglican suffragans are given the responsibility for a geographical area within the diocese ( for example, the Bishop of Stepney is an area bishop within the Diocese of London ).
Some Anglican churches consider themselves both Protestant and Catholic.
Some Christian denominations ( such as Anglican, Roman Catholic, and Eastern Orthodox ), include a number of books that are not in the Hebrew Bible ( the biblical apocrypha or deuterocanonical books or Anagignoskomena, see Development of the Old Testament canon ) in their biblical canon that are not in today's Jewish canon, although they were included in the Septuagint.
Some branches of the family were members of the Anglican Church of Ireland while others were Roman Catholics.
Some nations have military ordinariates of the Anglican Communion, Lutheranism and Eastern Orthodoxy.
Some Anglicans and Anglican churches, particularly Anglo-Catholics, personally ask prayers of the saints.
Some recent Anglican writers explicitly accept the doctrine of transubstantiation or, while avoiding the term " transubstantiation ", speak of an " objective presence " of Christ in the Eucharist.
Some were later involved in his usurpation with the Whigs, which they saw as defending the Anglican Church.
Some projects planned for that time, including Roman Catholic and Anglican cathedrals, were never completed.
Some Anglo-Catholic parishes use Anglican versions of the Tridentine Missal, such as the English Missal, The Anglican Missal, or American Missal, for the celebration of mass, all of which are intended primarily for the celebration of the Eucharist.
Some traditionalist Anglo-Catholics have left official Anglicanism to form " continuing Anglican churches " such as those in the Anglican Catholic Church and Traditional Anglican Communion.
Some have drawn parallels with the Eastern Catholic churches, but though there are some commonalities, Anglican ordinariates are intended to be part of the Western or Latin Rite of the Roman Catholic Church, as they had been before the breach with Rome following the reign of Mary I of England.
* Some, such as the original members of the Oxford Movement, use official Anglican liturgical texts such as the Book of Common Prayer.

Some and Communion
Some, in the early evening, come to their church to celebrate Holy Communion with their families.
Some Protestant churches make much of the foot washing ceremony on Maundy Thursday, for others it may be the only time in the year when Holy Communion is celebrated, other churches celebrate versions of the Jewish Passover at this time.
Some time after the 13th century, the age of Confirmation and Communion began to be delayed further, from seven, to twelve and to fifteen.
Some traditions withhold the rite of Holy Communion from those not yet at the age of accountability, on the grounds that children do not understand what the sacrament means.
Some Oneness Pentecostals practice foot washing, often in conjunction with their celebration of Holy Communion, as Jesus Christ did with his disciples at the Last Supper.
Some Catholic priests on their own accord have welcomed non-Catholic Christians to receive Holy Communion.
Some United Methodist churches also perform the sign before and after receiving Holy Communion.
Some Protestant groups see Communion ( also called the Lord's Supper or the Lord's Table ) as a strictly symbolic meal, a memorial of the Last Supper and the Passion with symbolic and subjectively meaningful elements, which is done by the ordinance of Jesus, but in which nothing miraculous or objectively significant occurs.
Some English practices ( e. g. their way of distributing Communion ) were replacing the Scottish traditions, and this caused complaints.
Some reproduce parts of Common Worship in a different or more concise form, such as Holy Communion Order One, Additional Collects, Funeral, Marriage, Rites on the Way, Ministry to the Sick, The Reconciliation of a Penitent Form One, Holy Week and Easter ( includes readings ), and Time to Pray ( containing Prayer During the Day and Night Prayer ).
Some of the prayers of the mass are unique, such as the priest's preparation prayers for Holy Communion.
Some editions of the Oxford Annotated Bible also include the apocryphal and deuterocanonical books used by the Roman Catholic Church and the Greek and Slavonic Orthodox Churches, as well as churches of the Anglican Communion ( including The Episcopal Church ); these editions are titled the " Oxford Annotated Bible with the Apocrypha ".
Some Eastern Catholic Churches ( for instance, the Ethiopic-rite Catholics of Ethiopia and Eritrea ) have adopted the use of unleavened bread, justifying it by reference to the ancient Jewish practice of using only unleavened bread at Passover meals, and give Communion by intinction.

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