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usage and Dom
Dom Cabrol (" Benediction Episcopale " in " Report of the 19th Eucharistic Congress ") considers that the Anglo-Saxon Benedictions were not survivals of Gallican ( Celtic ) usage, but were derived from the ancient practice of Rome itself, and that the rite was a general one of which traces are found nearly everywhere.

usage and was
Polyphosphates gave renewed life to soap products at a time when surfactants were a threat though expensive, and these same polyphosphates spelled the decline of soap usage when the synergism between polyphosphates and synthetic detergent actives was recognized and exploited.
The Civil War was a significant force in the eventual dominance of the singular usage by the end of the 19th century.
As a simple, cheap and reliable device, the Russian abacus was in use in all shops and markets throughout the former Soviet Union, and the usage of it was taught in most schools until the 1990s.
Until the 17th century, art referred to any skill or mastery and was not differentiated from crafts or sciences, but in modern usage the fine arts, where aesthetic considerations are paramount, are distinguished from acquired skills in general, and the decorative or applied arts.
The first abjad to gain widespread usage was the Phoenician abjad.
The term alphasyllabary was suggested for the Indic scripts in 1997 by William Bright, following South Asian linguistic usage, to convey the idea that " they share features of both alphabet and syllabary ".
In Italian, possibly following a tradition of antiquity, the Arcipelago ( from medieval Greek * ἀρχιπέλαγος ) was the proper name for the Aegean Sea and, later, usage shifted to refer to the Aegean Islands ( since the sea is remarkable for its large number of islands ).
In 386 Justina and Valentinian received the Arian bishop Auxentius, and Ambrose was again ordered to hand over a church in Milan for Arian usage.
The meaning was eventually further generalized in its modern English usage to apply to any outrageous act or exhibition of pride or disregard for basic moral laws.
While at the time the process was openly referred to as colonization (" takushoku " 拓殖 ), the notion was later reframed by Japanese elites to the currently common usage " kaitaku "( 開拓 ), which instead conveys a sense of opening up or reclamation of the Ainu lands.
When the grammatical dual form of Ajax is used in the Iliad, it was once believed that it indicated the lesser Ajax fighting side-by-side with Telamonian Ajax, but now it is generally thought that that usage refers to the Greater Ajax and his brother Teucer.
The term was popularized by G. L. Trager and Bernard Bloch in a 1941 paper on English phonology and went on to become part of standard usage within the American structuralist tradition.
Of the capabilities present in the BBC Micro but absent from the Electron, the teletext-style mode 7 was particularly conspicuous because of the very low memory usage in that mode ( just less than 1 kB ) and the high number of BBC programs that used it.
Aon said its conduct was not deliberate, adding it had since " significantly strengthened and enhanced its controls around the usage of third parties ".
By making the mass number of soldiers blend within the landscape / painting, it shows that he believed that the usage and depiction of landscape was just as significant as a historical event, such as a war.
Society at Nauplia was divided into 3 classes: nobles, citizens and plebeians ; and it had been the ancient usage that the nobles alone should hold the much-coveted local offices, such as the judge of the inferior court and inspector of weights and measures.
According to the FidoNet Nodelist, BBSes reached their peak usage around 1996, which was the same period that the World Wide Web suddenly became mainstream.
In 1991, Steven Fanning argued that " it is unlikely that the term ever existed as a title or was in common usage in Anglo-Saxon England ".
The later usage was in part attributed to the choices of gold, silver and bronze to represent the first three Ages of Man in Greek mythology: the Golden Age, when men lived among the gods ; the Silver age, where youth lasted a hundred years ; and the Bronze Age, the era of heroes, and was first adopted at the 1904 Summer Olympics.
The thermosetting phenolic resin was at one point considered for the manufacture of coins, due to a shortage of traditional material ; in 1943, Bakelite and other non-metal materials were tested for usage for the one cent coin in the US before the Mint settled on zinc-coated steel.
Noteworthy in the following statement is the usage of the term " not far " ( non longe ) which was also used to describe the distance between Birka and the Uppsala temple:
The first known usage of the term blue whale was in Melville's Moby-Dick, which only mentions it in passing and does not specifically attribute it to the species in question.

usage and prerogative
With the council's elevation of Constantinople to primacy in the East, with the words " The Bishop of Constantinople ... shall have the prerogative of honour after the Bishop of Rome ; because Constantinople is New Rome ", the Constantinoplitan Rite gradually came to be the standard usage in every place under its jurisdiction.
Therefore, if the Prime Minister was advising on the usage of the honours prerogative, his actions may not be reviewed in Court.

usage and princes
Cadets of France's princes étrangers began to affect similar usage but when, for example, the House of La Tour d ' Auvergne's ruling dukes of Bouillon, attempted to use the same style, it was initially resisted by historians such as Père Anselme – who, however, willingly recognized use of territorial titles, i. e. he accepts that the ducal heir apparent is known as prince de Bouillon, but would record in 1728 only that the heir's cousin, the comte d ' Oliergues was " known as the Prince Frederick " (" dit le prince Frédéric ").
* A John Aubrey anecdote about Sir Walter Raleigh-' evidently drawn from the usage of " whipping boys " in the education of princes ' - describes how at a dinner table ' Sir Walter ... gives his son a damned blow over his face.
In turn, his children's claims to be princes or princesses, and their usage of royal titles, is open to question, at least in Britain ; titles can be incorporated into names in modern Germany ( see German nobility ).

usage and royal
About the late twenty-first dynasty ( tenth century BC ), however, instead of being used alone as before, it began to be added to the other titles before the ruler's name, and from the twenty-fifth dynasty ( eighth to seventh centuries BC ) it was, at least in ordinary usage, the only epithet prefixed to the royal appellative.
The first actual usage of the term prime minister or Premier Ministre was used by Cardinal Richelieu when in 1625 he was named to head the royal council as prime minister of France.
# Physical presence, arrival – The main use is the physical presence of a person, which where that person is not already present refers to the prospect of the physical arrival of that person, especially the visit of a royal or official personage and sometimes as an extension of this usage, a formal " occasion ".
Curia in medieval and later Latin usage means " court " in the sense of " royal court " rather than " court of law ".
What incensed the people most against him was the way in which he put the king completely on one side ; and this feeling was all the stronger as, outside a very narrow court circle, nobody seems to have believed that Christian VII was really mad, but only that his will had been weakened by habitual ill usage ; and this opinion was confirmed by the publication of the cabinet order of 14 July 1771, appointing Struensee " gehejme kabinetsminister " or " Geheimekabinetsminister ", with authority to issue cabinet orders which were to have the force of royal ordinances, even if unprovided with the royal sign-manual.
This usage is again different from that of the term " palace " in English, where there is no requirement that a palace must be in a city, but the word is rarely used for buildings other than the grandest royal residences.
In 1856, the burgh of Dunfermline resolved to use the title of city in all official documents in the future, based on long usage and its former status as a royal capital.
However, it may also be due to the word " Swiss " having become a generic term for a royal guard in popular European usage.
Adolf founded a cadet branch of the royal Danish House of Oldenburg called House of Holstein-Gottorp, a convenient usage for the technically more correct Duke of Schleswig and Holstein at Gottorp.
This includes many words which are of Latin origin but whose forms have been worn down and distorted in a way which suggests that they already possessed a long history of French usage ; examples include avoeson ' right of nominating a parish priest ' ( Latin advocationem ), neife ' female serf ' ( Latin nativa ) and essoyne or essone ' circumstance giving exemption from a royal summons ' ( Latin sunnis, later replaced by essonia which is simply a reintroduction into Latin from the French form ).
" The title " Wang " should not be confused with the common surname, which, at least by middle and later Chinese historical usage, has no definite royal implications.
The title " Wang " should not be confused with the common surname, which, at least by middle and later Chinese historical usage, has no definite royal implications.
Now the title holders are mainly known domestically as Crown Princess Victoria, Prince Daniel, Princess Estelle, Prince Carl Philip, Princess Madeleine and Princess Lilian though the ducal titles often are included in formal communication and royal court usage.
The style was brought back to France, where its usage spread to the French population and the royal court of King Louis XIV, who made it fashionable throughout Europe, both as a civilian and military wear.
In modern usage, the name of Jezebel is sometimes used as a synonym for sexually promiscuous and sometimes controlling women, In his two-volume Guide to the Bible ( 1967 and 1969 ), Isaac Asimov describes Jezebel's last act: dressing in all her finery, make-up and jewelry, as deliberately symbolic, indicating her dignity, royal status and determination to go out of this life as a Queen.
It is defined by Arrêté royal portant règlement général sur la police de la circulation routière et de l ' usage de la voie publique.
In Germany, during the 19th century mural crowns ( Mauerkronen ) came to be adopted for the arms of cities, with increasingly specific details: " Residential ( i. e. having a royal residence ) cities and capital towns usually bear a Mauerkrone with five towers, large towns one with four towers, smaller towns one with three ", observed Arthur Charles Fox-Davies, in A Complete Guide to Heraldry, adding " Strict regulations in the matter do not yet exist " and warning that the usage was not British.
Its usage was first only limited to the royal families and later spread to common people.
Indeed, the spelling of the city in the royal records, all written prior to the modern Burmese spelling standardization drives, is ( Awa ), the phonetic spelling of the Upper Burmese usage.
The best known example of this is a room, known by excavators as D2, which was a part of the royal complex at Yeavering in Northumberland, and which has been widely interpreted as a temple room, for it contained buried oxen skulls, two postholes that have been interpreted as holding idols, and no evidence of domestic usage.
This explanation is in conflict with Yiddish usage, where the word keniglich ( קעניגליך ּ) is the dominant word meaning royal.

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