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phrase and True
This same period is sometimes referred to as " mid-school " or a " middle school " in hip hop, the phrase covering acts like Gang Starr, The UMC's, Main Source, Lord Finesse, EPMD, Just Ice, Stetsasonic, True Mathematics, and Mantronix.
The phrase " True Womanhood " was used by mid-nineteenth century authors who wrote about the subject of women.
" Shakespeare in turn was making use of a phrase already in common use in his time: it appears for example, in Richard Eedes's Latin play Caesar Interfectus of 1582 and The True Tragedie of Richarde Duke of Yorke & c of 1595, a source work for Henry VI, Part 3.

phrase and Will
A famous phrase of the day was " Will the last person out of Seattle please turn off the lights?
Will Wright has stated in an interview that the game does not actually reticulate splines when generating terrain, and he just inserted the phrase because it " sounded cool ".
The TV show popularized the phrase in the 1960s, and many variations of it were used as titles for other works such as Have Space Suit – Will Travel by Robert Heinlein.
After the celebrities voted for their choices, Collyer intoned the famous phrase, " Will the real ... John Doe ... please ... stand up?
Pirates ' radio announcer Bob Prince coined the phrase " Spread some chicken on the Hill with Will.
* The video for " maJiK " features stop motion animation and the following phrase written in a book near the beginning of the video: " Very Soon / Forever More / The Way to Be / Will Be Attached / Forever Matched / Through What U See ".
In his GQ magazine feature on O ' Connor in June 2006, Will Self said of O ' Connor: " He is fiercely intelligent, charmingly foul-mouthed and has a fantastic turn of phrase ... few could equal O ' Connor when it comes to taking a conversational thread, yanking, unravelling and generally running with it .”
Martel played the princess Sarafina on Have Gun Will Travel, the evil witch " Malvina " on Bewitched, the French Underground contact " Tiger " on several episodes of Hogan's Heroes, a female cosmonaut on I Dream of Jeannie, a Hungarian immigrant " Magda " on The Fugitive episode " The Blessings of Liberty " ( 1966 ), and the woman who repeatedly utters the sinister phrase " Room for one more, honey!
Baltimore fans did not like this perceived snub, and T-shirts were sold outside of Camden Yards that season bearing the phrase, " Will Rogers never met Cito Gaston ," referencing the famous line by Will Rogers, " I never met a man yet that I didn't like.
" However, their iconic phrase became famous three years earlier in " Last Will and Temperament " from their Frantic Times album.
Deborah Curtis had the phrase " Love Will Tear Us Apart " inscribed on Ian Curtis's memorial stone.
* Will Robinson, fictional character in the 1960s American television series Lost in Space, namesake of the catch phrase " Danger, Will Robinson "
** The phrase " wiki wiki ", meant to simulate a DJ scratching a turntable, used by Newcleus in several songs as well as " Wild Wild West " ( Will Smith song ), among others
In December 2006 masked Brotherhood students at Cairo's Al Azhar University staged a militia-style march, which included the " wearing of uniforms, displaying the phrase, ' We Will be Steadfast ', and drills involving martial arts.
On the Fox TV show Glee, Sue Sylvester ( Jane Lynch ) sang and performed in a " Vogue " music video on the March 2010 all-Madonna episode, with the name of Ginger Rogers replaced by the name of Sue Sylvester, and the phrase " Bette Davis we love you " replaced by the phrase " Will Schuester I hate you ".

phrase and does
The phrase does not come from association with Black's Law Dictionary, which was first published in 1891.
We deliberately use the phrase " with the addition of other means " because we also want to make it clear that war in itself does not suspend political intercourse or change it into something entirely different.
The phrase " Cogito ergo sum " ( I think, therefore I am ) is also commonly associated with Descartes ' theory, because in his own methodological doubt, doubting everything he previously knew in order to start from a blank slate, the first thing that he could not logically bring himself to doubt was his own existence: " I do not exist " would be a contradiction in terms ; the act of saying that one does not exist assumes that someone must be making the statement in the first place.
The nominalist approach is to argue that certain noun phrases can be " eliminated " by rewriting a sentence in a form that has the same meaning, but does not contain the noun phrase.
The terms geab and geabaire are certainly Irish words but the phrase " geab ar ais " does not exist, and the word gibberish exists as a loan-word in Irish as gibiris, defined by Ó Dónaill as " Gibberish.
The phrase olam ha-ba, ( עולם הבא ) " world to come ", does not occur in the Hebrew Bible.
The jumping of the broom does not constitute taking a " leap of faith " because the practice of jumping the broom pre-dates the phrase coined by Søren Aabye Kierkegaard by one hundred years, if not more.
However, the phrase 功夫武術 ( kung fu wu shu ) does exist in Chinese and could be ( loosely ) translated as ' the skills of the martial arts '.
The phrase is not a term of art in the law ; it has no exact meaning, nor does it have a legal definition.
* Nicene Creed or the Creed of Nicaea is used to refer to the original version adopted at the First Council of Nicaea ( 325 ), to the revised version adopted by the First Council of Constantinople ( 381 ), to the Latin version that includes the phrase " Deum de Deo " and " Filioque ", and to the Armenian version, which does not include " and from the Son ", but does include " God from God " and many other phrases.
The phrase " what does it matter " or such variants is often spoken by several characters in response to events ; the significance of some of these events suggests a subscription to nihilism by said characters as a type of coping strategy.
Although Plato does not have an explicit theory of natural law ( he almost never uses the phrase natural law except in Gorgias 484 and Timaeus 83e ), his concept of nature, according to John Wild, contains some of the elements found in many natural law theories.
" The simple meaning of the phrase is that if one is sceptical of existence, that is in and of itself proof that he does exist.
Unlike other commentators, Rashi does not paraphrase or exclude any part of the text, but elucidates phrase by phrase.
Many parties, including the government of Israel, hold that this phrase does not mean that Israel should withdraw from all such territories, else the Security Council would have said " from the territories occupied ".
Opponents of Harrison have argued that a phrase in Pope Pius XII's legislation " Cardinals who have been deposed or who have resigned, however, are barred and may not be reinstated even for the purpose of voting ", though it speaks of someone deposed or resigned from the cardinalate, not of someone who may have incurred automatic excommunication but has not been officially declared excommunicated, means that, even if someone is permitted to attend, that does not automatically translate into electability.
Another variety also begins suddenly with frequent word and phrase repetition, and does not develop secondary stuttering behaviours.
The phrase " The Tower of Babel " does not actually appear in the Bible ; it is always, " the city and its tower " () or just " the city " ().
This phrase means that the head of state's role in government is generally ceremonial and as a result does not directly institute executive powers.
The term Westminster Village, sometimes used in the context of British politics, does not refer to a geographical area at all ; employed especially in the phrase Westminster Village gossip, it denotes a supposedly close social circle of Members of Parliament, political journalists, so-called spin doctors and others connected to events in the Palace of Westminster.
An adverb is a word that changes or qualifies the meaning of a verb, adjective, other adverb, clause, sentence or any other word or phrase, except that it does not include the adjectives and determiners that directly modify nouns.
In other words, if a person does not understand a certain word or phrase, another person may substitute a synonym or symbol in order to get the meaning of the original word or phrase across.

phrase and appear
Clitics do not always appear next to the word or phrase that they are associated with grammatically.
Many Indo-European languages, for example, obey " Wackernagel's Law ", which requires clitics to appear in " second position ", after the first syntactic phrase or the first stressed word in a clause:
We will now consider the purportedly “ positive argument ” for design encompassed in the phrase used numerous times by Professors Behe and Minnich throughout their expert testimony, which is the “ purposeful arrangement of parts .” Professor Behe summarized the argument as follows: We infer design when we see parts that appear to be arranged for a purpose.
Some sources incorrectly refer to the June 1982 speech before the British House of Commons as the " Evil Empire " speech, but while Reagan referred twice to totalitarianism in his London speech, the exact phrase " evil empire " did not appear in any speech until later in his Presidency.
Here phrase structures are not derived from rules that combine words, but from the specification or instantiation of syntactic schemata or configurations, often expressing some kind of semantic content independently of the specific words that appear in them.
Note that the phrase " It is better to burn than to disappear " does not appear in the French original.
For that reason the phrase " restraint of trade ," which, as will presently appear, had a well understood meaning at common law, was made the means of defining the activities prohibited.
* Chaterism Where the length of words in a phrase or sentence increase or decrease in a uniform, mathematical way as in " I am the best Greek bowler running ", or " hindering whatever tactics appear ".
It is common for the setter to use a juxtaposition of anagram indicator and anagram that form a common phrase to make the clue appear as much like a ' normal ' sentence or phrase as possible.
While the concept of an unlawful combatant is included in the Third Geneva Convention, the phrase itself does not appear in the document.
While the phrase " age of consent " typically does not appear in legal statutes, when used in relation to sexual activity, the age of consent is the minimum age at which a person is considered to be legally competent of consenting to sexual acts.
Some blemishes may undoubtedly be detected in his character ; but the more carefully it is examined, the more it will appear, to use the phrase of the old anatomists, sound in the noble parts, free from all taint of perfidy, of cowardice, of cruelty, of ingratitude, of envy.
( A word spoken alone becomes such a phrase, hence such prosodic stress may appear to be lexical if the pronunciation of words is analyzed in a standalone context rather than within phrases.
The phrase has gained enough fame to appear many times outside typography, including:
It claims that among their phrasal categories, all those languages share certain structural similarities, including one known as the " X-bar ", which does not appear in traditional phrase structure rules for English or other natural languages.
Although the phrase " rivers of blood " does not appear in the speech, it does include the line, " As I look ahead, I am filled with foreboding ; like the Roman, I seem to see ' the River Tiber foaming with much blood.
These people, who lived and worked in the capital would appear against a brightly coloured background with the Carlton logo in the top left corner, and would say the phrase, " This is Carlton, television for London ", or other variations of the theme.
The phrase fûts de chêne ( oak casks ) will sometimes appear on the wine label of these oak aged wines.
The phrase lost its overt message during the 19th century, during which it became a warning against eavesdroppers (" No good of himself does a listener hear ,/ Speak of the devil he's sure to appear "), and by the 20th century had taken on its present meaning.
Chad would appear with the slogan " Wot, no sugar ", or a similar phrase bemoaning shortages and rationing.
In most Commonwealth Realms the phrase does not appear in the Monarch's full style, while maintaining the initial By the Grace of God.
He states that Ginsberg misread " Naked Lust " from the manuscript, and only he noticed ; that section of the manuscript later became Queer, although the phrase does not appear in either of the two final texts of that novel.
The phrase itself, however, did not appear in the scientific literature until 1987, when it was used in the title of a pair of articles ( in German ) in Stern und Weltraum by Wolfgang Priester and Hans-Joachim Blome.

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