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naming and decision
When the decision had been reached to make the location a settlement, a problem arose in naming it.
In the early 2000s in North America, the Ford Motor Company made a strategic decision to brand all new or redesigned cars with names starting with " F ." This aligned with the previous tradition of naming all sport utility vehicles since the Ford Explorer with the letter " E ." The Toronto Star quoted an analyst who warned that changing the name of the well known Windstar to the Freestar would cause confusion and discard brand equity built up, while a marketing manager believed that a name change would highlight the new redesign.
Students offered naming suggestions during student government elections in 2007, with a final decision made by a committee of students and faculty.
Relying on a 1960 HSMB decision that naming national historic sites outside Canada should be avoided, and in light of policy that Events and Persons outside the country may be designated, it decided that Dochet Island had been designated a national historic event in 1968.
Argument over team colours ran alongside the naming problem until a compromise blue, black and white shirt was unveiled and satisfied most people, as did the initial decision to play an equal number of games at Bridgend's Brewery Field and Pontypridd's Sardis Road.
The naming of New Brighton was apparently done on a ' spur of moment ' decision by William Fee, an early settler of the area.
During the development of the port, the decision was made to change the character design of the protagonist, modeling him and naming him after Hudson Soft's spokesman Takahashi Meijin.
This naming decision was based on the idea that the name " Olympiapark " related well to the central theme of a " green Olympic Games " and also to the central function of the U-Bahn station, which, in conjunction with the bus station, serviced all sports venues and important sectors of the area.

naming and took
* Upon his adoption by Caesar, he took Caesar's name and become Gaius Julius Caesar Octavianus in accordance with Roman adoption naming standards.
Ultimately, no battle ever took place as Constantius became ill and died late in 361, though not before naming his opponent as his successor.
The system was regularly solved by the French, naming it Übchi, who were typically able to quickly find the keys once they'd intercepted a number of messages of the same length, which generally took only a few days.
Although the battle actually took place close to Allenstein ( Olsztyn ), General Erich Ludendorff's aide, Colonel Max Hoffmann, suggested naming it after Tannenberg, in the interest of Pan-German ideology, to counter the defeat of the Teutonic Knights at the Battle of Grunwald ( Tannenberg ) in 1410 by the Poles, Lithuanians and Tatars.
The naming ceremony took place in his presence ; there was a last-minute scramble to repaint the station's new nameboards when it was discovered that the unusual dieresis in his name had been omitted ( making the French word for " welcome ").
The Dominion acquired Rupert's Land from the Hudson's Bay Company and the North-Western Territory from the Crown in 1869, and took ownership on December 1 of that year, merging them and naming them North-West Territories ( though final payment to the Hudson's Bay Company did not occur until 1870 ).
:* date ( yyyy-mm ) that the naming authority took ownership of the domain
He took kindly to this move and thanked the Carolina Legislature for honoring him with naming the new county after him.
A freedman customarily took his former owner's family name, that is, the nomen ( see Roman naming conventions ) of his master's gens.
Jacob Starcher erected a grist mill in 1824 and laid out the town in 1830, naming it in honor of Harry Ripley, a young minister who was to be married, but drowned in Big Mill Creek, about one and a half miles north of the town, shortly before the ceremony took place.
* Battle of Dettingen, which took place in what is now Karlstein am Main, which led to the naming of:
After early struggles ( including a fistfight between George Wackenhut and one of his partners ), Wackenhut took sole control of his company in 1958, then naming it after himself.
In an African naming ceremony before her death, she took the name Gambda Adisa, which means " Warrior: She Who Makes Her Meaning Known ".
He took the Christian name of Hastings after being baptised into the Church of Scotland, naming himself after John Hastings, a Scottish missionary working near his village whom he admired.
In 1921 Stratton went into partnership with Ernest Instone and they took charge of the Daimler showrooms at 39 Pall Mall naming the business Stratton-Instone.
Peter Duval Smith, writing in Financial Times, also took the opportunity to defend Fleming's work against negative criticism, also specifically naming Paul Johnson and his review: " one should not make a cult of Fleming's novels: a day-dream is a day-dream ; but nor should one make the mistake of supposing he does not know what he is doing.
Under Iceland naming conventions, his name would have been Magnús Sigursteinsson ( Magnús, son of Sigursteinn ), but his family adopted British naming conventions and he took his father's surname.
Scotiabank had been an advertising partner with the club for several years and took over the naming after Corel declined to renew its naming agreement with the Senators, but continued as an advertising sponsor.
In the second series an American Vice-Chancellor Jack Daniels ( Michael Shannon ) took over from Hemingway, continuing the running joke of naming the VC after an American.
( This change in name aligned BPEL with other Web Service standard naming conventions which start with " WS -" and took account of the significant enhancements made between BPEL4WS 1. 1 and WS-BPEL 2. 0.
In his first news conference, Kan announced his priority was stimulating growth and took the unusual step of naming a specific dollar-yen level as optimal to help exporters and stimulate the economy.
The recurring Polish-German double naming Piła-Snydemole may be attributed to the fact that two originally separate localities took their name from the water-powered sawmill that had been part of the town's raison d ’ être from the beginning.
After the Dutch abandoned Mauritius, the island became a French colony in September 1715 when Guillaume Dufresne d ' Arsel landed and took possession of it, naming the island Isle de France.

naming and place
" This tradition ended on berkelium, though, as the naming of the next discovered actinide, californium, was not related to its lanthanide analogue dysprosium, but after the discovery place.
There are well-defined systems in place for naming chemical species.
This naming was followed up with many Gothic novels often set in Gothic buildings, with the action taking place in castles, abbeys, convents and monasteries, many of them in ruins, evoking “ feelings of fear, surprise, confinement ”.
In the morning, Jacob awakened and continued on his way to Haran, after naming the place where he had spent the night " Bethel ", " God's house ".
They prospected south along the Baiyer River to its junction with the Maramuni and Tarua Rivers, where they established a palisaded forward camp naming the place ‘ Akmana Junction .’ From this base they prospected along the Maramuni River and its tributaries, again without success.
* Paleoanthropology, the study of fossil evidence for human evolution, studying hominid fossil evidence and dating to determine matters such as the time and manner in which the mandible evolved, the effect of nature and environment on bipedality or the use of opposable thumb, with hominid classification and the individual naming of the proposed species and their place in primatology, the study of primates.
Taxonomy has been called " the world's oldest profession ", and naming and classifying our surroundings has likely been taking place as long as mankind has been able to communicate.
A massive re-branding campaign was launched to support the new naming, with customers even being sent ITV Digital stickers to place over the existing ONdigital logos on their remote controls and set top boxes.
It is said that the naming of Dunmore Street was not to honour the ex-governor, but to celebrate the place in Norfolk where he had last set foot.
It was decided in 1921 at a Fall River Council Executive Board meeting that the purchase of a wooded area would take place, naming it Camp Noquochoke.
Later, in 1817, Zephania W. Bunce sailed up the St. Clair River and settled at the place of the mill, naming it Bunce Creek.
The city's prominent place in Mississippi River commerce during the nineteenth century was expressed by the naming of nine steamboats plying the lower river between 1823 and 1918 which were named Natchez.
In 1890 industrialist W. R. Rust established Tacoma Smelting & Refining Company and a company town for his employees, naming the place " Smelter ".
In the second half of 1749 the French explorer Pierre Joseph Céloron de Blainville claimed French sovereignty over the Ohio Valley, burying a lead plaque at the meeting point of the Rivers Ohio and Kanawha, naming the place Point Pleasant.
The toponymy of England examines the linguistic origins of place names in England, and trends in naming.
Personal names often appear within the place names, presumably the names of landowners at the time of naming.
A feudal naming habit is used sometimes in other languages: the French sometimes refer to Aristotle as " le Stagirite " from one spelling of his place of birth, and English speakers often refer to Shakespeare as " The Bard ", recognizing him as a paragon writer of the language.
There are many reasons why births go unregistered, including social and cultural beliefs and attitudes ; alternative documents and naming ceremonies ; remote areas, poor infrastructure ; economic barriers ; lack of office staff, equipment and training ; legal and political restrictions ; fear of discrimination and persecution ; war, conflict and unrest or simply the fact that there is no system in place.
This naming occurred because San Diego was the city from which Lindbergh began the journey that would ultimately become the first solo transatlantic flight, in addition to being the place where his aircraft was designed, built, and tested, at Dutch Flats.
In his book, Dr. Murphy retells his encounters with multiple demons manifest in a lady named Betty, naming themselves through use of her vocal cords, with names such as " Hellbent " ( its purpose was to ensure Betty's place in Hell ( although it was defeated )); " Unbelief " ( purposed to inspire exactly what it's named for ) and " Destroyer " ( meant to destroy the victim's spirit ).

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