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Page "lore" ¶ 11
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phrase and emotional
A connotation is a commonly understood subjective cultural or emotional association that some word or phrase carries, in addition to the word's or phrase's explicit or literal meaning, which is its denotation.
* Bambi effect, a phrase that refers to emotional objections to the killing of " adorable " animals, inspired by the Disney depiction of the death of Bambi's mother by human hunters
" Similarly, Maria Todorova notes that, although it minimized the Ottoman contribution and displayed " emotional or evaluative overtones ", such a perspective ran against the divisive interpretations of the Balkans, offering a working paradigm for a global history of the region: " Although Iorga's theory may be today 2009 no more than an exotic episode in the development of Balkan historiography, his formulation Byzance après Byzance is alive not only because it was a fortunate phrase but because it reflects more than its creator would intimate.
The phrase, traditionally used by traders and market commentators, has become a topic of economic research about investor irrationalities ( cognitive and emotional biases ).
The phrase " broken heart " refers to an emotional feeling in which someone is very sad for a reason such as a breakup with a romantic partner.
The crowd's reaction to de Gaulle's phrase was emotional, and has been described as frenzied, but it sparked controversy with English-Canadians, as many were outraged at the implied threat to Canada's territorial integrity.
In his history of the pre-Nazi Freikorps paramilitary organizations, " Vanguard of Nazism ", historian Robert GL Waite describes some of the emotional effects of World War I on German troops, and refers to a phrase he attributes to Goering: men who could not become " de-brutalized ".
American author Albert Bernstein uses the phrase " emotional vampire " for people with various personality disorders who are often considered to drain emotional energy from others.
The phrase to wear your heart on your sleeve, meaning to show your feelings, to display an emotional affiliation or conviction, is supposedly related to armbands.
" The name Elemi is derived from an Arabic phrase meaning ' above and below ', an abbreviation of ' As above, so below ' and this tells us something about its action on the emotional and spiritual planes.
The phrase, " a spear has no branches " is applied to him often, as the Ally attempts to hone him into a lone, hardened warrior by killing those he has emotional attachments to.
( 1884 ), Walter Cannon's Bodily Changes in Pain, Hunger, Fear and Rage ( 1915 )-in which Cannon coined the famous phrase fight or flight response-and Schachter and Singer's ( 1962 ) studies on the interaction of social, psychological and physical factors in the generation of emotional states.
Sat is a literal translation from the Greek, but Fortna notes that it misses the emotional meaning of the phrase.
An ecphonesis () is an emotional, exclamatory phrase ( exclamation ) used in poetry, drama, or song.
The phrase tired and emotional is a chiefly British euphemism for alcohol intoxication ( or drunkenness ).

phrase and death
A specimen of Proto-Sinaitic script containing a phrase which may mean ' death to Baalat '.
* Court History of David or Succession narrative ( 2 Samuel 9-20 and 1 Kings 1-2 ): a " historical novel ", in Alberto Soggin's phrase, telling the story of David's reign from his affair with Bathsheba to his death.
Although the phrase " perfect game " appeared in record books as early as 1922, and was a common expression years before that, Major League Baseball did not formalize the definition of a " perfect game " until 1991, long after Young's death.
In a stanza from Ynglingatal recorded in chapter 72 of the Heimskringla book Saga of Harald Sigurdsson, " given to Hel " is again used as a phrase to referring to death.
The phrase " death of one man is a tragedy, death of a million is a statistic " is sometimes attributed to Stalin, but was actually made by the German writer and pacifist Erich Maria Remarque.
* In 1940, actor Pat O ' Brien portrayed Rockne in the Warner Brothers film Knute Rockne, All American in which Rockne used the phrase " win one for the Gipper " in reference to the death bed request of George Gipp, played by Ronald Reagan.
The Greek equivalent metempsychosis ( μετεμψύχωσις ) roughly corresponds to the common English phrase " transmigration of the soul " and also usually connotes reincarnation after death, as either human, animal, though emphasising the continuity of the soul, not the flesh.
Twenty times on the original Star Trek, McCoy declares someone or something deceased with the line, " He's dead ", " He's dead, Jim ", or something similar ; the phrase is considered a catchphrase of the character, although actor Kelley disliked repeating such lines, and refused to say it on The Wrath of Khan when Spock is near death ; James Doohan as Montgomery Scott says " He's dead already " instead.
A specific use of the phrase is in the context of the vacancy of the Holy See between the death or resignation of a Pope and the election of his successor.
They have also said that the revision of the words of consecration of the wine invalidates the sacrament by moving the phrase mysterium fidei ( in the English translation, " the mystery of faith "), from the middle of the formula of consecration of the wine to after it and changing its context from, they say, referring to the transubstantiated Sacrament to the mystery of Christ's death and resurrection.
As in the past, the appeal lies in the vitality of the character, a hero who can go into a brawl and come out with his hair combed and who, faced with death, lights a cigarette and taunts his enemy with the signature phrase " As the actress said to the bishop ...."
The death of Spanish dictator Francisco Franco during the first season of NBC's Saturday Night served as the source of the phrase.
The organisation sought to trademark the phrase " Let's Roll ," which was the subject of some criticism after some accused her of seeking to profit from her husband's death.
Valhalla is additionally referenced in the phrase " visiting Odin " in a work by the 10th century skald Þjóðólfr of Hvinir describing that, upon his death, King Vanlandi went to Valhalla.
The phrase " So it goes " is repeatedly used in reference to death, a deliberate echoing of Kurt Vonnegut's Slaughterhouse Five.
" The phrase due process of law first appeared in a statutory rendition of Magna Carta in A. D. 1354 during the reign of Edward III of England, as follows: " No man of what state or condition he be, shall be put out of his lands or tenements nor taken, nor disinherited, nor put to death, without he be brought to answer by due process of law.
Upon the death of the Sovereign, his or her heir immediately and automatically succeeds ( hence the phrase " The King is dead.
A figure is slain with a sword in the subsequent plate and the phrase above the figure refers to Harold's death ( Interfectus est, " he is slain ").
Other references in classical literature include the belief that upon death the otherwise silent Mute Swan would sing beautifully-hence the phrase swan song ; as well as Juvenal's sarcastic reference to a good woman being a " rare bird, as rare on earth as a black swan ", from which we get the Latin phrase rara avis, rare bird.
Upon a demise of the Crown ( the death or abdication of a sovereign ), the late sovereign's heir immediately and automatically succeeds, without any need for confirmation or further ceremony — hence arises the phrase " The King is dead.
On August 25, 1996, about a year after his death, Mantle's Monument Park plaque was replaced with a monument, bearing the words " A great teammate " and keeping a phrase that had been included on the original plaque: " A magnificent Yankee who left a legacy of unequaled courage.
In the " double-decker " tombs, in Erwin Panofsky's phrase, a carved stone bier displays on the top level the recumbent effigy or gisant of a person as they were before death or soon after their death, where they may be life-sized and sometimes represented kneeling in prayer, and as a rotting cadaver on the bottom level, often shrouded and sometimes complete with worms and other flesh-eating wildlife.

phrase and interesting
The last sentence of the interesting epitaph from which this phrase is taken may be quoted as a specimen of the dialect ; the stone was found in Corfinio, the ancient Corfinium, and the very perfect style of the Latin alphabet in which it is written shows that it cannot well be earlier than the last century BC: " Eite uus pritrome pacris, puus ecic lexe lifar ," " ite vos porro pacati ( cum bona pace ), qui hoc scriptum ( hbar, 3rd decl.
In expanding Cloud's individuality, the staff wanted him to be interesting to players, and focused on working in all his mannerisms and his phrase " Not interested ," which is repeated various times in the game.
The phrase " true self " is interesting since Buddhists, including Zen Buddhists deny the existence of a self.
The phrase E ticket ( or E ticket ride ) refers to an unusually interesting, thrilling, or expensive experience.
The name can also be viewed as an interesting ( and incidental ) pun, too, as the initial letters of the phrase growth hormone-releasing giving us " ghre " with " lin " as a usual suffix for some hormones.
In a review of The Yale Book of Quotations ( 2006 ) by Fred Shapiro, The New Yorker critic Louis Menand observed that it was " extremely interesting to know, for instance, that the phrase ' Shit happens ' was introduced to print by one Connie Eble, in a publication identified as UNC – CH Slang ( presumably the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill ), in 1983.
In addition, this post-interruption phrase introduces a very interesting melodic parallelism in form of an augmentation of the end of the pre-interruption phrase one step higher.
Although interesting and somewhat related to the concept, these show the dual-use nature of technology, which does not always clearly convey the intention of the phrase nor how it is used today.

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