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latter and contains
the former contains no poem dated before 1909 - 10 -- that is, no poem from a period covered by a previous volume -- and the latter has only a few such.
The latter contains five other communes: Bastelicaccia, Alata, Afa, Appietto and Villanova, making a total of six communes for the seven cantons of Ajaccio.
It should be noted, however, that the Class Action Fairness Act contains carve-outs for, ' inter alia ', shareholder class actions covered by the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 and those concerning internal corporate governance issues ( the latter typically being brought as shareholder derivative actions in the state courts of Delaware, the state of incorporation of most large corporations ).
The latter Chapel contains archaeological remains from Hadrian's temple and Constantine's basilica.
The game contains several humorous references to pop culture, like some of Duke's lines that are drawn from movies like Aliens, Dirty Harry, Evil Dead II, Full Metal Jacket, Jaws, Pulp Fiction, and They Live ; the mutated women begging " Kill me " are also a reference to the latter.
Duke Nukem: Total Meltdown ( titled simply Duke Nukem in Europe ), the PlayStation version, contains all three original episodes, plus a new one, Plug ' n ' Pray, which includes six extra levels and a secret level, the latter which was also included in the PC version.
P contains all the extant plays of Euripides, L is missing The Trojan Women and latter part of The Bacchae.
Flamsteed designations do, however, tend to trump the Bayer designation if the latter contains an extra attached number, so " 55 Cancri " is more common than " Rho-1 Cancri ".
The latter provides a systematic approach to solving for the geometry of a spacetime that contains a distribution of matter that moves slowly compared with the speed of light.
Fremont eventually captures and imprisons Dick and Brady after the latter attempts to produce and distribute a record that contains subliminal messages of revolt against the current dictatorship.
In derivative classes, the former contains code that will undo that command, and the latter returns a boolean value that defines if the command is undoable.
There is less sapwood than heartwood, and the latter contains pockets of resin.
Its trailing and leading hemispheres are asymmetrical: the latter is much redder than the former, because it contains more dark red material.
Nikephoros was the author of an extant treatise on military tactics, most famously the Praecepta Militaria which contains valuable information concerning the art of war in his time, and the less-known On Skirmishing ( Περί Παραδρομής in the original Greek ), which concerned guerilla-like tactics for defence against a superior enemy invasion force — though it is likely that this latter work, at least, was not composed by the Emperor but rather for him: translator and editor George T. Denis suggests that it was perhaps written by his brother Leo Phokas, then Domestic of the West.
The latter contains the Cienega Valley, Lime Kiln Valley, and Paicines AVAs.
Unlike the latter, the genome of R. prowazekii, however, contains a complete set of genes encoding for the tricarboxylic acid cycle and the respiratory chain complex.
As had been the case with Riverside, his period with Columbia Records contains many live albums, including Miles and Monk at Newport ( 1963 ), Live at the It Club and Live at the Jazz Workshop, both recorded in 1964, the latter not being released until 1982.
The latter was designed by J E Newberry in the Arts and Crafts movement style and still contains its original interior .< ref >
The latter contains the tale of a fisherman named Peter Grimes, on which Benjamin Britten's opera was based.
The southern edge contains a small portion of 48133 and 48157, the latter of which is used primarily by the city of Luna Pier.
The fourth act of his famous work Faust contains a dialogue between a neptunist and a plutonist, the latter being Mephistopheles, the antagonist of the play who is a devil.
The latter work, entirely wordless, contains some of the most difficult choral music in existence, according to Heseltine.
The former contains undergraduates and the latter advanced students.

latter and pagan
May Day has been celebrated in Ireland since pagan times as the feast of Bealtaine and in latter times as Mary's day.
The Catholic Encyclopedia states the Church's view on the latter claim by saying that while midwinter pagan feasts such as Saturnalia may have helped influence the eventual choice to fix the date of Christmas, this does not mean that Christian Christmas traditions find their origin or inspiration there: " though the abundance of analogous midwinter festivals may indefinitely have helped the choice of the December date, the same instinct which set Natalis Invicti at the winter solstice will have sufficed, apart from deliberate adaptation or curious calculation, to set the Christian feast there too.
Greek philosophers such as Porphyry, who claimed influence from Platonism, and the fathers of the Christian Church, held that the world was pervaded with spirits, the latter of whom advanced the belief that demons received the worship directed at pagan gods.
The former term refers to the sacrificial ritual leaders of Judaism, the kohanim, and to those holding the office of conducting sacrifices in ancient pagan temples, whereas the latter term refers to an acknowledged elder of a community.
Since Penda was a pagan and Oswald was Christian, the latter was subsequently venerated as a martyr and saint.
Dyngus and Śmigus were twin pagan gods ; the former representing water and the moist earth ( Dyngus from din gus – thin soup or dingen – nature ); and the latter representing thunder and lightning ( Śmigus from śmigać or to make a whooshing sound ).
Also in 1003, Henry II allied with the pagan Lutici against Boleslaw I, and in 1004 launched a campaign against the latter.
From the latter half of the 19th century it was rivalled by the Gothic revival, whose champions, such as Augustus Pugin, remembering the origins of Palladianism in ancient temples, deemed it too pagan for Protestant and Anglo-Catholic worship.
If the latter, Roseberry Topping is one of only a handful of known pagan names in England, being named after the Norse god Odin and paralleled by the Old English name Wodnesberg, found for example in Woodnesborough.
The latter is heavily modified, with Christian religious elements substituted for pagan ones.
He goes to the Roman pagan orator Cicero for rules in the latter.
The church promoted celebration of name days ( or rather saints ' feast days ) over birthdays, as the latter was seen as a pagan tradition.
The Church of Sweden promoted celebration of name days over birthdays, as the latter was seen as a pagan tradition.
In the 3rd century AD, Tertullian remarks the inevitable presence of Lares in pagan households as good reason to forbid marriage between pagan men and Christian women: the latter would be " tormented by the vapor of incense each time the demons are honored, each solemn festivity in honor of the emperors, each beginning of the year, each beginning of the month.
According to Bede, it was this latter advice that was taken up by Coifi, an influential English pagan priest for King Edwin of Northumbria, who after being converted to Christianity, cast a spear into the temple at Goodmanham and then burned it to the ground.

latter and poetry
Those three other great activities of the Persians, the bath, the teahouse, and the zur khaneh ( the latter a kind of club in which a leader and a group of men in an octagonal pit move through a rite of calisthenics, dance, chanted poetry, and music ), do not take place in buildings to which entrance tickets are sold, but some of them occupy splendid examples of Persian domestic architecture: long, domed, chalk-white rooms with daises of turquoise tile, their end walls cut through to the orchards and the sky by open arches.
Instead, poetry and painting each has its character ( the former is extended in time ; the latter is extended in space ).
This notion, however, is much more generally expressed in Latin by placere or delectāre, which are used more colloquially, the latter used frequently in the love poetry of Catullus.
By this period, a number of clans had fallen by the wayside, leaving the Reizei and the Nijo family ; the former stood for " progressive " approaches, the varied use of the " ten styles " and novelty, while the latter conservatively hewed to already established norms and the " ushin " ( deep feelings ) style that dominated courtly poetry.
For example, while public speaking and poetry reading are both types of speech, the former is governed by the rules of rhetoric and the latter by poetics.
The latter fuses Daoist ideas with Confucianism and was a precursor to later Chinese metaphysical nature poetry, according to Liu Wu-chi.
This cultural exchange was evident in literature through the introduction of German courtly poetry, or Minnesang, in the latter part of the 13th century.
He further distinguished a twofold reference of speech ( schisis ) to things ( pragmata ) and to the hearers, and referred poetry and rhetoric to the latter.
In the latter part of the twentieth century, Welsh poetry in English flourished.
While the Anglo-Welsh literary scene tended to be dominated by fiction in the 1930s, in the latter part of the twentieth century poetry flourished.
The latter seems to be a reference to Smyrneis, whereas the sweet verses — apparently the slender, economical kind of verses on which Callimachus modelled his own poetry — appear to refer to Nanno.
In the latter half of the 19th century, a certain MP would exit the Serbian parliament each day, and tell of the debate over the Monetary Reform Bill in the style of epic poetry.
The latter were associations on a city level, that fostered literary activities, like poetry, drama and discussions, often through contests.
Between and over-lapping the poetry of the latter days of the Han and the beginning period of the Six Dynasties was Jian ' an poetry.
For Knight ‘ picturesque ’ means simply ‘ after the manner of painting ’, a point which is important to his further discussion of sensation, which in Knight's view is central to the understanding of painting and music which are ‘ addressed to the organs of sight and hearing ’, while poetry and sculpture appeal ‘ entirely to the imagination and passions .’ The latter must be understood in terms of associations of ideas, while the former rely on the ‘ irritation ’ or friction of sensitive parts of the body.
Here, Coleridge opposes imitation to copying, the latter referring to William Wordsworth's notion that poetry should duplicate nature by capturing actual speech.
English language poetry from Pakistan from the beginning held a special place in South Asian writing, notably with the work of Shahid Suhrawardy, Ahmed Ali, Alamgir Hashmi, Daud Kamal, Taufiq Rafat, and Maki Kureishi, and later of M. Athar Tahir, Waqas Ahmed Khwaja, Omer Tarin, Hina Babar Ali and others ; but fiction from Pakistan began to receive recognition in the latter part of the 20th century, with the popularity of the Parsi author Bapsi Sidhwa who wrote The Crow Eaters, Cracking India ( 1988 ), etc., after the earlier reputations of Ahmed Ali and Zulfikar Ghose had been made in international fiction.
of poetry, Summer and Winter Hours ( 1831 ), and My Old Portfolio, the latter also containing pieces in prose.
Aeolic poetry, the most famous example of which being the works of Sappho, mostly uses four classical meters known as the Aeolics, which are: Glyconic ( the most basic form of Aeolic line ), hendecasyllabic verse, Sapphic stanza and Alcaic stanza ( the latter two so named after Sappho and Alcaeus respectively ).
In addition to her autobiography, China Eggs, and three dramatic sketches ( the latter published in 2011 by the Gallery of Surrealism, New York, in the book called Kay Sage: the Biographical Chronology and Four Surrealist One-Act Plays-see footnote no 1. below ), Sage wrote several books of poetry, all but one in French.
Nevertheless, with the novels of Unamuno, Azorín, Pío Baroja, and Valle Inclán, the theater of the latter, and the poetry of Antonio Machado and Unamuno, a definitive literary shift had taken place — a shift in both form and content — pointing towards the more celebrated experimental writings of Spain's vanguard writers of the 1920s.
Its place in Japanese poetry has also given it the names uta-yomi-dori (" poem-reading bird ") and kyo-yomi-dori (" sutra-reading bird "), the latter because its call is traditionally transcribed in Japanese as " Hō-hoke-kyo ", the abbreviated Japanese title of the lotus sutra.

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