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Page "belles_lettres" ¶ 349
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dweller and at
Tipis are distinguished from other tents by two crucial innovations: the opening at the top and the smoke flaps, which allow the dweller to cook and heat themselves with an open fire, and the lining that is primarily used in the winter, which insulates while providing a source of fresh air to fire and dwellers.
Fossils of Pterichtyodes showing eyes positioned on the top of the head and a " ventrally flattened trunk shield " suggest that it was a " bottom dweller ", living at the bottom of lakes, where it might have crawled using its pectoral appendages.
That wish would then be granted by the guardian or dweller, based upon how the coin would land at the bottom of the well.
After a humiliating loss to MAC bottom dweller Eastern Michigan, Kruczek was fired despite having signed a three-year contract extension at the start of the season.

dweller and is
The problem for the city apartment dweller is primarily to plan the use of existing space.
For example the temple of Heracles Monoikos ( i. e. the lone dweller ), built far from any nearby town upon a promontory in what is now the Côte d ' Azur, gave its name to the area's more recent name, Monaco.
Paganism ( from Latin paganus, meaning " country dweller ", " rustic ") is a blanket term, typically used to refer to religious traditions which are polytheistic or indigenous.
The name is often interpreted as " dweller in the valley ", and occasionally as " war-like ," " people of prey ", " cave-men " In some rabbinical interpretations, Amalek is etymologised as a people am, who lick blood, but most specialists regard the origin to be unknown.
Lee Hollander explains that " bones-of-the-sea " is a kenning for " rocks ", and believes that this defective stanza undoubtedly referred to Skaði as a " dweller of the rocks " in connection with her association with mountains and skiing.
The translation of Kowi anuskasha is " The one who stays in the woods ", or to give a more concise translation, " Forest dweller ".
Despite their small size, these dogs are not recommended for the condominium or apartment dweller unless the owner is ready to take on the daunting task of providing the dog with the necessary amount of exercise and stimulation.
A natural beehive is comparable to a bird's nest built with a purpose to protect the dweller.
During this stage, the eel is transformed from a freshwater dweller to an oceanic traveler.
Vimāna-vāsin (' dweller in vimāna ') is a class of deities who served the.
The origin of the name is possibly the Latin word Lucus, meaning wood or sacred wood, or Gaulish locovanno " lake dweller ".
Live specimens of this cephalopod are very rarely seen, because it is a deep-ocean dweller.
* Llanero is a borrowing from Spanish meaning " plains dweller ".
A bottom dweller, it is found mainly along the continental shelf and upper slopes with a range around the rim of the North Pacific Ocean, from the Yellow Sea to the Bering Strait, along the Aleutian Islands, and south to about Los Angeles, down to the depths of 900 meters.
* Mouse ( played by David Greenlee )-A young and possibly autistic tunnel dweller who is infamous for stealing from the World Above.
In terms of morphology the coquí does not have webbings between its toes mainly because it is a tree dweller in moist environments.
Thornton is a male given name and surname derived from Old English, meaning " settlement walled by strong thorn hedges " or " thorny estate dweller ".
Although this shark is a bottom dweller and appears harmless, it should be respected due to its powerful jaws and sharp teeth which can inflict painful lacerations if provoked.
), although in modern parlance it is used by urban Scots to describe any rural dweller.
In English internet parlance, the expression " basement dweller " is sometimes used, referring to someone who lives in his or her parents ' basement.
The starry triggerfish ( Abalistes stellaris ), or flat-tailed triggerfish, or chicken fish, is a tropical, harmless, oviparous bottom dweller, characterized by some white spots along the spinal dark band.
As a forest dweller, the Pombero is said to be able to imitate the sounds of various forest creatures.

dweller and last
In all apartments except of the " cooperative " ones, there was no right of inheritance — if the last dweller dies, the apartment is returned to the government.

dweller and about
The bearded septuagenarian portrayed a mountain dweller who warns an urbanite about holding prejudices against people who live in the mountains: " Sie glauben wohl auch, dass wir hier oben etwas altmodisch sind.

dweller and new
If the new " propiska " of the new dweller would violate some of this — the propiska would not be granted ( spouses were an exception ).
The book presents new versions of the barbarian ( here a steppe warrior or forest and jungle dweller ) and monk, as well as new classes such as the ninja, kensai, wu-jen, and shukenja.
His wife Lisa, a very reluctant rural dweller initially, fits right in to her new surroundings and is almost immediately accepted and befriended by nearly everyone.

dweller and one
Atlanta, long thought of as a perennial cellar dweller, was lifted in the 1990s into one of the most successful franchises in the game on the strength of its stellar pitching staff and solid hitting.
Self ; pure consciousness, that cosmic self which is the same in every dweller on this globe and on every one of the planetary or stellar bodies in space.
Redtails are bottom dwellers, so it is highly suggested that one does not introduce them into an aquarium with another bottom dweller, as they will constantly pester and harass it.

dweller and who
" From its earliest beginnings, Christianity spread much more quickly in major urban areas ( like Antioch, Alexandria, Carthage, Corinth, Rome ) than in the countryside ( in fact, the early church was almost entirely urban ), and soon the word for " country dweller " became synonymous with someone who was " not a Christian ," giving rise to the modern meaning of " pagan.
There " they called upon the mother of Dindymon, mistress of all, the dweller in Phrygia, and with her Titias and Kyllenos who alone of the many Cretan Daktyls of Ida are called ' guiders of destiny ' and ' those who sit beside the Idaean Mother '.
Madan means " dweller in the plains ( ʻadan )" and was used disparagingly by desert tribes to refer to those inhabiting the Iraqi river basins, and by those who farmed in the river basins to refer to the population of the marshes.
Much fan discussion has revolved around the identity of The Gnome King in Baum's The Life and Adventures of Santa Claus, a jolly rock dweller who does not believe in giving, but only in even exchange.
His first film role was as the simple country dweller who was the victim of an error by the justice system in the film Criminel ( 1932 ), directed by Jack Forrester.
* Ise ( 44 – 45 ): A rogue underground dweller who, along with her brother Teto, is part of a cult that worships the Underground Knight Unas.

dweller and with
At first he tried to imitate Al Jolson by smearing his face with black paint, but later separated himself to form his own identity as an impoverished slum dweller with baggy pants, a rope for a belt, and a distinctive mustache.
He contrasts the " true-type " rural born, with the nomadic, traditionless, irreligious, matter-of-fact, clever, unfruitful, and contemptuous-of-the-countryman city dweller.
* David Dale House-South Lanarkshire Council facility named after another famous Lanarkshire dweller, famous for his connection with New Lanark
This also creates yet another odd mirror-aspect of Drizzt, an above-ground dweller infused with darkness against a drow infused with light.
The Sussex Iron Age dweller supplemented their diet with marine shellfish, the remains of which have been found on
Successively deprived of parents and homes and with few other ties, Ballard descends literally and figuratively to the level of a cave dweller as he falls deeper into crime and degradation.
The term ' Burgher ' comes from the Dutch / German word burger, meaning " citizen " or " town dweller ", and is cognate with the French and English word " bourgeois ".
All could be taken to describe a dweller near a green area, or further in time, an inhabitant of a town with ' Ziel -' somewhere in its name

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