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Page "History of Honduras" ¶ 53
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Such and course
Such a response, of course, misses the point that in crisis order is going out of existence.
Such therapy, of course, requires careful and gradual titration of the dose to prevent the effects of rapidly decreasing blood pressure ( dizziness, fainting, etc.
Such word sets can also be called etymological twins, and of course they may come in groups of higher numbers, as with, for example, the words wain ( native ) wagon ( Dutch ) and vehicle ( Latin ) in English.
Such a course is suggested to the Attorney General.
Such a course of events compelled the indolent, but by no means incapable, beauty to overthrow the weak and corrupt government.
( Such an organic traffic course is called a corridor.
Such characters as Romeo of course require the appearance of youth and those graces of person which will alone commend the Mantuan lover to his Juliet.
Such attacks would continue to some extent for the course of the revolution .< ref name =" REID-49 "> Reid ( 1974 ), page 49 ; Mochtar Lubis, Jalan Tak Ada ( Jakarta: Yayasan Obot Indonesia, 2002 ) < nowiki > published 1952 ),
Such rivers form when the base level of erosion is rapidly lowered, so that the river begins downcutting into its channel faster than it can change course ( which rivers normally do on a constant basis ).
( Such a radical transformation would, of course, be easier in the 21st century, with its potential for material abundance, than in the Spain of the 1930s, with its harsh poverty and civil war conditions.
Such an interpretation would also of course mean Jews and their descendants displaced from previously Arab countries would have no right of return.
Such as " gradually lessening the pressure with his right hand " which of course was impossible for Erickson to have done since he was almost completely paralysed in his right hand.
Such, of course, is not the case, and so we have as many contradictions as there are attributes ; for we must say A is a, is not a, is b, is not b, etc.
Such soup can constitute the main course of a Polish obiad ( the main meal eaten in the early afternoon ).
Such discipline usually occurs only on votes regarding procedural matters on which party unity is expected as a matter of course, rather than substantive matters.
Such a review would pose difficulties since evidence on how its most senior policymakers arrived at their decisions is destroyed as a matter of course, as are those of the meetings of the interim Financial Policy Committee, which was set up in 2011 as part of the Bank's greater responsibility for financial stability.
Such accounts, of course, face the same burden as causalist responses to Gettier: they have to explain what sort of relationship between the world and the believer counts as a justificatory relationship.
Such colleges, as in the case of those in London, became ' constituent colleges ' of the Institute of Education, with their academic award being from the University of London. Students were offered an extra year of study, bringing the course up to four years in length and resulting in the award of the Bachelor of Education degree.
Such an election upset the usual course of dynastic succession in the age.
Such a bill was quite prepared to support, and in due course a bill passed the Commons depriving him of his spiritual dignities, banishing him for life, and forbidding any British subject to hold intercourse with him except by the royal permission.
Such names are formed by the initials of the cardinal directions and their intermediate ordinal directions, and are very handy to refer to a heading ( or course or azimuth ) in a general or colloquial fashion, without having to resort to computing or recalling degrees.
Such a course of action is not in the interest of any of the stakeholders .”
Such is the nature of the geology of the New Zealand region that the true river tells only half the story of the Clutha's course.
Such losses are, of course, very small when an item is near to negligible.

Such and action
Such tasks, which usually required a coordinated group effort in either a pulling or pushing action, included weighing anchor and setting sail.
Such " big battalion " operations may be needed to break up significant guerrilla concentrations and split them into small groups where combined civic-police action can control them.
Such cases are treated as brand new award recommendations and the process for presenting the Purple Heart begins again with a review of records and interview of witnesses to the action in which a service member was wounded.
Such a theory of quantum gravity would yield the same experimental results as ordinary quantum mechanics in conditions of weak gravity ( gravitational potentials much less than c < sup > 2 </ sup >) and the same results as Einsteinian general relativity in phenomena at scales much larger than individual molecules ( action much larger than reduced Planck's constant ), but moreover be able to predict the outcome of situations where both quantum effects and strong-field gravity are important ( at the Planck scale, unless large extra dimension conjectures are correct ).
" Such resolutions are not legally binding but are an expression of Congress's views in the hope of guiding executive action.
Such an action ideally is done as an act of religious devotion out of a wish to help or bring joy to others, without any thought of compensation.
Such an action may be accompanied by diagnostic information on the aborted process.
Such an action was believed to be required to pacify China and maintain his rule.
Such action is automatic in online poker.
Such elements include the essential idea of narrative structure, with identifiable beginnings, middles and endings, or exposition-development-climax-resolution-denouement, normally constructed into coherent plot lines ; a strong focus on temporality, which includes retention of the past, attention to present action, and protention / future anticipation ; a substantial focus on characters and characterization which is " arguably the most important single component of the novel "; a given heterogloss of different voices dialogically at play – " the sound of the human voice, or many voices, speaking in a variety of accents, rhythms and registers "; possesses a narrator or narrator-like voice, which by definition " addresses " and " interacts with " reading audiences ( see Reader Response theory ); communicates with a Wayne Booth-esque rhetorical thrust, a dialectic process of interpretation, which is at times beneath the surface, conditioning a plotted narrative, and other at other times much more visible, " arguing " for and against various positions ; relies substantially on now-standard aesthetic figuration, particularly including the use of metaphor, metonymy, synecdoche and irony ( see Hayden White, Metahistory for expansion of this idea ); is often enmeshed in intertextuality, with copious connections, references, allusions, similarities, parallels, etc.
Such protagonists, either due to age or physical unsuitability may be limited to cerebral conflicts ( such as those based on conversational interplay ) while leaving the physical action to a younger or more physically capable sidekick.
Such action would be considered aggression and would be resisted.
Such military action, which has the sole purpose of inflicting civilian casualties is illegal under modern rules of war, and may be considered a war crime or crime against humanity.
Such an action, if successful, would have compromised the position of the other Austrian Corps on the Wagram plateau and would have forced them back northwestwards, away from any reinforcements they might have expected to receive from Pressburg.
Such affirmative action can be controversial as they are in conflict with the absolute application of the right to equality, or because some members of the group that is intended to benefit from such programs criticizes or opposes them.
Such action may include demonstrations, blockade, and other operations by air, sea, or land forces of Members of the United Nations.
Such critics such as Lu Xiangshan and Wang Yangming later disliked the great learning because of the stress on scholarship rather than action.
Such was his grief at the loss of so many airmen in the dams raid, Wallis donated the entire sum to Christ's Hospital School in 1951 to allow them to set up the RAF Foundationers ' Trust, which allows the children of RAF personnel killed or injured in action to attend the school.
Such action risked legal reprisals, but ultimately none transpired.
Such an argument would seek to show that a proposed action would have unreasonably inconvenient consequences, as for example a law that would require a person wishing to lend money against a security to first ascertain the borrower's title to the property by inquiring in every single courthouse in the country.
Such action helps individuals, teams, organizations become more capable of self-transformation and thus more creative, more aware, more just and more sustainable ” ( Torbert, 2004 ).
Such consent is however " assumed in case of fire or other disaster requiring prompt protective action ".
Such snares are termed “ flypaper traps ,” however the trapping mechanism of sundews is often erroneously described as “ passive .” In fact, sundew traps are quite active and sensitive, and the disturbance of one or a few trichomes quickly triggers an action potential that stimulates the rapid movement of other trichomes toward the prey.
Such elements include the essential idea of narrative structure, with identifiable beginnings, middles and ends, or exposition-development-climax-denouement, with important inciting incidents, normally constructed into coherent plot lines ; a strong focus on temporality that includes retention of the past, attention to present action and protention / future anticipation ; a substantial focus on characters and characterization which is " arguably the most important single component of the novel " ( David Lodge The Art of Fiction 67 ); a given hetergloss of different voices dialogically at play, " the sound of the human voice, or many voices, speaking in a variety of accents, rhythms and registers " ( Lodge The Art of Fiction 97 ; see also the theory of Mikhail Bakhtin for expansion of this idea ); possesses a narrator or narrator-like voice, which by definition " addresses " and " interacts with " reading audiences ( see Reader Response theory ); communicates with a Wayne Booth-esque rhetorical thrust, a dialectic process of interpretation, which is at times beneath the surface, conditioning a plotted narrative, and other at other times much more visible, " arguing " for and against various positions ; relies substantially on now-standard aesthetic figuration, particularly including the use of metaphor, metonymy, synecdoche and irony ( see Hayden White, Metahistory for expansion of this idea ); is often enmeshed in intertextuality, with copious connections, references, allusions, similarities, parallels, etc.

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