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Some Related Sentences
phrase and essentials
In an oft-quoted
phrase, Ranjitsinhji said
of Grace that
" he turned
the old one-stringed instrument ( i
. e.,
the cricket bat ) into
a many-chorded lyre
" and that
" the theory
of modern batting is
in all essentials the result
of W
. G
.

**"
The Roman Canon dates
in essentials from before St
. Gregory
the Great
, who died
in 604
, and
who is credited with adding
a phrase to it
.
phrase and unity

And
, the phrase "" Kimigayo "" indicates our State
, Japan
, which
has the Emperor enthroned as
the symbol
of the State and
of the unity of the people by
the consensus-based will
of Japanese citizens
.
In necessariis unitas
, in dubiis libertas
, in omnibus caritas ( commonly translated as
" unity in necessary
things ; liberty in doubtful
things ; charity in all things " or more literally as
" in necessary
things unity ; in uncertain
things freedom
; in everything compassion ") is
a Latin
phrase.

Etymologist Dave Wilton says
, " Some time during
the war
, Chad and Kilroy met
, and
in the spirit
of Allied
unity merged
, with
the British drawing appearing over
the American
phrase.
The phrase is intended to set forth
the four marks
, or identifying signs
, of the Christian
Church —
unity, holiness
, universality
, and apostolicity — and is based
on the premise that
all true Christians form
a single united group founded by
the apostles
.

If
the ground field K does not contain
the nth roots
of unity, one sometimes still uses
the phrase Kummer theory to refer to
the isomorphism
The Romanian historian
of ideas and historiographer Lucian Boia stated:
" At
a certain point
, the phrase Geto-Dacian was coined
in the Romanian historiography to suggest
a unity of Getae and Dacians ".
phrase and ;

He can coin
a neat
phrase: ``
a street spattered with an invigoration
of people ''
; ;

It was an automatic
phrase ; ;
The phrase " branched-chain amino acids
" or BCAA refers to
the amino acids having aliphatic side-chains that are non-linear
; these are leucine
, isoleucine
, and valine
.

An anagram is
a type
of word play
, the result
of rearranging
the letters
of a word or
phrase to produce
a new word or
phrase, using
all the original letters exactly once
; for example orchestra can be rearranged into carthorse
.
In a perfect anagram
, every letter must be used
, with exactly
the same number
of occurrences as
in the anagrammed word or
phrase ; any result that falls short is called an imperfect anagram
.

Agathon's extraordinary physical beauty is brought up repeatedly
in the sources
; the historian W
. Rhys Roberts observes that
" ὁ καλός Ἀγάθων ( ho kalos Agathon )
has become almost
a stereotyped
phrase.
The literal translation
of " Im Westen nichts Neues
" is
" Nothing New
in the West ," with
" West
" being
the Western Front
; the phrase refers to
the content
of an official communiqué at
the end
of the novel
.
The form used
in the Roman Rite included anointing
of seven parts
of the body while saying (
in Latin ):
" Through this holy unction and His own most tender mercy may
the Lord pardon thee whatever sins or faults thou hast committed deliquisti by sight hearing
, smell
, taste
, touch
, walking
, carnal delectation ",
the last
phrase corresponding to
the part
of the body that was touched
; however
, in the words
of the 1913 Catholic Encyclopedia
, " the unction
of the loins is generally
, if not universally
, omitted
in English-speaking countries
, and it is
of course everywhere forbidden
in case
of women ".

Scarlatti's style
, however
, is more than
a transitional element
in Western music
; like most
of his Naples colleagues he shows an almost modern understanding
of the psychology
of modulation and
also frequently makes use
of the ever-changing
phrase lengths so typical
of the Napoli school
.

His comment
on Numbers 23: 19
has a still more polemical tone: “ God is not
a man that he should lie
; neither
the son
of man
, that he should repent
; < font face =" times new roman
" size = 3 > if
a man says: ‘ I am
a god ’ he is
a liar
; if he says: ‘ I am
a son
of man ’ he will
have cause to regret it
; and if he says
, ‘ I will go up to heaven ’ he
has said but will not keep his word ” last
phrase is borrowed from B ' midbar 23: 19 ( Yer
.

However
, it
has been strongly argued that this was
a point made out
of mis-translation
, as pointed out by Amin Malouf
, and that
the origin
of the term
in Middle Eastern culture comes from
phrase Asasiyun
, meaning those
who follow
the Asas
; believers
in the foundation
of faith
.

Existence is not being
; it gives being – here
a customary
phrase is used
, existence is
a principle (
a source )
of being
, not
a previous source
, but one which is continually
in effect
.

Note that just because
a player is described as being
" at bat
" in this sense
, he will not necessarily be given an at bat
in his statistics
; the phrase actually signifies
a plate appearance ( assuming it is eventually completed ).
The first known use
of the word ball
in English
in the sense
of a globular body that is played with was
in 1205
in in the phrase, ""
The word came from
the Middle English bal ( inflected as ball-e ,-es
, in turn from Old Norse böllr ( pronounced
; compare Old Swedish baller
, and Swedish boll ) from Proto-Germanic ballu-z
, ( whence probably Middle High German bal
, ball-es
, Middle Dutch bal ),
a cognate with Old High German ballo
, pallo
, Middle High German balle from Proto-Germanic * ballon ( weak masculine ), and Old High German ballâ
, pallâ
, Middle High German balle
, Proto-Germanic * ballôn ( weak feminine ).
The original posters showed Bennett himself
; a kindly looking old man offering guidance and support to would-be students with
the phrase " Let me be your father
" attached
.
The Oxford English Dictionary records
the first use
of the phrase " conspiracy theory
" to
a 1909 article
in The American Historical Review .< ref >" conspiracy ", Oxford English Dictionary
, Second edition
, 1989
; online version March 2012
.

This
phrase is frequently used when discussing
the value
of an electric current
, especially
in older texts
; modern practice often shortens this to simply current but current intensity is still used
in many recent textbooks
.

Some writers
, such as James-Charles Noonan
, hold that
, in the case
of cardinals
, the form used for signatures should be used
also when referring to them
, even
in English
; and this is
the usual but not
the only way
of referring to cardinals
in Latin .< ref > An Internet search will uncover some hundreds
of examples
of " Cardinalis Ioannes < surname >", examples modern and centuries-old ( such as this from 1620 ), and
the phrase " dominus cardinalis Petrus Caputius
" is found
in a document
of 1250
.

Class actions are commonly referred to as class action suits
; however
, this
phrase is redundant as
the historical distinction between
" actions
" at law and
" suits
" in equity is no longer recognized
.
phrase and liberty

We perhaps need to revive
the phrase " social fascism
" to describe
the modern British development
of the corporate state and its bureaucratic attack
on personal
liberty.

Hence
the phrase servos ad pileum vocare is
a summons to
liberty, by which slaves were frequently called upon to take up arms with
a promise
of liberty ( Liv
.

This interpretation was enhanced by
the High and Late Victorian historians
, James Anthony Froude and A
. F
. Pollard
, who saw Somerset as
a champion
of political
liberty whose desire
" to do good
" was thwarted by
, in Pollard's
phrase, " the subtlest intriguer
in English History ".
The phrase was included
in section 7
of the new Canadian Charter
of Rights and Freedoms
, which asserted that
" Everyone
has the right to life
, liberty and security
of the person and
the right not to be deprived thereof except
in accordance with
the principles
of fundamental justice
.

Justice Thomas wrote
in a separate dissent that
the law that
the Court struck down was
" uncommonly silly ",
a phrase he quoted from Justice Potter Stewart's dissent
in Griswold v
. Connecticut
, but he voted to uphold it as he could find
" no general right
of privacy
" or relevant
liberty in the Constitution
.

A saving clause
in the revocation
of the Edict
of Nantes
, which provided for some
liberty of conscience
, if not
of worship
, Louvois sharply annulled with
the phrase " Sa majesté veut qu '
on fasse sentir les dernières rigueurs
a ceux qui ne voudront pas se faire de sa religion
" (" His Majesty wishes
the worst harshness
on those
who do not partake
of his religion ").

An alternative
phrase " life
, liberty, and property ", is found
in the Declaration
of Colonial Rights
, a resolution
of the First Continental Congress
.
The phrase " fatherland and freedom
" or
" fatherland and
liberty " may refer to
The first use recorded
in the Oxford English Dictionary
of the phrase, to hell
in a hand basket
, is
in The Great North-Western Conspiracy
in All Its Startling Details
, by I
. Windslow Ayer
, in alleging that
, at
a meeting
of the Order
of the Sons
of Liberty
, Judge Morris
of the Circuit Court
of Illinois said:
" Thousands
of our best men were prisoners
in Camp Douglas
, and if once at
liberty would ‘ send abolitionists to hell
in a hand basket
.
The phrase splice
the mainbrace is used idiomatically meaning to go ashore
on liberty, intending to go out for an evening
of drinking
.

Many historians find that
the origin
of this famous
phrase derives from Locke's position that
" no one ought to harm another
in his life
, health
, liberty, or possessions
.

Contrast with Life
, liberty and
the pursuit
of happiness
, a spiritually-similar
phrase found
in the United States Declaration
of Independence
.
The phrase is often loosely translated into English as
" by
the sword we seek peace
, but peace only under
liberty ".
phrase and all

What was lacking was
a real sense
of phrase, the kind
of legato singing that would
have added
a dimension
of smoothness to what is
, after
all, a very oily character
.
" American shot
" is
a translation
of a phrase from French film criticism
, " plan américain
" and refers to
a medium-long (" knee ") film shot
of a group
of characters
, who are arranged so that
all are visible to
the camera
.
In mathematics
, the phrase " almost
all " has a number
of specialised uses
.

This poem gave rise to
the common
phrase monarch
of all I survey via
the verse:
The phrase " all quiet
on the Western Front
" has become a colloquial expression meaning stagnation
, or lack
of visible change
, in any context
.
The phrase " in anger he turned back to his own
" probably indicates that this annal is drawn from saga material
, as perhaps are
all of the early Wessex annals
.
The construction involves replacing
a common word with
a rhyming
phrase of two or three words and then
, in almost
all cases
, omitting
the secondary rhyming word
, in a process called hemiteleia
, making
the origin and meaning
of the phrase elusive to listeners not
in the know
.
The phrase became
a fundamental element
of Western philosophy
, as it was perceived to form
a foundation for
all knowledge
.
The first mention
of a diaspora created as
a result
of exile is found
in the Septuagint
in the phrase " esē diaspora en pasais basileias tēs gēs
" translated to mean
" thou shalt be
a dispersion
in all kingdoms
of the earth ".
The logical inconsistency
of a Cretan asserting
all Cretans are
always liars may not
have occurred to Epimenides
, nor to Callimachus
, who both used
the phrase to emphasize their point
, without irony
.
The building was named after
the ancient
phrase of Hakkō ichiu ( literally
" eight cords
, one roof "), which had been attributed to Emperor Jimmu and
, since 1928
, has been espoused by
the Imperial government as an expression
of Japanese expansionism
, as it envisioned to
the unification
of the world (
the " eight corners
of the world ") under
the Emperor's
" sacred rule ",
a goal that was considered imperative to
all Japanese subjects
, as Jimmu
, finding five races
in Japan
, had made them
all as
" brothers
of one family
.

* Thompson's poem is
also the source
of the phrase, " with
all deliberate speed ," used by
the Supreme Court
in Brown II
, the remedy phase
of the famous decision
on school desegregation
.

Now
, however
, the Jewish conspiracy is intended to
" shake down
" ( his favorite
phrase ) such innocent entities as Swiss banks
, German corporations and East European owners
of looted Jewish property
, all in order to consolidate Jewish power and influence without giving
the real survivors
of the genocide anything but empty rhetoric
.

Although
the phrase All Hallows is found
in Old English ( ealra hālgena mæssedæg
, mass-day
of all saints ), All-Hallows-Even is itself not seen until 1556
.
The phrase classical liberalism is
also sometimes used to refer to
all forms
of liberalism before
the 20th century
.
The phrase " Inuit language
" is largely limited to professional discourse
, since
in each area
, there is one or more conventional terms that cover
all the local variants
; or it is used as
a descriptive term
in publications where readers can't necessarily be expected to know
the locally used words
.

A couple jumping
the broom
. Jumping
the broom is
a phrase and custom relating to wedding ceremonies
in different cultural traditions
, found
in " many diverse cultures
, those
of Africa − Europe including Scotland
, Hungary and Gypsy culture ",
all of which
" include brooms at wedding rituals
.

A rana was described as an infidel
, but only because he was fighting against
the Mughals
, and infidel was used as an everyday
phrase to describe
all non-Muslims anyway
.
In 1930
, when Gallant Fox became
the second horse to win
all three races
, sportswriter Charles Hatton brought
the phrase into American usage
.

Another characteristic feature
of logical positivism is
the commitment to
" Unified Science "; that is
, the development
of a common language or
, in Neurath's
phrase, a " universal slang
" in which
all scientific propositions can be expressed
.

Philosopher and encyclopedist Mortimer Adler includes
all such second-order questions about various fields
of study
, which are often found under various branches
of philosophy beginning with
the phrase " philosophy
of ....",
in his taxonomy
.
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