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part and personality
A detailed description of Domitian's appearance and character is provided by Suetonius, who devotes a substantial part of his biography to his personality.
This could sometimes be seen as a part of his TV personality.
Ethan's personality is diametrically opposed to the other characters, in part because of his relative lack of technical knowledge.
He was heavily injured both physically and psychologically, and the " Armitage " personality was constructed as part of experimental " computer-mediated psychotherapy " by Wintermute ( see below ), one of the artificial intelligences seen in the story ( the other one being the eponymous Neuromancer ) which is actually controlling the mission.
At death, Edenists can use affinity to transfer their memories and personality into the mind of one of their bitek ships or habitats, where they live on for many centuries before gradually becoming an integral part of the habitat personality.
Ellert Nijenhuis and colleagues suggest a distinction between personalities responsible for day-to-day functioning ( associated with blunted physiological responses and reduced emotional reactivity, referred to as the " apparently normal part of the personality " or ANP ) and those emerging in survival situations ( involving fight-or-flight responses, vivid traumatic memories and strong, painful emotions, the " emotional part of the personality " or EP ).
All are strongly intercorrelated and except the Mini-SCIDD, all incorporate absorption, a normal part of personality involving narrowing or broadening of attention.
Mead's central concept is the self: the part of an individual's personality composed of self-awareness and self-image.
This suggests that only a very small part of an adult ’ s personality is influenced by factors parents control ( i. e. the home environment ).
" The result of such advice was to awaken immediately all the insecurity in the non-musical part of Bruckner's personality ," musicologist Deryck Cooke writes.
The id is the unorganized part of the personality structure that contains a human's basic, instinctual drives.
The ego comprises the organized part of the personality structure that includes defensive, perceptual, intellectual-cognitive, and executive functions.
It comprises that organised part of the personality structure, mainly but not entirely unconscious, that includes the individual's ego ideals, spiritual goals, and the psychic agency ( commonly called " conscience ") that criticizes and prohibits his or her drives, fantasies, feelings, and actions.
According to Montefiore the Molotov cocktail was one part of Molotov's cult of personality which he highly disliked.
An increasing number of researchers have moved towards more process-oriented experiments, and personality factors give the potential for directional, falsifiable hypotheses, a part of the scientific process that critics have argued that parapsychology lacks.
The creature had a twin personality as the red part of the rainbow was male, while the blue part was female.
While the smorgasbord of later additions on these houses gives the older part of town an eccentric and fanciful personality, each of these older houses has a small, tent-shaped core dating from the first cottage construction.
On May 6, 2008, NBC Today Show personality Al Roker broadcasted live from Malmstrom AFB as part of an " Access Granted " series centered on places the American public doesn't get to see firsthand.
There is a part for narrator on pre-recorded video which was played in the original production by Magnus Pyke and in the London production by the noted astronomer and TV personality Sir Patrick Moore.

part and harbours
The city's economy revolves largely around its harbor-occupying a part of the estuary of the Sierra Leone River in one of the world's largest natural deep water harbours.
By means of the causeway the channel between island and mainland was formed into two harbours, of which the larger, or southern, was further enclosed by two strongly built moles that are still in good part entire.
The old part of the town, Calais proper ( known as Calais-Nord ), is situated on an artificial island surrounded by canals and harbours.
The northern part of the city of Gothenburg, with its harbours, industries and suburbs, is located on the island, which is divided between the two historical provinces of Västergötland and Bohuslän.
In antiquity, the Jubaland region's various port cities and harbours, such as Essina and Sarapion, were an integral part of global trade.
In ancient times, the Jubaland region's various port cities and harbours, such as Essina and Sarapion, were an integral part of world trade.
* 1999: In the East Timor independence crisis as part of INTERFET, CDTs clandestinely mapped harbours and beaches in preparation for the arrival of peacekeepers.
Two prefabricated or artificial military harbours were taken across the English Channel from Britain with the invading army in sections and assembled off the coast of Normandy as part of the D-Day invasion of France in 1944.
* Hartcup, Guy, Code Name Mulberry: The planning, building and operation of the Normandy harbours, David & Charles ( Publishers ) Ltd, 1977-This book covers the background to Mulberry harbours as part of Operation Overlord, the prototypes, the testing and development, the building ( including contributions of suppliers ) plus the installation and running.
Also under the direction of the commander-in-chief of the Home Fleet would be the Coast Guard ships, which would continue to be berthed for the most part in their respective district harbours in order to carry out their local duties, but would join the Home Squadron for sea work at least three times per year, at which point the assembled force – the Home Squadron and the Coast Guard vessels – would be known collectively as the Home Fleet.
It was also the owner or part owner of steamers, hotels ( including the Caledonian Hotel at Edinburgh ), docks, and harbours ; and of two canals, the Forth and Clyde Navigation and the Monkland.
The Gask Road and the towers alongside it in this scenario guard the strategically important link to the harbours at the Firths of Tay and Forth and the Southern part of the province.
The Southwold Railway finally built a branch to the harbour in 1914, as part of a plan to relieve congestion of the harbours at Great Yarmouth and Lowestoft during the herring fishing season.
The RAN's Clearance Diving Team 3 was awarded the US Presidential Unit Citation, twice awarded the Navy Unit Commendation for the periods January 1, 1968 to December 31, 1970 whilst part of Explosive Ordnance Disposal Mobile Unit, Pacific ( EODMUPAC ) and June 1, 1969 to November 25, 1970 as a unit of Inshore Undersea Warfare Group One ( IUWG1 ), and the Meritorious Unit Commendation for its work clearing the harbours of Vung Tau, Cam Ranh Bay, Qui Nhon, and Nha Trang between February 19 and June 30, 1967.
The western part of North Jutland lost its road connection with mainland Jutland, but the towns and harbours in the western part of the Limfjord could benefit from becoming directly accessible from the North Sea, to the dismay of Aalborg.
After the Red Army reached the coast of the Vistula Lagoon near Elbing on January 23, 1945, cutting off the overland route between East Prussia and the western territories, the only way to leave was to cross the frozen Vistula Lagoon to reach the harbours of Danzig / Gdańsk or Gdingen / Gdynia to be evacuated by ships taking part in Operation Hannibal.
Caissons, codenamed Phoenix, were an integral part of the Mulberry harbours used during the World war II Allied invasion of Normandy.
The Phoenix breakwaters were a set of reinforced concrete caissons built as part of the artificial Mulberry harbours that were assembled as part of the follow-up to the Normandy landings during World War II.
He was part of the team involved in planning and designing of the " artificial " Mulberry harbours, having been responsible for the development of the four-legged floating pontoons and the floating roadways that became the Spud pier heads and the Whale piers of these two harbours.
Latouche-Tréville defended the harbours in the south, giving the western part to Admiral Willaumez.

part and these
We have staved off a war and, since our behavior has involved all these elements, we can only keep adding to our ritual without daring to abandon any part of it, since we have not the slightest notion which parts are effective.
The major effect of these advances appears to lie in the part they have played in the industrial revolution and in the tools which scientific understanding has given us to build and manipulate a more protective environment.
The men who speculate on these institutions have, for the most part, come to at least one common conclusion: that many of the great enterprises and associations around which our democracy is formed are in themselves autocratic in nature, and possessed of power which can be used to frustrate the citizen who is trying to assert his individuality in the modern world ''.
And in these organizations certain primal notions played a radiant part, radiant both in the sense of giving light and of being a pole toward which all perspectives converge.
It was the opinion of some of us that these must be part of the Committeemen who had been in the Battle of the North Bridge, which entitled them to a sort of veteran status, and we felt that if they employed this tactic, it was likely enough the best one.
During these early years the repair of watches and clocks and the building of special clocks for church steeples formed an important part of the young man's occupation.
We have developed an ingenious method of interlocking these so that you can make the major part of your house in your own workshop, panel by panel, according to plan.
The consuming public has used up a good part of these liquid assets, or they have been drained by the rising price level, and we have apparently gotten to the end of the line in making consumer or home mortgage terms easier.
With these aids, and a pair of skiis substituting for wheels on the Waco, Bob Fogg made the first landing on what is now part of the Barre-Montpelier Airport on November 21, 1927.
Moreover, prudence alone would indicate that, unless the local customs are already ready to fall when pushed, the results of direct economic action everywhere upon national chain stores will likely be simply to give undue advantage to local and state stores which conform to these customs, leading to greater decentralization and local autonomy within the company, or even ( as the final self-defeat of an unjust application of economic pressure to correct injustice ) to its going out of business in certain sections of the country ( as, for that matter, the Quakers, who once had many meetings in the pre-Civil War South, largely went out of business in that part of the country over the slavery issue, never to recover a large number of southern adherents ).
There is an extraordinary sense of presence in all of these recordings, apparently obtained at least in part by emphasizing the middle and high frequencies.
The only performance which was too soft for me was that of Yvette Mimieux, but since someone had to become the victim of despoilers, just to emphasize that such things do happen at these fracases, I suppose this was the attitude the part called for.
Several of these double entries have been collected by Ben Bagley and Michael McWhinney, along with Rodgers and Hart songs that disappeared permanently en route to New York and others that reached Broadway but have not become part of the constantly heard Rodgers and Hart repertory, in a delightfully refreshing album, Rodgers And Hart Revisited ( Spruce Records, 505 Fifth Avenue, New York ).
The traditions of jurisprudence, history, philology, and sociology then evolved into something more closely resembling the modern views of these disciplines and informed the development of the social sciences, of which anthropology was a part.
It has been proposed that these were part of pilgrimage paths followed during ritual ceremonies.
Other researchers see these motifs as part of a more generalized Puebloan style and / or spiritual significance, rather than evidence of a continuing specific elite socioeconomic system.
( So prevalent are these isolated peaks and ridges that a specialised term has been adopted in Germany to describe this kind of country, thought to be in great part the result of wind action.
Many of these were part of the corruption indulged in by Scott and the Pennsylvania's president, J. Edgar Thomson, which consisted of inside trading in companies that the railroad did business with, or payoffs made by contracting parties " as part of a quid pro quo ", as biographer David Nasaw writes.
A counterpoint to this argument would be that neither Samaria nor Syria where these refugees were claimed to have originated from were actually ever part of Assyria, but were colonies inhabited largely by Hebrews, Nabateans and Arameans respectively.
The south-west is part of the Albuch, the east is part of the Härtsfeld, these two both being parts of the Swabian Jura.
Dürer worked with pen on the marginal images for an edition of the Emperor's printed Prayer-Book ; these were quite unknown until facsimiles were published in 1808 as part of the first book published in lithography.
In modern arranging these instruments are considered part of the rhythm section.
* Meteorological data: historically these were usually divisional level specialist teams but advances in technology mean they are now increasingly part of artillery units.

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