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break and is
Monogamy is the vice from which the abjectly fearful middle class continue to suffer, whereas the beatnik has the courage to break out of that prison of respectability.
For the occasion on which everyone already knows everyone else and the host wishes them to meet one or a few honored newcomers, then the `` open house '' system is advantageous because the honored guests are fixed connective points and the drifting guests make and break connections at the door.
Starting with small stations not members of the National Association of Broadcasters, the firm apparently is seeking to break down the anti-liquor barriers in major-market stations.
the athlete of by-gone years who wears a size 46 suit and puffs when he has finished a sentence of any length then, it is time to break it up and move on.
it incorporates an automatic knot-tying device on each spindle, and it will knot a break in the yarn in 10 seconds as well as tie in new bobbins as the running end is exhausted.
There is a break in continuity just before the fourth variation in the `` Forellen '' movement, and I suspect that this is due to imperfect splicing between sides of the original Aj.
I know because this is my 37th year with hardly a break.
The argument against this last approach is comparable to that which rejects stories about hoop snakes, about snakes that break themselves into many pieces and join up again, or even of ghosts that chase people out of graveyards ; ;
If the student drops out of high school, the break with the school is even more complete.
It is at least as important as the more dramatic attempts to break down barriers of inequality in the South.
Locust gum is added to pulp slurries to break up the lumps of fibers in making paper.
As far as I am concerned there is continuous piling up of evidence that the creative fresh ideas which are needed in the world are going to be found by educated women unafraid to break traditions.
and again, that `` the object of non-violent resistance is partly analogous to this object of war -- namely, to demoralize the opponent, to break his will, to destroy his confidence, enthusiasm, and hope.
`` Which is a break as the area to search is less than a square mile '', she added as she swung her legs over the transom.
The company which performed the Pulitzer Prize musical here last night and will repeat it twice today is full of bounce, the politicians are in fine voice, the chorines evoke happy memories, and the Little Flower rides to break a lance again.
And pretty soon gray fox is announcing that he won't have anyone around that's against him, and setting out to break his second territorial treaty with the birds.
It is the deeper level beneath Hel, and those who break oaths, abduct and rape women, and commit other vile things will be sent there to be among their kind to suffer harsh punishments.
For cryptographers, a cryptographic " break " is anything faster than a brute force — performing one trial decryption for each key ( see Cryptanalysis ).
The vessel will now swing in the middle of two anchors, which is acceptable in strong reversing currents, but a wind perpendicular to the current may break out the anchors, as they are not aligned for this load.
Generous bequests to important churches and abbeys in Castile had the effect of making the noble churchmen there beneficiaries who would be encouraged by the will to act as a brake on Alfonso VII's ambitions to break it — and yet among the magnates witnessing the will in 1131 there is not a single cleric.
Earthquakes he asserted were the result either of lack of moisture, which causes the earth to break apart because of how parched it is, or of overabundance thereof, which also causes cracks in the earth because of the excess of water.
* 2006 – Over 60 tornadoes break out in the United States ; hardest hit is in Tennessee with 29 people killed.
This ability to maintain discipline and break out or maneuver away from a killing zone is a hallmark of good troops and training in any ambush situation.

break and roughly
It has been proven that applying Grover's algorithm to break a symmetric ( secret key ) algorithm by brute force requires roughly 2 < sup > n / 2 </ sup > invocations of the underlying cryptographic algorithm, compared with roughly 2 < sup > n </ sup > in the classical case, meaning that symmetric key lengths are effectively halved: AES-256 would have the same security against an attack using Grover's algorithm that AES-128 has against classical brute-force search ( see Key size ).
+ The version of " Girl About Town " used is a slightly longer version with an additional 4 bars just before the instrumental break ( roughly 1: 45-1: 59 ) than the original vinyl 7 " Version ( 3. 10 ).
( Also offered was a similar Sunbeam Break de Chasse ; " break " being a French term for an estate, and the phrase break de chasse translating roughly as shooting-brake.
The Mississippi embayment represents a break in what was once a single, continuous mountain range comprising the modern Appalachian range, which runs roughly on a north-south axis along the Atlantic coast of the United States, and the Ouachita range, which runs on a rough east-west axis west of the Mississippi River.
A simultaneous drum break and vocal scream is heard roughly halfway through the recording ( courtesy of Moon, who knocked over his recording mic in the process, resulting in his crash cymbal being heard over the other percussion for the rest of the piece ), after which the band begins playing a powerful blues-rock section.
The band's big break came roughly a year later when a DJ at the Vancouver's XFM decided to play " Everybody " on their music competition show, Chaos.
The rocks are in the western part of a lagoon surrounded by a submerged coral reef, over which the waves break, and that extends east-west and north-south, with an area of roughly 5 km² within the rim of the reef.
A ball presenting with roughly equal amounts of both is usually called an " overspinning " leg break or off break.

break and equivalent
Although Teuffel's First Period was equivalent to Old Latin and his Second Period was equal to the Golden Age, his Third Period, die römische Kaiserheit, encompasses both the Silver Age and the centuries now termed Late Latin, in which the forms seemed to break loose from their foundation and float freely ; that is, literary men appeared uncertain as to what " good Latin " should mean.
Bastiat argues that people actually do endorse activities which are morally equivalent to the glazier hiring a boy to break windows for him:
If a family managed to come up with all the answers given by the " 100 people surveyed " ( most commonly six in the early part of the show, reduced in number after the commercial break ), they win the pounds equivalent of the total number of people who had given the answers.
The mother tongue equivalent can be given almost as an aside, with a slight break in the flow of speech to mark it as an intruder.
This mass decrease is also equivalent to the energy required to break up the nucleus into individual protons and neutrons ( in this case, work and mass would need to be supplied ).
These teams have equivalent win-loss records, and some other form of tiebreak ( such as the total number of points scored ) must be applied to break the tie.
Violet and Klaus begin to break down but have enough courage to open up the helmet containing Sunny, and Sunny saves her own life when she manages to blurt out one word, the culinary equivalent of horseradish: wasabi -- the object she took from the cave which Violet still has in her pocket.
Some Portuguese triphthongs appears in places where some speakers can break the first segment to form a hiatus ( that is, or are not equivalent to standard Portuguese semivowels and in this case ), and as such they are deemed as non-triphthongs by standard, although many or most speakers produce them as such ( and even more frequently when speaking colloquially ):
The Foglios have stated that the climax of Volume 8 is the rough equivalent of " the end of the first season ", and provides a logical break in case of either author catastrophe or a fresh jumping-on point for new readers.
He won the equivalent event in Greece the following year as well as being only the third driver in the history of the WRC to break the Scandinavian stranglehold on the Neste Rally Finland.
This formed a break with the previous lexicologists ' custom to comment on a Flemish word that it is mainly used in Flanders, while the specific use in Holland of its Dutch-Dutch equivalent had remained unmentioned.
Lowe achieved the ultimate feat in darts on 13 October 1984 during the World Matchplay tournament against Keith Deller when he managed a nine dart finish – the sport's equivalent of a hole-in-one in golf or a 147 break in snooker.
But her biggest break was starring in two seasons of Now and Forever, " Tinig " and " Ganti ", which garnered high ratings ( equivalent to that of a primetime show ) despite its being on an afternoon timeslot.
Consequently, there was never a two decade long break in Osorkon B's struggle to regain control of Thebes ( from Year 1 to Year 22 of Sheshonq III ) as Kitchen's chronology implies because year 25 of Takelot II is equivalent to year 22 of Sheshonq III.
Her big break came in 1962 when she won the Golden Arena for Best Actress award ( which was the Yugoslav equivalent of Academy Award ) for her role in Branko Bauer's film Prekobrojna.
Despite several anonymous attempts to delete the results of his investigations from his recent memory, The Doctor eventually discovers a conspiracy by the crew to keep him from remembering events that led to the holographic equivalent of a psychotic break.

2.329 seconds.