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form's and sections
The march music form's origins can be derived from the sonata form, as it shares similar ideas of contrasting sections.

form's and are
Video art is named after the video tape, which was most commonly used in the form's early years, but before that artists had already been working on film, and with changes in technology Hard Disk, CD-ROM, DVD, and solid state are superseding tape but the electronic video signal remains the carrier of moving image work.
Some things can be changed and some things cannot be changed because forms that are unchangeable cannot be destroyed if certain attributes can be removed ; for attributes not only have the intention of altering an unchangeable form, but also the inevitable possibility of becoming — in relation to the form's disposition to its present environment — both an armor and a vulnerability to its stability.
The Cure are often identified with the gothic rock subgenre of alternative rock, and are viewed as one of the form's definitive bands.
Despite the form's Spanish roots ( confirmed by references in Spanish literature of the period ), the first written examples of passacaglias are found in an Italian source dated 1606.
The permutations resulting from applying the inversion or retrograde operations are categorized as the prime form's inversions and retrogrades, respectively.
They are also invisible to Link unless he uses his wolf form's scent ability, but can still be noticed by a lamp they each carry.
" In this sutta, sankilesa is juxtaposed with purification ( visuddhi ) which is contextualized by: " Experiencing revulsion the impermanence of form's pleasure, become dispassionate, and through dispassion they are purified.

form's and from
Because of resistance, forms must be unlimited ( unchangeable and able to grasp any point within the void ) because, if they weren't, a form's image would not come from a single place, but fragmented and from several places.
The Western Snowy Plover breeds from Texas and Oklahoma west to California and up the coastline to Oregon and Washington, with the coastal form's primary breeding concentration in central and southern California.
Next, a chemically reactive bondbreaker is sprayed on the form's surfaces to prevent the cast concrete from bonding with the slab.
The Onegin stanza is also used in the verse novel Equinox by Australian writer Matthew Rubinstein, serialized daily in the Sydney Morning Herald and currently awaiting publication ; in the biography in verse Richard Burgin by Diana Burgin ; in the verse novel Jack the Lady Killer by HRF Keating ( title borrowed from a line in Golden Gate in Onegin stanza rhymes but not always preserving the metric pattern ); and in several poems by Australian poet Gwen Harwood, for instance the first part of " Class of 1927 " and " Sea Eagle " ( the first employs a humorous Byronic tone, but the second adapts the stanza to a spare lyrical mood, which is good evidence of the form's versatility ).
The Sixth Form aim to use the money raised from this and the rest of Charity Week to support the sixth form's charity Grass roots.
O ' Brien attempts to transfer the alien life form's files back to the probe, and in order to keep the computer from stopping him, he and the rest of the crew give it a list of increasingly complex commands.

form's and by
By the Victorian era Gothic had ceased to be the dominant genre and was dismissed by most critics ( in fact the form's popularity as an established genre had already begun to erode with the success of the historical romance popularised by Sir Walter Scott ).
The end of the ' 80s is often referred to as hip-hop's Golden Era, a time when the form's creativity was expanding by leaps and bounds.
While its objects do encapsulate source code, there is no support for polymorphism, and only a very limited inheritance concept, which is wedded to objects on a form which can be controlled by code placed on a higher object in a form's object hierarchy.
The fact that so-called monothematic expositions usually have additional themes is used by Charles Rosen to illustrate his theory that the Classical sonata form's crucial element is some sort of dramatization of the arrival of the dominant.
" Happiness Is a Warm Gun ", by The Beatles, is an example of this form's application in popular music.
Frost's full range of abilities between her diamond state and regular form have been inconsistent ; however, later occurrences depict that Frost cannot access her psychic powers in diamond form, explained by different writers as either a distinct genetic flaw or suppression by her diamond form's adamantine luster.
*" American Hard-Boiled Crime Fiction, 1920s-1940s ", an essay on the form's early history by Lee Horsley
This is both stated by one of the Yans, that the form's cosmetic difference is comparable a " puffer fish " in that its only purpose is to intimidate opponents, and even proven in battle.

form's and .
The new form of jazz, bebop was an early hit with club owners of smaller venues who could draw the jazz form's growing audiences in New York City at a fraction of the cost of hiring a big band.
Literary techniques collectively comprise the art form's components-the means authors use to create meaning through language, and that readers use to understand and appreciate their works.
Gregory sought to create a grammar that would enable actors to maximise the form's potential for connecting with the audience both as individuals and as a collective.
He is additionally regarded as one of the form's greatest innovators.
Under the form's terms, Jean would have joined the Canadiens at a set date, and at an agreed-upon salary.
Chadbourne started out playing rock and roll guitar, but quickly grew bored with the form's conventions.
CSS can be used to describe a form's appearance.
While there is now an established CI Fundamentals technique, CI dance vocabulary is not closed, so all who practice the form contribute to the constant expansion and greater understanding of the dance form's vocabulary, which is exchanged and taught among practictioners world-wide via regional jams, classes, week-long festivals, both print and online publications and, since its inception, via video in a process of dancing / watching / refining.
Eventually, however, Rowe grew tired of what he considered the form's limitations.
The inventor, Denbei Shoami ( 1651 – 1728 ), initially called his product guri bori for its simplest form's resemblance to guri, a type of carved lacquerwork with alternating layers of red and black.

flexibility and allows
This type of compositing interface allows great flexibility, including the ability to modify the parameters of an earlier image processing step " in context " ( while viewing the final composite ).
Many sports still use leather to help in playing the game or protecting players ; its flexibility allows it to be formed and flexed.
Many languages have both an active and a passive voice ; this allows for greater flexibility in sentence construction, as either the semantic agent or patient may take the syntactic role of subject.
While arm power, accuracy, and pocket presence – the ability to successfully operate from within the " pocket " formed by his blockers – are still the most important quarterback virtues, the ability to elude or run past defenders creates an additional threat that allows greater flexibility in the team's passing and running game.
The flexibility of relational databases allows programmers to write queries that were not anticipated by the database designers.
This system allows great flexibility in setting the difficulty of an action.
The use of drums allows bulk transportation to save cost yet permits flexibility in retail distribution.
A Turing tarpit is any programming language or computer interface that allows for flexibility in function but is difficult to learn and use because it offers little or no support for common tasks.
Logistically prosection allows more flexibility than dissection as there is no commitment to provide a cadaver per a certain number of students, this in fact create opportunities for cadavers to be used, for example at Birmingham, for Special Study Modules ( SSMs ) and postgraduate teaching.
Palette knives are also used in cooking, where their flexibility allows them to easily slide underneath pastries or other items.
Employment Equity also forms part of a company's Black Economic Empowerment scorecard: in a relatively complex scoring system, which allows for some flexibility in the manner in which each company meets its legal commitments, each company is required to meet minimum requirements in terms of representation by previously disadvantaged groups.
This procedure, called a rhizotomy (" rhizo " meaning root and " tomy " meaning " a cutting of " from the Greek suffix ' tomia '), reduces spasms and allows more flexibility and control of the affected limbs and joints.
This method allows for greater flexibility in operation, as well as removing the need for a single immensely powerful launch vehicle.
Conditional zoning allows for increased flexibility and permits municipalities to respond to the unique features of a particular land use application.
Incentive zoning allows a high degree of flexibility, but can be complex to administer.
The flexibility of its spine allows the sea lion to bend its neck backwards far enough to reach its hindflippers.
This allows for greater harmonic flexibility and some very interesting harmonic possibilities.
Tight integration with Python gives flexibility to simulation description, real-time control and post-processing, and allows introspection of all internal data.
RBAC is a flexible access control technology whose flexibility allows it to implement DAC or MAC.
Although the current position allows for flexibility in terms of defining that " one China ", any departure from the One-China policy is deemed unacceptable by the PRC government.
This design allows the greatest range of movements and flexibility, with both front and rear standards able to tilt, shift, rise, fall and swing in similar proportion.
Absolute linearity is a variation of terminal linearity, in that it allows no flexibility in the placement of the straight line, however in this case the gain and offset errors of the actual device are included in the linearity measurement, making this the most difficult measure of a device's performance.
In tendons, the collagen I fibres have some flexibility due to the absence of hydroxyproline and proline residues at specific locations in the amino acid sequence, which allows the formation of other conformations such as bends or internal loops in the triple helix and results in the development of crimps.
The grammar of Latin, like that of other ancient Indo-European languages, is highly inflected ; consequently, it allows for a large degree of flexibility in choosing word order.
Many languages have both an active and a passive voice ; this allows for greater flexibility in sentence construction, as either the semantic agent or patient may take the syntactic role of subject.

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