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predominant and faction
" Trujillo's faction became predominant in CELAM after the 1972 Sucre conference, and in the Roman Curia after the CELAM conference in Puebla, Mexico, in January 1979.
On the return of the king to London, Talbot received an appointment as Queen's Almoner, but the Clarendon and Ormond faction, which was then predominant, feared his influence with the king.
After Sarim faction replaced Hungu faction as the predominant political force in late 16th century, a nationwide split occurred between the Eastern faction ( Dong-in ) and Western faction ( Seo-in ).
Randolphs and close relatives formed the predominant political faction in the colonial government during the 18th century, with many members of the elected House of Burgesses and the appointed, and more exclusive, Council.

predominant and War
Italians have so been predominant in most urban settlements and in the coast with strong minorities of Slovenes or Croats, especially in Trieste / Trst district where Slovenes represented a third of the population by the end of World War I.
It was also during this time that German immigrants, who had been settling in town during most of the century, became the predominant population group in the city, at least partially due to its being a major destination port of the Hamburg America Line, though anti-German sentiment during World War I led to a rapid decline in the German community.
However, as a result of the Holocaust, World War II and immigration, the secular-speaking Yiddish community is very small, and is far outnumbered by Religious Yiddish-Speaking communities in New York, Antwerp, Jerusalem, B ' nei Beraq, London and others, making the predominant contemporary Yiddish Dialect that of the Yeshivish variant.
Although U. S. capital investments within the Philippines and Puerto Rico were relatively small ( figures that would seemingly detract from the broader economic implications on first glance ), " imperialism " for the United States, formalized in 1904 by the Roosevelt Corollary to the Monroe Doctrine, would also spur its displacement of Britain as the predominant investor in Latin America — a process largely completed by the end of the Great War.
* Argentina itself, with the definite article as " the Argentine " – generally an older usage, but probably the predominant one, at least in British usage, until the Second World War
The concept of a major tank battle along the Fulda Gap was a predominant element of NATO war planning during the Cold War, and weapons such as the AH-64 Apache attack helicopter and A-10 ground attack aircraft were developed with such an eventuality in mind.
Labor Zionists played a leading role in the 1948 Arab-Israeli War and Labor Zionists were predominant among the leadership of the Israeli military for decades after the formation of the state of Israel in 1948.
Twenty-three years have passed ( putting the date of the events at 2007 ), and England has emerged from its artificially-prolonged Civil War to become the predominant world power under the autocratic rule of its psychic Queen Anne.
The Soviet armies permanently stationed in Germany were the predominant land-based military threat to NATO from the late 1940s until 1989, a primary factor in the military situation during the Cold War.
From the 16th century onward, European influence prevailed, with American influences becoming predominant following the end of World War II.
It was only after World War II that the name Prekmurje became predominant and quickly replaced all previous denominations.
Whedon himself admits that sometimes, the Alliance is like the predominant US view of the USA in World War II: doing very good things, helping people, spreading democracy.
Marduk's predominant lyrical topics are Satanism, anti-Christianity, Biblical tales, death, Third Reich history, and World War II.
Farming remained the predominant occupation of the area through the First World War.
The book was representative of much First World War history produced in the 1960s and was not outside the mainstream — Basil Liddell Hart vetted Clark's drafts — and helped to form the predominant popular view of the First World War ( in the English-speaking world ) in the decades that followed.
After World War II, television's visual images replaced the audio-only limitation of radio as the predominant entertainment and news vehicle.

predominant and Hawks
Where found in Caribbean islands, Red-tailed Hawks prey mostly on reptiles such as snakes and lizards, since these are perhaps the most predominant native land animals of that region.

predominant and ,"
In an interview conducted for Stars and Stripes just after his capture, Field Marshal Gerd von Rundstedt summed up the predominant German view of the American general: " Patton ," Rundstedt concluded simply, " he is your best.
In other instances, the " fixing " that the a posteriori algorithms require isn't implemented correctly, and characters find themselves embedded in walls, or falling off into a deep void, sometimes referred to as " black hell ," " blue hell ," or " green hell ," depending on the predominant color.
Unions that represent professional athletes have written contracts that include exclusive representation provisions ( for example in the National Football League ), but their application is limited to " wherever and whenever legal ," as the Supreme Court has clearly held that the application of a Right to Work law is determined by the employee's " predominant job situs.
In his article entitled " On the new quantum crisis ," about the quantization of space, a pioneer of quantum gravity Matvei Bronshtein, who was shot in 1937, wrote: " Since we are obviously speaking here about a four-dimensional grid that includes both space and time, a privileged coordinate system clearly designates an absolute time and three predominant directions in a motionless space.
" Indeed, anytime the government " acts with the ostensible and predominant purpose of advancing religion ," or " to favor one religion over another ," that advancement violates the Establishment Clause.
" The predominant characteristic is a longing for the " way things used to be ," and a belief that the world was better " back then.
Muriel Porter suggests that AFES is the " predominant student Christian organization across Australian universities ," since the demise of the Student Christian Movement and the decline of diocesan-funded university chaplaincies.

predominant and were
According to Tillich, the last of these three types of existential anxiety, i. e. spiritual anxiety, is predominant in modern times while the others were predominant in earlier periods.
These authors, the former a medieval historian and the latter an early modernist, quickly became associated with the distinctive Annales approach, which combined geography, history, and the sociological approaches of the Année Sociologique ( many members of which were their colleagues at Strasbourg ) to produce an approach which rejected the predominant emphasis on politics, diplomacy and war of many 19th and early 20th-century historians as spearheaded by historians whom Febvre called Les Sorbonnistes.
Haplogroups D1a, M7a, and N9b were observed in these individuals, and N9b was by far the most predominant.
Haplogroups N9b, D4h2, G1b, and M7a were observed in these individuals, with N9b being the predominant one.
They clashed with the predominant figure sculpture tradition, in which works were decorative, formulaic, or highly thematic.
Between 1914 and 1915 talks were held for a proposed amalgamation with rugby league, the predominant code of football in New South Wales and Queensland was considered and trialled.
In general rationalism is the predominant school of thought in the multi-national, cross-cultural Age of reason, which began in the century straddling 1600 as a conventional date, empiricism is the reliance on sensory data gathered in experimentation by scientists of any country, who, in the Age of Reason were rationalists.
In primitive regions today and in all pre-development ( lacking highways or railways ) regions worldwide in times before industrial development and highways, barges were the predominant and most efficient means of inland transportation in many regions of the world.
This book is extremely detailed and complex, and later the ideas were developed into the predominant Western view of the chakras by C. W. Leadbeater in his book The Chakras.
The most predominant influences on Finland's geography were the continental glaciers that scoured and gouged the country's surface.
The word Gulag was not often used in Russian — either officially or colloquially ; the predominant terms were the camps () and the zone (), usually singular — for the labor camp system and for the individual camps.
2 ), which had become predominant in the Hellenistic world, were cherished in the Sasanian court.
Cavalry were now the predominant fighting unit and the older straight chokutō were particularly unsuitable for fighting from horseback.
In the 1980s, schematics were the predominant method to design both circuit boards and custom ICs known as gate arrays.
The predominant traditional Jewish view is that were an ancient folk remedy to help barren women conceive a child.
The French arrived in 1604, and Catholic Mi ’ kmaq and Acadians were the predominant populations in the colony for the next 150 years.
Quality control activities were predominant in the 1940s, 1950s, and 1960s.
Carl Linnaeus originally grouped rabbits and rodents under the class Glires ; later, they were separated as the predominant opinion was that many of their similarities were a result of convergent evolution.
These stories typically involve " frontier " colony worlds ( colonies that have only recently been terraformed and / or settled ) serving as stand-ins for the backdrop of lawlessness and economic expansion that were predominant in the American west.
The predominant languages of the city were still Polish and, to a lesser extent, Yiddish.
For example, influences on thinking that originate from outside of an individual's consciousness were reflected in the ancient ideas of temptation, divine inspiration, and the predominant role of the gods in affecting motives and actions.

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