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Some Related Sentences

phrase and valley
An example is the phrase " Cwm fjord bank glyphs vext quiz ", although " cwm " is actually a Welsh word, meaning valley.
Due to the horrific nature of this narrative, the phrase valley of trouble became eminently proverbial and occurs elsewhere in the Hebrew bible.
The Aztecs entered the valley in 1440 and named it “ Huaxyacac ,” a Nahuatl phrase meaning " among the huaje " ( Leucaena leucocephala ) trees.
Valle Crucis is a Latin phrase meaning " valley of the cross ", and may refer to:
The name, etymologically, comes from the Arabic phrase Wadi al-Qanal ( وادي القنال ), meaning " river of the stalls " or " valley of stalls ", referring to the refreshment stalls set up there during the Muslim rule in Andalusia.
In letters home soldiers had called the original valley " The Valley of Death ", and Tennyson's poem used the same phrase, so when in September 1855 Thomas Agnew put the picture on show, as one of a series of eleven collectively titled Panorama of the Plateau of Sebastopol in Eleven Parts in a London exhibition, he took the troops '— and Tennyson's — epithet, expanded it as The Valley of the Shadow of Death with its deliberate evocation of Psalm 23, and assigned it to the piece ; it is not the location of the famous charge, which took place in a long, broad valley several miles to the south-east.
Similarly, the use of ' ipsam ' in a phrase such as " per mediam vallem ipsam " (" through middle of valley itself ") anticipates the type of definite article (" péri sa mesanía de sa bàdhe ") that is found in Sardinian (" sa limba sarda ")-at least in its standard form.
A Sanskrit inscription dated 512 AD found in Tistung, a valley to the west of Kathmandu, contains the phrase “ greetings to the Nepals ” indicating that the term " Nepal " was used to refer to both the country and the people.
The phrase about " the valley of the shadow of death " is often taken as an allusion to the eternal life given by Jesus.
However, the name, first applied to the city in California, is a corruption of an Ojibwe phrase meaning " valley " or " of the valley ".

phrase and was
But `` after the war '' was a luxury of a phrase he did not permit himself.
A particularly galling phrase was `` O.K., Panyotis, we have time at our disposal ''.
I use the phrase advisedly because there was something positively indecent about our relationship.
She was a living doll and no mistake -- the blue-black bang, the wide cheekbones, olive-flushed, that betrayed the Cherokee strain in her Midwestern lineage, and the mouth whose only fault, in the novelist's carping phrase, was that the lower lip was a trifle too voluptuous.
In Senator Joseph McCarthy's phrase, it was the most unheard-of thing ever heard of.
What was lacking was a real sense of phrase, the kind of legato singing that would have added a dimension of smoothness to what is, after all, a very oily character.
It was an automatic phrase ; ;
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.
But for even the most active citizen the formal basis of his political activity was the invitation issued to everyone ( every qualified free male Athenian citizen ) by the phrase " whoever wishes ".
In the United States, farmland was typically divided as such, and the phrase " the back 40 " would refer to the 40 acre parcel to the back of the farm.
Brian Murdoch's 1993 translation would render the phrase as " there was nothing new to report on the Western Front " within the narrative.
During its design stages the name Victorie Stadion was frequently used, referring to the Dutch War of Independence, the phrase " n Alkmaar begint de victorie " ( Victory begins in Alkmaar ) in particular.
The form used in the Roman Rite included anointing of seven parts of the body while saying ( in Latin ): " Through this holy unction and His own most tender mercy may the Lord pardon thee whatever sins or faults thou hast committed deliquisti by sight hearing, smell, taste, touch, walking, carnal delectation ", the last phrase corresponding to the part of the body that was touched ; however, in the words of the 1913 Catholic Encyclopedia, " the unction of the loins is generally, if not universally, omitted in English-speaking countries, and it is of course everywhere forbidden in case of women ".
When he discovered that the original Desiree, Glynis Johns, was able to sing ( she had a " small, silvery voice ") but could not " sustain a phrase ", he devised the song " Send in the Clowns " for her in a way that would work around her vocal weakness, e. g., by ending lines with consonants that made for a short cut-off.
However, it has been strongly argued that this was a point made out of mis-translation, as pointed out by Amin Malouf, and that the origin of the term in Middle Eastern culture comes from phrase Asasiyun, meaning those who follow the Asas ; believers in the foundation of faith.
It was at this time that ` Abdu ' l-Bahá, in order to provide proof of the falsity of the accusations leveled against him, in tablets to the West, stated that he was to be known as "` Abdu ' l-Bahá " an Arabic phrase meaning the Servant of Bahá to make it clear that he was not a Manifestation of God, and that his station was only servitude.
The phrase does not come from association with Black's Law Dictionary, which was first published in 1891.
The phrase " black-letter law " was used in the Pennsylvania Supreme Court case Naglee v. Ingersoll, 7 Pa. 185 ( 1847 ), almost 50 years before the first publication of Black's.
Before controversy erupted ( see below ) he exhibited an obsession with fire and his trademark phrase was " FIRE!

phrase and sometimes
From biblical to medieval Christian traditions, tensions between self-affirmation and other-regard were sometimes discussed under the heading of " disinterested love ," as in the Pauline phrase " love seeks not its own interests.
The phrase " mad Arab ", sometimes with both words capitalized in Lovecraft's stories, is used so commonly before Alhazred's name that it almost constitutes a title.
Although the phrase " Arabic numeral " is frequently capitalized, it is sometimes written in lower case: for instance, in its entry in the Oxford English dictionary.
They also believe that the phrase Holy Spirit sometimes refers to God's character / mind, depending on the context in which the phrase appears, but reject the orthodox Christian view that we need strength, guidance and power from the Holy Spirit to live the Christian life, believing instead that the spirit a believer needs within themselves is the mind / character of God, which is developed in a believer by their reading of the Bible ( which, they believe, contains words God gave by his Spirit ) and trying to live by what it says during the events of their lives which God uses to help shape their character.
For example, sometimes the phrase visually impaired is labeled as a politically correct euphemism for blind.
Such activities are sometimes known as " fan labor " or " fanac ", an abbreviated form of the phrase " fan activity.
" Fundamentalism " is sometimes used as a pejorative term, particularly when combined with other epithets ( as in the phrase " right-wing fundamentalists ").
Colloquially, the phrase " genetic makeup " is sometimes used to signify the genome of a particular individual or organism.
The phrase classical liberalism is also sometimes used to refer to all forms of liberalism before the 20th century.
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.
It has often been assumed that, in England, jumping over the broom ( or sometimes walking over a broom ), always indicated an irregular or non-church union ( as in the expressions " Married over the besom ", " living over the brush "), but there are examples of the phrase being used in the context of legal weddings, both religious and civil.
More recently, as the phenomenon has become so well known, the phrase is sometimes used in ordinary examples ( without obfuscation ).
This leads to the English phrase " Count and Capture " sometimes used to describe the gameplay.
The phrase prima facie is sometimes misspelled in the mistaken belief that is the actual Latin word ; however, the word is in fact faciēs ( fifth declension ), of which faciē is the ablative.
The referent of the pronoun is often the same as that of a preceding ( or sometimes following ) noun phrase, called the antecedent of the pronoun.
Usually, the individual sections of a statute are incorporated into the Code exactly as enacted ; however, sometimes editorial changes are made by the LRC ( for instance, the phrase " the date of enactment of this Act " is replaced by the actual date ).
Sondheim converted long passages of dialogue, and sometimes just a simple phrase like " A boy like that would kill your brother ", into lyrics.
Generally, if a structure pre-dates another structure in evolutionary terms, then it often appears earlier than the second in an embryo ; this general observation is sometimes summarized by the phrase " ontogeny recapitulates phylogeny ".
This use of " chicken " survives in the phrase " Hen and Chickens ", sometimes used as a British public house or theatre name, and to name groups of one large and many small rocks or islands in the sea ( see for example Hen and Chicken Islands ).
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.
Alongside this traditional usage, the phrase natural sciences is also sometimes used more narrowly to refer to natural history.
Historians sometimes use the phrase de facto damnatio memoriae when the condemnation is not official.
In linguistics, a phrase is a group of words ( or sometimes a single word ) that form a constituent and so function as a single unit in the syntax of a sentence.
The phrase is also sometimes incorrectly used for Broadway cast recordings.

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