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phrase and new
In the second and third chapters of Revelation the new version retains, however, the old phrase `` angel of the church '' which Biblical scholars have previously interpreted as meaning bishop.
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.
Brian Murdoch's 1993 translation would render the phrase as " there was nothing new to report on the Western Front " within the narrative.
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.
Among semantics of language, lexical semantics is most robust, and to some extend the phrase semantics too, while other types of linguistic semantics are new and not quite examined.
A mondegreen is the mishearing or misinterpretation of a phrase as a result of near-homophony, in a way that gives it a new meaning.
The original meaning of the phrase new moon was the first visible crescent of the Moon, after conjunction with the Sun.
For example, in the sentence That poor man looks as if he needs a new coat, the antecedent of the pronoun he is the noun phrase that poor man.
With the exception of Meet – The Tiger !, chapter titles of Templar novels usually contain a descriptive phrase describing the events of the chapter ; for example, Chapter Four of Knight Templar is entitled " How Simon Templar dozed in the Green Park and discovered a new use for toothpaste ".
The second edition of 3, 000 copies was quickly brought out on 7 January 1860, and incorporated numerous corrections as well as a response to religious objections by the addition of a new epigraph on page ii, a quotation from Charles Kingsley, and the phrase " by the Creator " amended to the closing sentence.
Mnemonic phrases or poems can be used to encode numeric sequences by various methods, one common one is to create a new phrase in which the number of letters in each word represents the according numerical.
In Ancien Régime France, a nom de guerre ( a French phrase meaning " war name ") would be adopted by each new recruit ( or assigned to him by the captain of his company ) as he enlisted in the French army.
The phrase " leader of the new school ", coined in hip hop by Chuck D in 1988, and presumably given further currency by the group with the exact name Leaders of the New School ( who were named by Chuck D prior to signing with Elektra in 1989 ), remains popular.
This phrase has been the subject of some controversy, as some shows have been ruled ineligible for the new categories, meaning that their authors did not have a chance to win the marquee awards of Best Play or Best Musical ( or Best Score or Best Book for musicals ).
Though not all manuscript versions of the Gettysburg Address contain the words " under God ", all the reporters ' transcripts of the speech as delivered do, as perhaps Lincoln may have deviated from his prepared text and inserted the phrase when he said " that the nation shall, under God, have a new birth of freedom.
It seemed that either Jelic had seen the Vinland Map and promised not to reveal its existence ( keeping the promise so rigidly that he never mentioned any of the other new historical information on the map ), or that he had invented the phrase as a scholarly description, and the Vinland Map creator copied him.
In contrast, the metaphorical phrase " fishing for information " transfers the concept of fishing into a new domain.
The new tagline for the revamped Discovery Channel was " Let's All Discover ...", with a continuing phrase or sentence that relates to a show.
The company was expanding rapidly, opening new branches and factories and trading in ' Everything Electrical ', a phrase that was to become synonymous with GEC.
This phrase can be translated into English as: " Go forth with new value, boy: thus is the path to the stars ; son of gods that will have gods as sons.
The phrase referred to the fashionable scenes of the era, with a new generation of pop groups and style magazines, successful young fashion designers, and a surge of new restaurants and hotels.
. The concept, born out of " a sense of mission to redeem the Old World ", was enabled by " the potentialities of a new earth for building a new heaven " The phrase itself meant many different things to many different people.

phrase and world
there was no Martian concept to match it -- unless one took `` church '' and `` worship '' and `` God '' and `` congregation '' and many other words and equated them to the totality of the only world he had known during growing-waiting then forced the concept back into English in that phrase which had been rejected ( by each differently ) by Jubal, by Mahmoud, by Digby.
Mainstream Christianity professes belief in the Nicene Creed, and English versions of the Nicene Creed in current use include the phrase: " We look for the resurrection of the dead, and the life of the world to come ".
You wouldn't like me when I'm angry ", became a catchphrase the world over ( the phrase was used again, first in Ang Lee's Hulk ( 2003 ), although in Spanish, and again in the 2008 movie The Incredible Hulk, with an altered version in Portuguese ).
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.
In addition, he gave the world the memorable phrase " pursuit of the almighty dollar " from his novel The Coming Race.
During World War II and for decades after, the phrase " Kilroy was here " with accompanying illustration was widespread throughout the world, due to its use by American troops and its filtering into American popular culture.
The title is a translation into German of the Old Norse phrase Ragnarök, which in Norse mythology refers to a prophesied war of the gods that brings about the end of the world.
While small test programs existed since the development of programmable computers, the tradition of using the phrase " Hello, world!
The speech first culminated with the first of two mentions of the Ich bin ein Berliner phrase: " Today, in the world of freedom, the proudest boast is Ich bin ein Berliner!
Saint Isidore of Seville ( Spanish: or, Latin: ) ( c. 560 – 4 April 636 ) served as Archbishop of Seville for more than three decades and is considered, as the historian Montalembert put it in an oft-quoted phrase, " the last scholar of the ancient world ".
The version best known in the English-speaking world is the Latin phrase " Et tu, Brute?
The phrase olam ha-ba, ( עולם הבא ) " world to come ", does not occur in the Hebrew Bible.
Taking up and " communing with " ( Merleau-Ponty's phrase ) the sensible qualities it encounters, the body as incarnated subjectivity intentionally elaborates things within an ever-present world frame, through use of its pre-conscious, prepredicative understanding of the world's makeup.
In the following classic examples, as humans, we are able to interpret the prepositional phrase according to the context because we use our world knowledge, stored in our lexicons:
Substance, according to Spinoza, is one and indivisible, but has multiple modes ; what we ordinarily call the natural world, together with all the individuals in it, is immanent in God: hence the famous phrase Deus sive Natura (" God, or Nature ").
He argued that the world exists as a " vale of soul-making " ( a phrase that he drew from John Keats ), and that suffering and evil must therefore occur.
Common use of the phrase " The Great Depression " for the 1930s crisis is most frequently attributed to British economist Lionel Robbins, whose 1934 book The Great Depression is credited with ' formalizing ' the phrase, though US president Herbert Hoover is widely credited with having ' popularized ' the term / phrase, informally referring to the downturn as a " depression ", with such uses as " Economic depression cannot be cured by legislative action or executive pronouncement ", ( December 1930, Message to Congress ) and " I need not recount to you that the world is passing through a great depression " ( 1931 ).
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.
It was first published on 21 February 1848 and ends with the world famous phrase: " Let the ruling classes tremble at a Communistic revolution.
* The phrase " north of X " is often used to mean " more than X " or " greater than X ", i. e. " The world population is north of 6 billion people.
As fiercely anti-Communist as they were anti-Semitic, Kennedy and Astor looked upon Adolf Hitler as a welcome solution to both of these " world problems " ( Nancy's phrase ).... Kennedy replied that he expected the " Jew media " in the United States to become a problem, that " Jewish pundits in New York and Los Angeles " were already making noises contrived to " set a match to the fuse of the world.

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