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quotation and from
Aberdare was the birthplace of the Second World War poet Alun Lewis, and there is a plaque commemorating him, including a quotation from his poem The Mountain over Aberdare.
The title of Nicholas Blake's 1949 detective novel Head of a Traveller is a quotation from Housman's parody Fragment of a Greek Tragedy.
The 5th century Decretum Gelasianum includes a Gospel of Barnabas amongst works condemned as apocryphal ; but no certain text or quotation from this work has been identified.
Amulet ( 800 BC – 612 BC ) to ward off plague inscribed with a quotation from the Akkadian Erra Epic
The quotation from the Gospel of John has raised some questions about the meaning and authenticity of the phrase " born again ".
The progress of casuistry was interrupted toward the middle of the 17th century by the controversy which arose concerning the doctrine of probabilism, which stipulated that one could choose to follow a " probable opinion ", that is, supported by a theologian or another, even if it contradicted a more probable opinion or a quotation from one of the Fathers of the Church.
Eusebius provides a list of Clement's works, biographical information, and an extended quotation from the Stromata.
The Oxford English Dictionary says its earliest quotation for " clipper " is from 1830.
Bulwer-Lytton's most famous quotation, " the pen is mightier than the sword ", is from his play Richelieu where it appears in the line beneath the rule of men entirely great, the pen is mightier than the sword
* Each chapter in Frank Herbert's science fiction novels Whipping Star, The Dosadi Experiment, and Dune variously begin with an aphorism, an excerpt from an official report ( or even a manual ), a quotation from a book about the events of the novel, etc.
John Ernest Grabe found an otherwise unreported saying of Jesus, attributed to the Apostle Barnabas, amongst the Greek manuscripts in the Baroccian collection in the Bodleian Library ; which he speculated might be a quotation from this lost gospel ; and John Toland claimed to have identified a corresponding phrase when he examined the surviving Italian manuscript of the Gospel of Barnabas in Amsterdam before 1709.
Nelson defines transclusion as " the same content knowably in more than one place ", setting it apart from more special cases such as the inclusion of content stored in a different location ( which he calls " transdelivery ") or " explicit quotation which remains connected to its origins " ( which he calls " transquotation ").
T. S. Eliot's use of a quotation from Heart of Darkness —" Mistah Kurtz, he dead "— as an epigraph to the original manuscript of his poem The Hollow Men contrasted its dark horror with the presumed " light of civilization ," and suggested the ambiguity of both the dark motives of civilization and the freedom of barbarism, as well as the " spiritual darkness " of several characters in Heart of Darkness.
" Ich bin ein Berliner " (, " I am a Berliner ") is a quotation from a June 26, 1963, speech by U. S. President John F. Kennedy in West Berlin.
Consider the following quotation from Groucho Marx:
Saint Ignatius's most famous quotation, however, comes from his letter to the Romans:
There is considerable evidence, however, that attests to the existence of the references to Jesus in Josephus well before then, including a number of ad hoc copies of Josephus ' work preserved in quotation from the works of Christian writers.
In his memoir A Moveable Feast, published after his death, he writes " I tried to balance Miss Stein's quotation from the garage owner with one from Ecclesiastes.
* 1844 – Samuel Morse sends the message " What hath God wrought " ( a biblical quotation, Numbers 23: 23 ) from the Old Supreme Court Chamber in the United States Capitol to his assistant, Alfred Vail, in Baltimore, Maryland to inaugurate the first telegraph line.
The following quotation from the Guru Granth Sahib highlights this point:
Sachs believes the strong rhythm of the music, a derivation of the name from a term meaning " to stamp " and the quotation from the Froissart poem above definitely label the estampie as a dance.

quotation and Epimenides
Other ancient sources which could suggest the liar paradox, including Saint Augustine, Cicero, and the quotation of Epimenides appearing in the Epistle to Titus, were not cited in discussions of insolubilia.
Paul introduced another quotation from Epimenides ( de Oraculis ) by calling him a prophet of the Cretans ( Titus 1: 12-13 ).

quotation and is
We have been using the word `` public '' in quotation marks, that is, in its vernacular connotation with reference to the odd-lot index theory.
Or the mildly epigrammatic utterance ( also a quotation ): `` Woman's place is in the wrong ''.
The sociological impact is perhaps most eloquently summed up in this quotation of J. Walter Carroll of KSAN, San Francisco:
It is also similar to the use of quotation marks in many other languages ( including Portuguese, Spanish, French, Italian, Catalan, Dutch and German ).
Each lecture is based upon a text of Scripture, and there is an abundance of Scriptural quotation throughout.
This is allowed by the European Convention on Human Rights – note the word finally in the above quotation.
Because almost every argument, quotation, and issue raised for decades can be found here, the work is often termed ' the deist's Bible '.
Scholars of Augustine's work have traditionally understood him to have shared the common view of his educated contemporaries that the Earth is spherical, in line with the quotation above, and with Augustine's famous endorsement of science in De Genesi ad litteram.
Another early mentioning of the name, this time by Poseidonios ( writing around 80 BCE ), is also dubious, as it only survives in a quotation by Athenaios ( writing around 190 CE ); the mention of Germani in this context was more likely inserted by Athenaios rather than by Poseidonios himself.
This occurs in the context of Irenaeus ' work On the Detection and Overthrow of Knowledge Falsely So Called, ( Greek: elenchos kai anatrope tes pseudonymou gnoseos genitive case, ἔλεγχος καὶ ἀνατροπὴ τῆς ψευδωνύμου γνώσεως ) where the term " knowledge falsely so-called " ( nominative case pseudonymos gnosis ) covers various groups, not just Valentinus, and is a quotation of the apostle Paul's warning against " knowledge falsely so-called " in 1 Timothy 6: 20.
" There are quotation marks needed to make this answer correct when the puzzle is printed, but they give away the trick.
" But again, the quotation marks spoil the puzzle when it is printed.
" Again the quotation marks ruin the written puzzle, so this version is usually written without the quotation marks and with the word " one " capitalized.
The ISO / IEC 8859 standard is designed for reliable information exchange, not typography ; the standard omits symbols needed for high-quality typography, such as optional ligatures, curly quotation marks, dashes, etc.

quotation and given
Many aspects of modernist design still persist within the mainstream of contemporary architecture today, though its previous dogmatism has given way to a more playful use of decoration, historical quotation, and spatial drama. In other arts such pragmatic considerations were less important.
For example, each guest may be given a card with an inspiring quotation on it.
One quotation may be given as being a most remarkable prophecy of the impending revolution in the art of war, a revolution which the " advanced " tacticians themselves scarcely foresaw.
Omne Datum Optimum ( Latin for " Every perfect gift ", a quotation from the Epistle of James ) was a Papal Bull issued by Pope Innocent II in 1139 that initially endorsed the Order of the Poor Knights of Christ and of the Temple of Solomon ( Knights Templar ), in which the Templar Rule was officially approved, and papal protection given.
Hopton was Waller's intimate personal friend, and some correspondence passed between the opposing generals, a quotation from which ( Gardiner, Civil War, i. 168 ) is given as illustrative of " the temper in which the nobler spirits on either side had entered on the war ".
* Translation ( rhetoric device ) a form of parody, where a sarcastic paraphrase of a source quotation is given to mock its author
The quotation from von Haller may be translated from the Latin as follows: " Of course, firstly the remedy must be proved on a healthy body, without being mixed with anything foreign ; and when its odour and flavour have been ascertained, a tiny dose of it should be given and attention paid to all the changes of state that take place, what the pulse is, what heat there is, what sort of breathing and what exertions there are.
" Referring here to Phoebe, the word rendered " servant " being in the Greek διάκονος ( di ' a · ko · nos ), the parallel English word being deaconess, and in the context of the above quotation, this denotes a servant who is given servants to manage, in effect, a deaconess, one who delegates, a manager, though in most ways, Jewish Christianity did not differ from any of the other Jewish sects of Second Temple Judaism.
The quotation has been used numerous times by various Star Trek characters, and has been given a back-story within the Star Trek canon.
The titles between quotation marks are the original titles given by Khnopff himself.
Competitors are given a topic, usually a single word or phrase that may be a person, thing, well-known saying, a less well-known quotation, current event, or an object.
* A quotation attributed to David Farragut, referring to an order given at the Battle of Mobile Bay
The lifespans given cause problems of chronology for Bible scholars, as the following quotation shows.
However, this usage arose some time after the quotation given above, and LDS scholars do not believe it to be the sense in which Cannon uses it.
* Gospel of Eve ( a quotation from this gospel is given by Epiphanius ( Haer.
Scare quotes ( and other quotation marks used in a special sense ) are usually given in the same style ( single or double ) as those used elsewhere in a work.
Translation as a rhetorical device is a form of parody, where a sarcastic paraphrase of a source quotation is given to mock its author ; to enhance the irony, it is furthermore stated that the version being given is merely a translation into the speaker's language, implying that the original speaker was unduly obscure or ranting.
The group name is obsolete, as " Prosauropoda " is not a monophyletic group ( thus given in quotation marks ), and most researchers prefer the term basal sauropodomorph.
In the third volume of the Japanese work, the " So Mokn Sei Fu ," a drawing is given of the huang yang, together with a quotation from the Chinese Materia Medica, which speaks of the tree as growing an inch a year, except in these years which have an intercalary moon, when it grows backwards.
The fragmentary quotation is given by Hippolytus as expressing the fundamental ideas of the Naassene Ophites, and possibly of all Gnostics.
Another variation still, is where the speaker is given an envelope with slips in it, each with a quotation.
He shows that the correct physics is always given by the combination of the Lorentz force with the Maxwell-Faraday equation ( see quotation box ) and poses these two " paradoxes " of his own.
The quotation is given in full as the epigraph to the novel.

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