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Supplying and armies
Supplying the armies, both in the Netherlands and in Germany, proved a boon for the agricultural areas in the Dutch inland provinces.

Supplying and by
Supplying signals to a rotating head is also problematic: This is usually accomplished by coupling the signal ( s ) inductively through a rotary transformer.
Supplying Salinas Valley farms is an underground water supply fed, in part, by the large watershed in surrounding mountains.
Supplying a custom AND mask will also allow for tweaking and hinting by the icon author.

Supplying and would
Supplying fuel to only one cylinder bank in turn, the engine would " air cool " the inactive bank.

Supplying and become
Supplying the information needs of the Congress, the Library of Congress has become the world ’ s largest library and the national library of America.

Supplying and transport
* Supplying printing presses, radios, cassette players, photocopiers, and A / V and transport equipment

Supplying and .
In Michel & Jules Verne's The Day of an American Journalist in 2889 ( 1889 ) submarine tubes carry people faster than aero-trains and the Society for Supplying Food to the Home allows subscribers to receive meals pneumatically.
Supplying a large load with a tolerable energy loss in the distribution system required large and expensive conductors to the generating plant.
Supplying the reactive / collisional gas into the tip of the skimmer cone and / or into the tip of the sampler cone induces extra collisions and reactions that destroy polyatomic ions in the passing plasma.
Supplying ample water to the reaction while peeling onions prevents the gas from reaching the eyes.
Supplying such detailed information as e-mail addresses and full names was considered acceptable and convenient in the early days of networking, but later was considered questionable for privacy and security reasons.
* van Creveld, Martin, Supplying War: Logistics from Wallenstein to Patton.
He is the author of seventeen books on military history and strategy, of which Command in War ( 1985 ), Supplying War: Logistics from Wallenstein to Patton ( 1977, 2nd edition 2004 ), The Transformation of War ( 1991 ), The Sword and the Olive ( 1998 ) and The Rise and Decline of the State ( 1999 ) are among the best known.
Van Creveld's Supplying War: Logistics from Wallenstein to Patton is now included on the list as well.
Supplying the large garrison, 1100 miles from Fort Leavenworth, was costly.
On October 12, 1920, The Society of Starachowice Mining Company signed a contract with Main Office of Supplying the Army.
::• Supplying the SF and crime markets with new fiction.
Supplying a factory with electric power will increase the production and allows for fine-tuning the economy.
Supplying War: Logistics from Wallenstein to Patton, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1977.
Supplying a conclusion to The Mystery of Edwin Drood has occupied writers from the time of Dickens's death to the present day.
Supplying support services and specific areas for distribution, New York's crime families collected a percentage of income from drug dealers while keeping themselves distanced from federal prosecution.
Uncle Sam Supplying the World with Berry Brothers Hard Oil Finish, c. 1880.
Supplying the oil costs $ 5 per barrel with profits going directly to PDO's shareholders.
* South Korea Begins Supplying Electricity to N. K.

armies and by
His sailing vessel is guided by fate to the shores of his own country at a time when Sibylla's domain is overrun by the armies of one of her rejected suitors.
Twice during the Civil War it was saved from destruction by the opposing armies by the pleas and prayers of a local minister.
The damage caused by Sherman's March to the Sea through Georgia in 1864 was limited to a swath, but neither Lincoln nor his commanders saw destruction as the main goal, but rather defeat of the Confederate armies.
His prudence and heroism preserved an un-walled Sparta against the revolts and conspiracies of helots, perioeci and even Spartans, and against her enemies, four different armies led by Epaminondas, that penetrated Laconia that same year, and again in 362 BC when they all but succeeded in seizing the city by a rapid and unexpected march.
Cunimund attempted to prevent the two armies joining up by moving against the Lombards and clashing with Alboin somewhere between the Tibiscus and Danube rivers.
The need to provide the units that would fight alongside the tank led to the development of the wide range of AFVs that exist today, with most armies having vehicles to carry infantry, artillery and anti-aircraft weaponry by the end of World War II.
Most modern AFVs are superficially similar in design to their World War II counterparts, with significantly better armour, weapons, engines and suspension-however with an increase in the capacity of transport aircraft allowing AFVs to be practically transported by air, many armies are replacing some or all of their traditional heavy vehicles with lighter airmobile versions, often with wheels instead of tracks.
The opposing armies are distinguished by the colors of their uniforms: Darius ' army in red and Alexander's in blue.
Few of his other paintings resemble this apocalyptic scene of two huge armies dominated by an extravagant landscape seen from a very high viewpoint, which looks south over the whole Mediterranean from modern Turkey to include the island of Cyprus and the mouths of the Nile and the Red Sea ( behind the isthmus to the left ) on the other side.
* In the mid-1970s several armies started equipping their artillery observation teams with laser rangefinders, ground surveillance radars and night vision devices, these were soon followed by inertial orienting and navigating devices to improve the accuracy of target locations.
He escaped being drafted into one of the armies by feigning madness, insisting that a fly was on his head.
Wellington is better-known to posterity, because he led one of the two Allied armies at the final decisive victory of the Napoleonic Wars ( the battle of Waterloo in 1815 ), although Wellington's superior reputation is perhaps also because he only once faced Napoleon, whereas Charles was confronted by Napoleon in battle more times than any other commander.
The invasion of Israel by the Northern Confederacy " will bring the Beast and his armies to the defense of Israel as her protector ".
Trench warfare had become largely obsolete in conflicts between advanced armies by the start of the Second World War.
Bayezid I, held captive by Emir Timur and his armies.
Having been defeated by his brother's armies, Cem sought protection from the Knights of St. John in Rhodes.
In 637, shortly after Jerusalem was captured by the Muslim armies, ' Umar ibn al-Khattāb, the second Caliph, promised that the Church of the Nativity would be preserved for Christian use.
Eventually Hezekiah revolted against Assyria, and as Isaiah had predicted the country was ravaged by Assyrian armies.
Also encouraged by the British victory were the Austrian Empire and the Russian Empire, both of whom were mustering armies as part of a Second Coalition, which declared war on France in 1799.
Through constant pressure by both infantry and cavalry, two Ottoman armies in the Judean Hills, were kept off-balance and virtually encircled during the Battles of Sharon and Nablus which have become known as the Battle of Megiddo.
On the ground, four giant panzer armies encircled surprised and disorganized Soviet forces, followed by marching infantry which completed the encirclement and defeated the trapped forces.
It has been argued by John Mosier that, while the French soldiers in 1940 were better trained than German soldiers, as were the Americans later, and the German army was the least mechanised of the major armies, its leadership cadres were both larger and superior and their high standards of leadership were the primary reason for the successes of the German army in World War Two as it had been in World War One.

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