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old and synthesized
The navy's part in securing victory was not fully understood by French public opinion in 1918, but a synthesis of old and new ideas arose from the lessons of the war, especially by admiral Raoul Castex ( 1878 – 1968 ), from 1927 to 1935, who synthesized in his five-volume Théories Stratégiques the classical and materialist schools of naval theory.
The dispersive hypothesis is exemplified by a model proposed by Max Delbrück, which attempts to solve the problem of unwinding the two strands of the double helix by a mechanism that breaks the DNA backbone every 10 nucleotides or so, untwists the molecule, and attaches the old strand to the end of the newly synthesized one.
In the conservative hypothesis, after replication, one molecule is the entirely conserved " old " molecule, and the other is all newly synthesized DNA.
Mantronix underwent several genre ( and line-up ) changes during its 7-year existence ( 1984 – 1991 ), from old school hip hop and electro-funk to house music, but the group is primarily remembered for its original, heavily synthesized blend of old school hip-hop and electro funk.
Accompanied by synthesized beeps that resembled an old computer, different letters rapidly cycled from left to right until they spelled " The National ".
The music could be described as a soundscape of analog synth and old world instruments ( both real and synthesized ) mixed with ethereal male and female vocals.

old and interstitial
was spun off into its own short-lived show series, showing four old episodes as one programming block, with interstitial material and quizzes in-between.
Many USTs were removed without replacement during the 10-year program and many thousands of old underground tanks were replaced with newer tanks made of corrosion resistant materials ( such as fiberglass ) and constructed as double walled tanks to catch leaks from the inner tanks and to give an interstitial space to accommodate leak detection sensors.

old and music
This is precisely what makes lucid, straightforward music so difficult to compose -- the clarity must be new, not old ''.
his hopes that the tunes from his old music might be used for popular American commercial songs!!
They specialize in out-of-the-way items and old French music naturally occupies a good deal of their attention.
Instead of her old confidence in the simplest, purest, most moving musical expression, Miss Schwarzkopf is letting herself be tempted by the classic sin of artistic pride -- that subtle vanity that sometimes misleads a great artist into thinking that he or she can somehow better the music by bringing to it something extra, some personal dramatic touch imposed from the outside.
`` The white colonnaded, cedar-roofed Southern mansion is directly traceable via the grey and buff stone of grey-skied England to the golden stucco of one particular part of the blue South, the Palladian orbit stretching out from Vicenza: the old mind of Andrea Palladio still smiles from behind many an old rocking chair on a Southern porch, the deep friezes of his architectonic music rise firm above the shallower freeze in the kitchen, his feeling for light and shade brings a glitter from a tall mint julep, his sense of columns framing the warm velvet night has brought together a million couple of mating lips ''.
Kabyle music is based on a rich repertoire that is poetry and old tales passed through generations.
As in the old series, Beavis and Butt-Head are high school students who, among other things, criticize contemporary music videos.
Beethoven had made plans to set this poem to music as far back as 1793, when he was 22 years old.
Wills not only learned traditional music from his family, he learned some Negro songs directly from African Americans in the cotton fields near Lakeview, Texas and said that he did not play with many white children other than his siblings, until he was seven or eight years old.
In some parts of Atlantic Canada, such as Newfoundland, Celtic music is as or more popular than in the old country.
Traditionally most computer music programs have tended toward the old write / compile / run model which evolved when computers were much less powerful.
Other notational traditions do exist ; Italian solo music is typically written at the sounding pitch, and the " old " German method sounded an octave below where notation except in the treble clef, where the music was written at pitch.
One meaning often given is that of old songs, with no known composers ; another is music that has been transmitted and evolved by a process of oral transmission or performed by custom over a long period of time.
One meaning often given is that of " old songs, with no known composers ", another is that of music that has been submitted to an evolutionary " process of oral transmission .... the fashioning and re-fashioning of the music by the community that give it its folk character.
Freestyle experienced another resurgence of popularity in the late 2000s, as older, well-known freestyle artists, producers and record labels released new music, and old and new freestyle artists performed at Philadelphia-area bars and night clubs.
His father Michele was a music teacher and an unsuccessful opera composer, who died when Giacomo was five years old.
In 2003, the British theatre company Punchdrunk used The Beaufoy Building in London, an old Victorian school to stage " Sleep No More ", the story of Macbeth in the style of a Hitchcock thriller, using reworked music from the soundtrack of classic Hitchcock films.
He spent much of his youth playing old time music for friends and dances, earning a living as a farmhand into the 1920s.
A soft-spoken man, his nature was reflected in the work, which consisted of a mellow mix of country, blues and old time music.
After television replaced old time radio's dramatic content, music formats became dominant in many countries.
A variety of small and medium-sized recording companies offer an abundance of recent music by Native American performers young and old, ranging from pow-wow drum music to hard-driving rock-and-roll and rap.

old and had
Six hundred and forty acres, the old man back in St. Louis had said ; ;
Had the situation been reversed, had, for instance, England been the enemy in 1898 because of issues of concern chiefly to New England, there is little doubt that large numbers of Southerners would have happily put on their old Confederate uniforms to fight as allies of Britain.
Here, in the old days -- when they had come to see the moon or displays of fireworks -- sat the king and his court while priests, soldiers, and other members of the party lounged in the smaller alcoves between.
Jay had participated in the decision that exiled his old friend Van Schaack.
When, in 1832, the South Carolina nullifiers adopted the principle of state interposition which Madison had advanced in his old Virginia Resolve, they elicited no encouragement from that senior statesman.
At the moment of crisis it had no more depth than an old school tie.
He had worked in the newspaper business since he was nineteen years old, always for the Hearst service.
Fulton was a very close friend of Jackson, and had been his private secretary for a number of years in the old days.
Getting out again, seeing old friends, had given his spirits a lift.
His mother Bess, who could not write herself, reminded her husband through Sturley to buy the apron he had promised her and `` a suite of hattes for 5 boies the yongst lined & trimmed with silke '' ( for John, only a year old ).
He had unearthed Stephens's letters in a New Jersey farmhouse and he discovered Stephens's unmarked grave in an old cemetery on the east side of New York, where the great traveller had been hastily buried during a cholera epidemic.
As a naturalist living for two years at the headwaters of the Amazon, he had collected specimens for Mexican museums, and he had taken to the London zoo a live quetzal, the sacred bird of the old Mayans.
Never hearing from him again, I remembered the little boy of whom I had had such doubts when he was ten years old.
To the Weston house came once William Allen Neilson, the president of Smith College who had been one of my old professors and who still called me `` Boy '' when I was sixty.
I must have written to say how much I had enjoyed his fine book The Building Of Eternal Rome, and I found he had not regretted giving me the highest mark in his old course on the later Latin poets, although in my final examination I had ignored the questions and filled the bluebook with a comparison of Propertius and Coleridge.
Two or three times, C. C. Burlingham came to lunch with us in Weston, that wonderful man who lived to be more than a hundred years old and whose birthplace had been my Wall Street suburb.
His reading ranged from Agatha Christie to The Book Of Job and he had an insatiable interest in his fellow-creatures, while his letters were full of gossip about new politicians and old men of letters with whom he had been intimately thrown six decades before.
Mr. Burlingham, -- `` C.C.B. '' -- wrote to me once about an old friend of mine, S. K. Ratcliffe, whom I had first met in London in 1914 and who also came out for a week-end in Weston.
The excesses of nationalism had brought down upon Europe a generation of tyranny and war, and a return to the old order of things seemed unthinkable.

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