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phrase and national
Similarly, in British law the phrase racial group means " any group of people who are defined by reference to their race, colour, nationality ( including citizenship ) or ethnic or national origin ".
Some elements of Sharia law were re-introduced, and the ritual phrase " Allahu Akbar " (" God is great "), in Saddam's handwriting, was added to the national flag.
The member organization in a particular country may name itself Friends of the Earth or an equivalent translated phrase in the national language, e. g., Friends of the Earth ( US ), Friends of the Earth ( EWNI ) ( England Wales and Northern Ireland ), Amigos de la Tierra ( Spain and Argentina ).
In 1953 Haley scored his first national success with an original song called " Crazy Man, Crazy ", a phrase Haley said he heard from his teenage audience.
The same phrase found its way into the very first resolution adopted by the United Nations General assembly in January 1946 in London, which used the wording "... the elimination from national armaments of atomic weapons and of all other weapons adaptable to mass destruction.
This show on Canadian national radio featured the Maple Leafs from Maple Leaf Gardens, and Hewitt became famous for the phrase " He shoots, he scores!
Similarly, in British law the phrase racial group means " any group of people who are defined by reference to their race, colour, nationality ( including citizenship ) or ethnic or national origin ".
Nielsen was ahead of his time when he used the phrase " national park " in regard to the harbour foreshores, but Sydney eventually caught up with him.
According to political scientist Samuel P. Huntington, who is credited with inventing the phrase " Davos Man ", they are people who " have little need for national loyalty, view national boundaries as obstacles that thankfully are vanishing, and see national governments as residues from the past whose only useful function is to facilitate the élite's global operations ".
Again, Jagland made national headlines similar to the publicity about " The Norwegian House " and " 36. 9 %", this time for the phrase " Bongo from Congo ", originally coined as an internal joke in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs at the expense of the President of Gabon, Omar Bongo.
Jagland again made national headlines in a similar fashion to the publicity about " The Norwegian House " and " 36. 9 %", this time for the phrase " Bongo from Congo ", which Jagland used when referring to Omar Bongo, the President of Gabon, when he was visiting Norway.
The Act did not define national security, which was conceivably advantageous as its ambiguity made it a powerful phrase to invoke whenever issues threatened by other interests of the state, such as domestic concerns, came up for discussion and decision.
Author Charles Panati says that in the United States " the mischievous face and the phrase became a national joke ...
The phrase was such a part of national culture at the time, when General Doolittle conducted the bombing of Tokyo in 1942, many newspapers used the phrase, " Doolittle Dood It " as a headline.
The legislated Slovak national anthem uses this version, the other phrase was used before 1993.
that the advocate of national pensions relies ....." Later, in October 1891, as a query in Notes and Queries, the pseudonymous questioner, signing as " St Swithin ", asked for the originator of the phrase, indicating common usage even at that date.
However, the use of the phrase as the national motto has been challenged by three lawsuits and has repeatedly been found to be constitutional.
The court's finding of Constitutionality for the phrase, as well as the justifications noted above, have made it more difficult for US separationists to challenge other constitutionally questionable practices, such as tax exemption of churches, legislative and military chaplaincies, national holidays based on religious commemorations, the " Pray for Peace " postmark, and, in classrooms, required singing of the fourth stanza of America and the Star-Spangled Banner, both of which include religious phrases, and the required recitation at government events of the US Pledge of Allegiance, modified by an Act of Congress of June 14, 1954, to include the words " under God ", especially since each of these instances are regularly used by accommodationists to justify the other instances.
The phrase is most often used to suggest a basic continuity in German history from the eleventh century to the present ; it is closely linked to Slavic stereotypes of the German national character.
As a consequence of these uncoordinated inward looking mutually contradictory national policies, international trade and investment stagnated – and crucially contemporaneous expert perceptions of the ' whys ' of this stagnation best summed up in the phrase ' beggar thy neighbor, decisively conditioned notions of a better global trade and investment system " next time ".
The phrase may be used to describe national intervention in corporations, including outright nationalization where the state assumes ownership of the corporation.

phrase and home
Scarlett O ' Hara uses the title phrase when she wonders to herself if her home on a plantation called " Tara " is still standing or if it is " gone with the wind which had swept through Georgia.
The phrase, which had previously been limited to regional usage with various possible references, was co-opted and popularized to mean " Old Kinderhook ", a reference to Van Buren based on the name of his home village in New York.
The phrase " do it yourself " came into common usage in the 1950s in reference to home improvement projects that people might choose to complete independently.
which is home to the annual Bourbon Festival held each September, and has been called the " Bourbon Capital of the World " by the Bardstown Tourism Commission and the Kentucky Bourbon Festival organizers who have registered the phrase as a trademark.
The Abenaki phrase Awasiwi Odanak (" far from the village ") is used by Jed Bartlet in The West Wing TV series, in describing his remote home in New Hampshire.
For instance, India has a ministry of home affairs ( a common-noun phrase ) called the Ministry of Home Affairs ( its proper name ).
The name Crystal Palace ( the satirical magazine Punch usually gets the credit for coining the phrase ) was later used to denote this area of south London and the park that surrounds the site, home of the Crystal Palace National Sports Centre.
This is German for " Not being at home ", a recurring phrase in the book House of Leaves.
The phrase stately home is a quotation from the poem The Homes of England, which was originally published in Blackwood's Magazine in 1827.
Modest owners do not usually use the phrase " stately home " but are more likely to call their property a " country house ", which might seem an understatement to the objective observer.
Of the more than three million web entries resulting from a search on the phrase " work at home ," more than 95 % of the results were scams, links to scams, or other dead ends.
The official etymology from the 1930s says the name comes from the Tagalog phrase " May lakán diyán ", (" There is a nobleman there "), as it was originally the home of a wealthy Spanish merchant.
In 2011 closing ceremony, while Florence K singing the acoustic rendition of " O Canada ", a technical glitch has occurred after the phrase " Our home and native land "..
While today some use the phrase in a " neutral and non-pejorative fashion ," this use can obscure the fact that home nations and Israel may have sharp political differences.
Arcturus is also home to a staggering array of oversized and often deadly megafauna, from the Arcturan Megaleech to the Arcturan Megavoidwhale, the Arcturan megagnat to the Arcturan megaelephant and megapuppy, as well as the megacamel, well known by the turn of phrase " one's soul moves at the speed of an Arcturan megacamel ", presumably the reason for distilling Arcturan Mega-gin.
Noam Chomsky argues that Smith ( and more specifically David Ricardo ) used the phrase to mean a " home bias " for investing domestically in opposition to outsourcing production and neoliberalism.
He is also noted as the pitcher who gave up a dramatic, walk-off home run ( a phrase Eckersley coined after this home run ) to the injured Kirk Gibson in Game 1 of the 1988 World Series.
A sign bearing Nuxhall's traditional signoff phrase “ rounding third and heading for home ” is located on the third base side exterior of the park.
The word “ zouk ” means “ party ”, in these Islands and is such a part of everyday life that a common phrase heard on the islands is: “ When you hear zouk, you feel at home .”
This phrase became a Chinese idiom le bu si shu ( 樂不思蜀 ; literally meaning " too joyful to think about home ", but often with a negative implication ).
He is most known for the use of puns to make nicknames for certain players ( e. g. calling former Minnesota Twins starting pitcher Bert Blyleven Bert " Be Home " Blyleven, a pun on the phrase " be home by eleven ").
" The children transport back to their world in their playroom by using the same refrain and the phrase " I wish, I wish, to use this rhyme, to go back home, until next time.
The opening line ' Libraries gave us power ' was inspired by the legend above the entrance to the former Pillgwenlly Library in Newport, near the band's home town of Blackwood in Wales: ' Knowledge is Power ', whilst the phrase ' then work came and made us free ' refers to the German slogan Arbeit macht frei that featured above the gates of most of the Nazi concentration camps and which was earlier referred to by the band on " The Intense Humming of Evil " from The Holy Bible.

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