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Page "Constantine II of Scotland" ¶ 27
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phrase and question
Rendering aion to indicate eternality in this verse would result in the contradictory phrase “ end of eternity ”, so the question arises whether it should ever be so.
He compared the market to a game in which ' there is no point in calling the outcome just or unjust ' and argued that ' social justice is an empty phrase with no determinable content '; likewise " the results of the individual's efforts are necessarily unpredictable, and the question as to whether the resulting distribution of incomes is just has no meaning.
" (...) In general, the word " materialistic " serves many of the younger writers in Germany as a mere phrase with which anything and everything is labeled without further study, that is, they stick on this label and then consider the question disposed of.
Answers cannot be found by appeal to an external truth, but only within the confines of the norms and forms that phrase the question.
The earliest use of the phrase is a quote from the Westminster Magazine of 1774: " He had no inclination for a Broomstick-marriage ", the person in question simply stating that he did not want to go through a ceremony that had no legal validity, it having been suggested to him that he would pretend to be marrying by having a French sexton read the marriage service to him and his young bride.
The phrase also occurs a few times in the Vulgate translation of the Bible, notably in when Peter asks Jesus the same question, to which he responds, " Whither I go, thou canst not follow me now ; but thou shalt follow me.
The term " sedevacantism " is derived from the Latin phrase sede vacante, which literally means " the seat being vacant ", the seat in question being that of a bishop.
In their bearing upon the question of papal infallibility these words have caused considerable attention and controversy, and prominence is given to the circumstance that in the Greek text of the letter to the Emperor which the phrase occurs, the milder expression subverti permisit (" allowed to be overthrown ...") is used for subvertare conatus est.
Many English speakers use " begs the question " to mean " raises the question ," or " impels the question ," and follow that phrase with the question raised, for example, " this year's deficit is half a trillion dollars, which begs the question: how are we ever going to balance the budget?
Sam Isaacs ' trademark was the phrase " This is the Plaice " combined with a picture of the punned-upon fish in question.
* the knowledge factors: Something the user knows ( e. g., a password, pass phrase, or personal identification number ( PIN ), challenge response ( the user must answer a question ))
The show, and the catch phrase used Gascoigne ( and later Paxman ) before each toss-up question, " Your starter for 10 ," was the inspiration for the novel Starter for 10, and the subsequent film.
); an interrogative sentence or phrase begins with an inverted question mark (¿) and ends with the question mark (?).
In use since the 1990s, the term LGBT is an adaptation of the initialism " LGB ", which itself started replacing the phrase gay community beginning in the mid-to-late 1980s, which many within the community in question felt did not accurately represent all those to whom it referred.
The phrase Lady of Edinburgh is wrong, if the lady in question does not hold a Scottish barony in her own right.
The company withdrew the spots, but also said that the phrase in question was permissible under E. P. A.
Chico spoke only limited and halting English, so the joke centered on him responding to almost any question with his catch phrase: " Baseball ... been berra berra good ... to me.
Ipso facto is a Latin phrase, directly translated as " by the fact itself ," which means that a certain phenomenon is a direct consequence, a resultant effect, of the action in question, instead of being brought about by a subsequent action such as the verdict of a tribunal.
" He then asked Cable for use of his super-computer to answer a question referring to the phrase " one minute before dawn ," which tied into the then upcoming Messiah Complex storyline.

phrase and reads
The key phrase " at the suggestion of the principal men among us " reads instead " Pilate condemned him to be crucified ".
The first rule reads: An S ( sentence ) consists of an NP ( noun phrase ) followed by a VP ( verb phrase ).
The second rule reads: A noun phrase consists of a Det ( determiner ) followed by an N ( noun ).
Formerly, it included the phrase that " the Lamanites shall be a dark, filthy, and loathsome people ..." The new version deleted the phrase " dark, loathsome, and filthy " and now reads, "... the Lamanites will be scattered, and the Spirit will cease to strive with them.
The phrase reads " Away with enforced Swedish ".
The phrase is taken from the fourth Eclogue of Virgil, which contains a passage ( lines 5-8 ) that reads:
* Get Wordy-A spoof of Jeopardy !, Smiley reads a meaning of a phrase and contestants have to guess what the phrase is.
* In Iran, in September 2009, the phrase " ahmadinejad president of iran " returned a fake Google search page which reads, " Did you mean: ahmadinejad is NOT president of iran.
A title card reads: " Le temps détruit tout " (" Time destroys everything ") — a phrase uttered in the film's first scene.
Lincoln's phrase, " but let us judge not, that we be not judged ," is an allusion to the words of Jesus in Matthew 7: 1, which in the King James Version reads, " Judge not, that ye be not judged.
At the end of the Star Trek motion picture released in 2009, Nimoy reads a revised version of his quotation from Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan that segues from the original series ' opening to the phrase " her ongoing mission " in place of " its five-year mission ", and closes with the Next Generations gender-neutral version: Space ... the Final Frontier.
According to Samuel, Ham sodomized Noah, a judgment that he based on analogy with another biblical incident in which the phrase " and he saw " is used: With regard to Ham and Noah, Genesis 9 reads, " And Ham, the father of Canaan, saw the nakedness of his father, and told his two brethren without.
The last page in his book, Topsys & Turvys contains the phrase THE END, which, when inverted, reads PUZZLE.
In a letter, Ælfric wrote: “ þeo is eac on English on ure wisan iset eow mannum to bisne, þet ge eower eard mid wæpnum beweriæn wið onwinnende here .” Translated into modern English, the phrase reads: “ It is also set as an example for you in English according to our style, so that you will defend your land with weapons against an attacking force ” ( Nelson, pg.
In 1963 both parties agreed on an out of court settlement that gave the Hotel Sacher the rights to the phrase " The Original Sachertorte " and gave the Demel the rights to decorate its tortes with a triangular seal that reads Eduard-Sacher-Torte.
In particular, they understand all to refer to all of the elect ( as in ) instead of every person in the world ; or to refer to all qualitatively, instead of quantitatively, as in all races of people, not just Israelites ( as in ; ; ; and ); or to refer to the elect in all places throughout the world ( as in, where the words " the sins of " have been added to the last phrase by the ESV and other translations and literally reads " but for the whole world ", as in the NKJV, ASV, the Vulgate, etc .).
" Revilo P. Oliver " is a palindrome — a phrase that reads the same backwards and forwards.
* Shoham ( in the masoretic text ) / Beryllios ( in the Septuagint )-in some other places the Septuagint instead has Onychion, or Smaragdos, or the phrase leek-green stone, where the masoretic reads Shoham ; Beryllios refers to Beryl but earlier to the blue-green colour of the sea, Onychion refers to Onyx, and Smaragdos literally means green stone and refers to a bright columnar crystal ( either Beryl or rock crystal ).
In the Book of Revelation, it reads “ I am the Alpha and Omega, the first and the last .” The first part of this phrase (“ I am the Alpha and Omega ”) is first found in Chapter 1 verse 8, and is found in every manuscript of Revelation that has 1v8.
The banner reads " Free from dogmas, always heresy | heretics " Anarchists " are generally non-religious and are frequently anti-religious, and the standard anarchist slogan is the phrase coined by the ( non-anarchist ) socialist Auguste Blanqui in 1880: ` Ni Dieu ni maître !’ ( Neither God nor master!
Brown disagrees and reads this turn of phrase as evidence that the grave clothes were sitting upon a shelf in the tomb.

phrase and et
* Contra as in the original Latin phrase of pros and cons pro et contra
The first recorded use of incunabula as a printing term is in a Latin pamphlet by Bernhard von Mallinckrodt, De ortu et progressu artis typographicae (" Of the rise and progress of the typographic art ", Cologne, 1639 ), which includes the phrase prima typographicae incunabula, " the first infancy of printing ", a term to which he arbitrarily set an end, 1500, which still stands as a convention.
' In 1989, Jerry Mahlman ( a proponent of anthropogenic global warming theory ) used the phrase ' noisy junk science ' in reference to the alternative theory of global warming due to solar variation presented in Scientific Perspectives on the Greenhouse Problem by Frederick Seitz et al.
Also argued by historians is the exact meaning of the phrase in the Remonstrances to Emerick from St Stephen: " Regale ornamentum scito esse maximum: sequi antecessores reges et honestos imitari parentos ", which translates to: " The greatest deed for the kingdom is to follow the old kings and to imitate parents ".
Orbis Catholicus is a Latin phrase meaning Catholic world, per the expression Urbi et Orbi, and refers to that area of Christendom under papal supremacy.
Tree structures are used to depict all kinds of taxonomic knowledge, such as family trees, the biological evolutionary tree, the evolutionary tree of a language family, the grammatical structure of a language ( a key example being S → NP VP, meaning a sentence is a noun phrase and a verb phrase, with each in turn having other components which have other components ), the way web pages are logically ordered in a web site, mathematical trees of integer sets, et cetera.
In the Stuart Gilbert translation, this phrase appears between the following two sentences in the original: " Je me suis mis à crier à plein gosier et je l ' ai insulté et je lui ai dit de ne pas prier.
But service under Warwick ( by now the Duke of Northumberland ) carried some risk, and decades later in his diary, Cecil recorded his release in the phrase " ex misero aulico factus liber et mei juris " (" I was freed from this miserable court ").
The phrase et cetera (" and so forth "), usually written as etc.
Astraea's hoped-for return was referred to in a phrase from Virgil's Eclogue IV: " Iam redit et virgo, redeunt Saturnia Regna " ( The Virgin and the Days of Old return ).
A 12th-century writer, Gervase of Tilbury, wrote in his Latin geography that " Poland is bordered in one side with Russia, which is also called Ruthenia, as you may see from the following phrase of Lucan …" The original Latin text: Polonia in uno sui capite contingit Russiam, quae et Ruthenia, de qua Lucanus: Solvuntur flavi longa statione Rutheni.
A mensa et thoro is a Latin phrase which means " from table and bed ", often translated as " from bed and board ", in which " board " is a word for " table ".
* An English translation of the Ordinary of the 1920 / 1962 Missals ( the translation of the phrase " sed et beati Ioseph, eiusdem Virginis Sponsi ", which marks a difference between the 1962 edition and the previous editions, is given between braces ), side-by-side with the 1973 ICEL translation of the Ordinary of the 1970 Missal
The death cap was first described by French botanist Sébastien Vaillant in 1727, who gave a succinct phrase name " Fungus phalloides, annulatus, sordide virescens, et patulus ", which is still recognizable as the fungus today.
Though Taine coined and popularized the phrase " race, milieu, et moment ," the theory itself has roots in earlier attempts to understand the aesthetic object as a social product rather than a spontaneous creation of genius.
On the other hand, in a minor variation, Sir Francis Bacon wrote the phrase " separa et impera " in a letter to James I of 15 February 1615.
" Elenore " is the only Hot 100 single which ever rhymed the phrase et cetera in its lyrics, though with an AACBBC rhyming pattern it doesn't actually rhyme very well with the word " better " in the sixth line.
Although the 1962 version does not include the phrase deemed most offensive ( Oremus et pro perfidis Judaeis ), it is still criticized by some as a prayer that explicitly asks for the conversion of Jews to the Catholic faith of Christ.
With regard to the phrase just noticed, a culpa et a poena ( in Latin ), which was often popularly used of the Jubilee and other similar indulgences, it should be observed that it means no more than what is now understood by a " plenary indulgence ".
In French a widespread phrase for such medals is " Regarde St Christophe et va-t-en rassuré " (" Look at St Christopher and go on reassured "); Saint Christopher medals and holy cards in Spanish have the phrase " Si en San Cristóbal confías, de accidente no morirás " (" If you trust St. Christopher, you won't die in an accident ").
The vague Latin phrase " Herioldi, et ipsius regis " has been translated variously as " Harald, and the king himself " and " Harald, previous king ".

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