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Some Related Sentences

term's and use
Here is an example of the term's original use:
NME journalist Roy Carr is credited with proposing the term's use ( adopted from the cinematic French New Wave of the 1960s ) in this context.
This may also be related to the term's claimed use as military slang for a land mine, not well documented.
The term's usage later expanded to include the use of e-mail filters that delete incoming messages that meet certain filter criteria set by the receiving user, so block messages from annoying senders.
The term's historical use in contexts that typically implied disapproval is also a reason why more unambiguously neutral terms such as " interracial ", " interethnic " or " cross-cultural " are more common in contemporary usage.
Regardless of the term's literary use, anything that meets the criterion of a " map " that describes the location of a " treasure " could appropriately be called a " treasure map.
* Devil Strips – term's use and lore.
Traffic calming is a literal translation of the German word ' Verkehrsberuhigung ', the term's first published use in English being in 1985 by Carmen Hass-Klau.
* Pudd ' nhead Wilson written by Mark Twain reflects the term's use as a metaphor for the gray matter of a fool.
In popular use, positive reinforcement is often used as a synonym for reward, with people ( not behavior ) thus being " reinforced ", but this is contrary to the term's consistent technical usage, as it is a dimension of behavior, and not the person, which is strengthened.
This use of the word subluxation should not be confused with the term's precise anatomic usage which considers only the anatomical relationships.
E. Norman Veasey, the chief justice of Delaware Supreme Court, answered one such request in 2003 by noting the term's extensive use in rulings over the past 60 years.
Various works of fantasy fiction, such as Clark Ashton Smith's " Empire of the Necromancers ", had used lich as a general term for any corpse, animated or inanimate, before the term's specific use in fantasy role-playing games.
This use was exploited by the company in a 1990's advertising campaign, in which a harassed housewife exclaims " Horlicks " in a context where a stronger term could have been expected, thus widening the term's exposure and usage for a while.
The term's popularity may have stemmed from its use in a well-known nautical poem by English Poet Laureate John Masefield entitled " Sea-Fever ", first published in 1902.
Liberal use of the word " shanty " by folklorists of the 20th century expanded the term's conceptual scope to include " sea-related work songs " in general.
In 2011, following the term's offhand use in a March 26 article appearing in The Spectator (" white-coated Jap bloke "), the Minister of the Japanese Embassy in London protested that " most Japanese people find the word ‘ Jap ’ offensive, irrespective of the circumstances in which it is used.
This is reflected in the term's wide use in modern American gang culture.
Levi seems to have been regarded by later Theosophists as the immediate source from which the term was adopted into their sevenfold schema of planes and bodies, though there was slight confusion as to the term's proper use.
Yet the term's use of open source clearly currently implies the meaning as given to it by the open source software movement ; where the source code of programs is published openly to allow anyone to locate and fix mistakes or add new functions.
The term was popularized in the 1896 US Presidential Election, when William McKinley supporters took to wearing gold lapel pins, gold neckties, and gold headbands in a demonstration of support for gold against the " silver menace ", though the term's original use may have been in Edgar Allan Poe's 1843 story " The Gold-Bug ," about a cryptographic treasure map.
The term's precise use and definition has varied with regard to transwomen, people born either biologically male or with ambiguous genitalia who self-identify as female.
This is the term's primary use in phonology when describing phonemes, or in phonetics when describing phones.
The term's first published use in a scholarly context is attributed to ethnobotanist Jonathan Ott, in 2001.

term's and word
The term's origin might be found with the Latin word for three, tres.
The word has the same meaning in Spanish, where the suffix-uela is used as a diminutive term ( e. g., plaza / plazuela, cazo / cazuela ); thus, the term's original sense would have been that of a " little Venice ".
The term's original usage was close to that of the traditional meaning of the word " own " – for instance, " I owned the network at MIT " indicated that the speaker had cracked the servers and had the same root-level privileges that the legitimate owner of the servers had.
At a Yale event and in bios associated with it, Courvant's use of the word ( as early as 1992 ) and involvement in Transfeminism. org, may make her the term's inventor.
" The term's origins lie in the word for the followers of the skeptic Pyrrho in ancient Greece and was used by flat-earthers in the 19th century.
The word is an example of Time magazine's habit of supplying new words through " unusual use of affixes ", although Time itself objected to the term's inclusion in the 1991 Random Webster's College Dictionary, citing it as an example of the dictionary " straining ... to avoid giving offense, except to good usage " and " authority to scores of questionable usages, many of them tinged with politically correct views.

term's and refers
The term's usage varies in different disciplines ; for example in psychology and cognitive science, it usually refers to an information processing view of an individual's psychological functions.
A number of philosophers have argued that ' water ' for both Oscar and Twin Oscar refers to anything that is sufficiently water-like ( i. e. the term's extension includes both H < sub > 2 </ sub > O and XYZ ).
Two different aspects of some terms ' meanings, a term's reference is the object to which the term refers, while the term's sense is the way that the term refers to that object.
As such, her use of the " 2. 0 " designation refers to a next version of the web that does not directly relate to the term's current use.
The term's literal meaning, " descent from heaven ", refers to the descent of the Shinto gods from heaven to earth ; the modern usage employs it as a metaphor, where " heaven " refers to the upper echelons of the civil service, the civil servants are the deities, and the earth are the private sector corporations.

term's and radio
Some commentators, such as right-wing radio talk-show host Michael Savage and left-wing activist Ralph Nader, who have both used the terms, have opined on how it is often hard to tell the parties apart, leading to the term's popularisation.
For the term's use in radio and television broadcasting, see Rimshot ( broadcasting ).

term's and at
While this and the many other theories offer their own measure of plausibility, attesting at least to the wit of later partisans and historians, if not of the French people at the time of this term's origin, " no one of the several theories advanced has afforded satisfaction.
" Early examples of the term's usage include a declaration made at the 1930 American Communist convention proclaiming that " the storm of the economic crisis in the United States blew down the house of cards of American exceptionalism.
The term's concept was nurtured in the US by Maynard Amerine at the University of California, Davis after Prohibition seeking to encourage growers to choose optimal vine varieties, and later promoted by Frank Schoonmaker in the 1950s and 1960s, ultimately becoming widespread during the California wine boom of the 1970s.
* A meeting at the end of term, usually with a set of tutors or-very occasionally-with the Head of House of the College, at which reports of the term's work are read, or ( especially for postgraduates ) the student's progress is discussed.

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