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Page "Love Divine, All Loves Excelling" ¶ 45
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omission and second
This difficult-to-find edition was substantively identical to the second ( except for the probable omission of Sherman's short 1875 and 1886 prefaces ).
The ellipsis or omission of the second use of the verb makes the reader think harder about what is being said.
The omission of this complication during the ending gave rise to the notion of a " second ending ".
This omission was corrected with the release of the second season which gave Zimbalist star billing with her photograph appearing on the box.
Norman attempted to warn London that he was in captivity by not giving the Germans the second part of his security check, which they did not know about, but was frustrated when London sent a curt reply telling him to correct the omission.
Other than two itacisms, and in the probable omission of the second ΕΙΣ ΤΟΥΤΟ from line 2 of the verso, < sup > 52 </ sup > agrees with the Alexandrian text base.
) To fill the hole its omission left in the second act, Berlin wrote " Something to Dance About " to give the second act a lively opening.
The band is clearly tighter and more comfortable with strong melodies, but with the exception of the omission of sub-30 second goof offs like ' Coffee Mug ' and ' Weinerschnitzel ', there is little that will alienate old fans.
From 1942 a simplified wartime version was built, on which the most obvious changes were the omission of the second side windows in the cab and the solid disc carrying wheels.
The full form of Old High German beraht is reduced in two ways, by omission of either the second ( berht, perht, pert ) or the first vowel ( braht, praht, brat, prat, brecht ).
His omission from the movie was written in that the character had died sometime between the end of the first movie and the start of the second.
After kicking six goals in the first round of 1986 and two in the second round, he retired after his omission from the Geelong senior side in the following round.
" He played in four of the five Tests against Australia in 1909 ; his omission from the second Test was later described as an error of judgement by the editor of Wisden, one of many selectorial blunders as England lost the series two games to one.

omission and stanza
He may have adapted the form from a French ballade stanza or from the Italian Ottava rima, with the omission of the fifth line.

omission and is
Ehrman uses this omission to support the notion that the title " Son of God " is not used of Jesus until his baptism, and that Mark reflects an adoptionist view.
Its omission from the Dead Sea Scrolls is attributed to the inability of the Qumran sect to fit Habakkuk's theology with their own narrow viewpoint.
Thus, from a consequentialist standpoint, a morally right act ( or omission ) is one that will produce a good outcome, or consequence.
It is also distinguished from virtue ethics, which focuses on the character of the agent rather than on the nature or consequences of the act ( or omission ) itself, and pragmatic ethics which treats morality like science: advancing socially over the course of many lifetimes, such that any moral criterion is subject to revision.
Legal and not punishable crime are all acts in self-defense or otherwise determined by the illegal or criminal conduct of others that happened in the first place ( or omission adequate to protect the staff member who is a victim of illegal crime ).
An act or omission is a crime if it is capable of being followed by what are called criminal proceedings.
Following the usual pattern of omission, "( and ) pears " is then dropped and " stairs " becomes " apples ".
Crochet patterns have an underlying mathematical structure — the pattern created by the regular presence or omission of stitches is the very essence of this artform.
Downplay is commonly done via omission, diversion and confusion as they communicate in words, gestures, numbers, et cetera.
In this case, the omission of the ē is, as the Oxford English Dictionary ( OED ) calls it, a blunder.
Mary Shelley's novel, though clearly influenced by the Gothic tradition, is often considered the first science fiction novel, despite the omission in the novel of any scientific explanation of the monster's animation and the focus instead on the moral issues and consequences of such a creation.
Contarini's theological advisor was Tommaso Badia ; his own position is shown in a treatise on justification, composed at Regensburg, which in essential points is Evangelical, differing only in the omission of the negative side and in being interwoven with the teaching of Aquinas.
Another difference between native and non-native Hausa is the omission of vowel length in words and change in the standard tone of native Hausa dialects ( ranging from native Fulani and Tuareg Hausa-speakers omitting tone altogether, to Hausa speakers with Gur or Yoruba mother tongues using additional tonal structures similar to those used in their native languages ).
With the omission of the law of the excluded middle as an axiom, the remaining logical system has an existence property which classical logic does not: whenever is proven constructively, then in fact is proven constructively for ( at least ) one particular, often called a witness.
The avoidance aspect is defined as behavior that results in the omission of an aversive event that would otherwise occur with the goal of the preventing anxiety.
Further, statements that are facts cannot be considered perjury, even if they might arguably constitute an omission, and it is not perjury to lie about matters immaterial to the legal proceeding.
:* Matthew 23: 35 – ( son of Barachi ' ah ) omitted ; this omission is supported only by codex 59 ( by the first hand ), three Evangelistaria ( ℓ 6, ℓ 13, and ℓ 185 ), and Eusebius.
:* John 4: 9 – ( Jews have no dealings with Samaritans ), it is one of so-called Western non-interpolations ; omission is supported by D, a, b, d, e, j, cop < sup > fay </ sup >, it was supplemented by the first corrector ( before leaving scriptorium );
One common source of expensive defects is caused by requirement gaps, e. g., unrecognized requirements, that result in errors of omission by the program designer.
The chief work of Severus is the Chronicle ( Chronica, Chronicorum Libri duo or Historia sacra, c. 403 ), a summary of sacred history from the beginning of the world to his own times, with the omission of the events recorded in the Gospels and the Acts, " lest the form of his brief work should detract from the honour due to those events ".

omission and with
* Other critics of Eusebius ' work cite the panegyrical tone of the Vita, plus the omission of internal Christian conflicts in the Canones, as reasons to interpret his writing with caution.
The title Patriarch of the West symbolized the pope's special relationship with, and jurisdiction over, the Latin Church — and the omission of the title neither symbolizes in any way a change in this relationship, nor distorts the relationship between the Holy See and the Eastern Churches, as solemnly proclaimed by the Second Vatican Council.
In France, the Parlement de Paris, with its strong upper bourgeois background and Jansenist sympathies, opened the pressure to expel the Jesuits from France in the spring of 1761, and the published excerpts from Jesuit writings, the Extrait des assertions, provided anti-Jesuit ammunition ( though, arguably, many of the statements the Extrait contained were made to look worse than they were through judicious omission of context ).
Omitted Sundays after Epiphany are transferred to Time after Pentecost and celebrated between the Twenty-Third and the Last Sunday after Pentecost according to an order indicated in the Code of Rubrics, 18, with complete omission of any for which there is no Sunday available in the current year.
Sun Yat-sen soon resigned from the office in favor of Yuan Shikai, who formally assumed the office of " President " ( 大總統, literally " Great President ", in contrast with the omission of ' great ' in the current title ) in 1913.
However, the omission of the geopolitical reality in ignoring the free hand Japan had been granted by the Treaty ( of Shimonoseki ) with respect to Korea and Japan was short-sighted of Russia with respect to its strategic goals ; to get to and maintain a strong point in Port Arthur Russia would have to dominate and control many additional hundreds of miles of Eastern Manchuria ( the Fengtian province of Imperial China, modern Jilin and Heilongjiang ) up to Harbin.
Some hold them to be marks of erasure ; others believe them to indicate that in some collated manuscripts the stigmatized words were missing, hence that the reading is doubtful ; still others contend that they are merely a mnemonic device to indicate homiletical explanations which the ancients had connected with those words ; finally, some maintain that the dots were designed to guard against the omission by copyists of text-elements which, at first glance or after comparison with parallel passages, seemed to be superfluous.
It can also be a special repetition, arrangement or omission of words with literal meaning, or a phrase with a specialized meaning not based on the literal meaning of the words in it, as in idiom, metaphor, simile, hyperbole, or personification.
He wrote to his mother-in-law on 2 July 1932: " Still with all his faults of omission and commission I had and still have a personal liking for Lang and a great deal of sympathy for his ideals and I did not at all relish being forced to dismiss him.
Unlike the similar occurrence with Dade County, Georgia on the Georgia state quarter, fewer complaints were made concerning the omission.
In what Tom O ' Neil called a " jaw-dropper ", the 62nd Primetime Emmy Awards were the first since Late Show began in which the show was not nominated ; O ' Neil attributed the omission to the fact that The Tonight Show with Conan O ' Brien had received a nomination that year.
The only difference introduced with those rules ( which remain the rules of golf ) was the omission of one rule to do with hazards such as trenches.
When a few parts had appeared, it was severely criticized in the Quarterly Review ( xxii., 1820 ) by Edward Valentine Blomfield ; the result was the curtailment of the original plan of the work and the omission of Barker ’ s name in connection with it.
They did come up with some specific criticisms, including typographic unattractiveness ( the type is too small and hard to read ); non-use of capital letters ( only " God " was capitalized ; the goal was to save space ); excessive use of citations, giving misspellings as legitimate variants, dropping too many obsolete words, the lack of usage labels, and deliberate omission of biographical and geographical entries.
Collins addressed the perceived omission in her memoir, America Over the Water, published in 2004 .< ref > Collins described her arrival in America 1959 in an interview with Johan Kugelberg:

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