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Page "mystery" ¶ 934
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word and distinctly
* 10 March 1876 — The first successful telephone transmission of clear speech using a liquid transmitter when Bell spoke into his device, “ Mr. Watson, come here, I want to see you .” and Watson heard each word distinctly.
The ' Kilkenny ' name was originally used during the ' 80s and ' 90s to market a stronger version of Smithwick's for the European and Canadian market due to difficulty in pronunciation of the word Smithwick ’ s ; but it now refers to a similar yet distinctly different beer.
Although philosophe is a French word, the Enlightenment was distinctly cosmopolitan ; philosophes could be found from Philadelphia to St. Petersburg.
The word itself is also used, at least in South Korea, as a common reference ( sometimes with distinctly negative connotations, reflecting the negative impression the class system and its unintentional but nonetheless heinous abuses left on Koreans as a whole ) to an older, sometimes cantankerous / stubborn man.
The " t '" is usually more of a glottal stop — and it replaces " the " entirely when the next word begins with a consonant: " I'm going to t ' shops " is often rendered in mimickery with the " t '" sounded distinctly.
Custom, so that it becomes to them a sort of inheritance to make arguments with and keep it: that if fuero is suitable, and of good usage, and of good custom, it has such great force that it becomes like law, because it maintains people, and they live with one another in peace and justice ; but there is between it and the others and custom such a distinction, that usage and custom are made over specific things, whether over many lands or few, or over some specific places ; but fuero must be in all and over all things that pertain distinctly to law and Justice: and for this it is more visible than custom or use, and more public: that in all places one can say and understand ; and moreover has this name fuero, because one ought not say or show it in a hidden way, but in market squares and other places, to whomever wants to hear: and the ancients used the Latin word forum for the market where men gather to buy and ..." continues at: Image: Fuero3. JPG < nowiki ></ nowiki >
Originally the word was coined by the Biluim, despite the opposition of some who preferred to use the more distinctly Hebrew שב-נא " please sit " or Persian / Arabic טוזיג " Tozig " ( via the Talmud ), the word has since stuck and is used by both the religious and secular public.
It is also found amusing what you can get from an original word, and how they contrast distinctly, for example, from the word " tea " you could get the word " murder ".
( 1997 )), and in numerous subsequent DTA studies, the main measure of DTA is a word fragment task, whereby participants can complete word fragments in distinctly death-related ways ( e. g., coff_ _ as coffin, not coffee ) or in non death-related ways ( e. g., sk_ _l as skill, not skull ).

word and from
The Constitution of the Southern `` Confederation '' differed from that of the Federal Union only in two important respects: It openly, defiantly, recognized slavery -- an institution which the Southerners of 1787, even though they continued it, found so impossible to reconcile with freedom that they carefully avoided mentioning the word in the Federal Constitution.
Harris J. Griston, in Shaking The Dust From Shakespeare ( 216 ), writes: `` There is not a word spoken by Shylock which one would expect from a real Jew ''.
I fled, however, not from what might have been the natural fear of being unable to disguise from you that the things about my bridegroom -- in the sense you meant the word `` things '' -- which you had been galvanizing yourself to tell me as a painful part of your maternal duty were things which I had already insisted upon finding out for myself ( despite, I may now say, the unspeakable awkwardness of making the discovery on principle, yes, on principle, and in cold blood ) because I was resolved, as a modern woman, not to be a mollycoddle waiting for Life but to seize Life by the throat.
One finds it difficult to pass censure on the lonely figure who waited for days for a saving word from his zealously served idol, W.R. Hearst.
Fosdick insisted that a strong word was needed from Washington, and it was immediately forthcoming.
The rider from Concord was as good as his word.
They answered him in monosyllables, nods, occasionally muttering in Greek to one another, awaiting the word from Papa, who restlessly cracked his knuckles, anxious to stuff himself into his white Cadillac and burst off to the freeway.
`` Your wife just called '', she said, separating one word from another, exactly like a child.
Therefore it's a genuine pleasure to tell you about an entirely happy bodybuilder who has never had to train in secret has never heard one unkind word from his parents and never has been taunted by his schoolmates!!
You'll never hear `` sayonara '', the Japanese word for goodbye, from your guests when you give a hibachi party.
For example, probably very few people know that the word `` visrhanik '' that is bantered about so much today stems from the verb `` bouanahsha '': to salivate.
This approach requires that: ( 1 ) each text word be separated into smaller elements to establish a correspondence between the occurrence and dictionary entries, and ( 2 ) the information retrieved from several entries in the dictionary be synthesized into a description of the particular word.
Applying the techniques developed at Harvard for generating a paradigm from a representative form and its classification, we can add all forms of a word to the dictionary at once.
From the point of view of syntactic analysis the head word in the statement is the predicator has broken, and from the point of view of meaning it would seem that the trouble centers in the breaking ; ;
An attempted middle course might lead to devices like a 5000-word alphabetized dictionary from which every fiftieth word was selected.
Extreme caution should be used, however, to avoid the conflicting usage of an index word or electronic switch which may result from the assignment of more than one name or function to the same address.
This word was from the Spanish, meanin' `` polecat ''.
Later, the word became almost exclusively applied to a cow thief, startin' from the days of the maverick when cowhands were paid by their employers to `` get out and rustle a few mavericks ''.
This was the first word from Jensen on his sudden walkout.
He took a midnight train out of Cleveland Saturday, without an official word to anybody, and has stayed away from newsmen on his train trip across the nation to Reno, Nev., where his wife, former Olympic Diving Champion Zoe Ann Olsen, awaited.
`` When Mickey went to the Yankees '', says Mark Freeman, an ex-Yankee pitcher who sells mutual funds in Denver, `` DiMaggio still was playing and every day Mickey would go by his locker, just aching for some word of encouragement from this great man, this hero of his.
We must not permit our society to become a slave to the scientific age, as might well happen without the cultural and spiritual restraint that comes from the development of the human mind through wisdom absorbed from the written word.

word and lips
The gospel, the word of God, faith, Christ, and Holy Spirit – these words are always on their lips ; look at their lives and they speak quite another language.
The word " nation " was often on his lips, and his conscious aim was to enhance national unity which he identified with national power.
Cleopatra decides that the only way to win back Antony's romance love is to send him word that she killed herself, dying with his name on her lips.
Their scientific name Ophrys is the Greek word for " eyebrow ", referring to the furry edges of the lips of several species.
The last word on his lips before his death was reported to have been " freedom.
In addition to its clear allusions to Adam and Eve, forbidden fruit, and temptation, there is much in the poem that seems overtly sexual, such as when Lizzie, going to buy fruit from the goblins, considers her dead friend Jeanie, " Who should have been a bride ; / But who for joys brides hope to have / Fell sick and died ", and lines like " She sucked until her lips were sore ", " She sucked their fruit globes fair or red "; " Lizzie uttered not a word ;/ Would not open lip from lip / Lest they should cram a mouthful in ;/ But laughed in heart to feel the drip / Of juice that syruped all her face ,/ And lodged in dimples of her chin ,/ And streaked her neck which quaked like curd.
It's back to the late thirteenth century, picking up where Prince Edward left off with his ninth crusade after St Louis had died in Tunis with the word Jerusalem on his lips.
" The word foo also turned up on signs, lists, menus, and the lips of various characters at random but frequent intervals.
Once a colloquial term on the lips of every English-speaking Indian and Englishman resident in India, the word is no longer in regular use.
Recently, however, we have heard this word on the lips of foreigners too, who seem to be studying it.
Byron would pleasantly pretend that Braham called ' enthusiasm ' entoozy-moozy ; and in the extraordinary combination of lightness, haste, indifference and fervour with which he would pitch out that single word from his lips, accompanied with a gesture to correspond, he would really set before you the admirable singer in one of his ( then ) characteristic passages of stage dialogue.
A research paper published by the IEEE reveals that most viewers are more sensitive to audio / video misalignment when audio plays before the corresponding video, because hearing the spoken word before seeing the lips move is more " unnatural " to a viewer.
According to this precept, faith and salvation could only come about through hearing the word preached from the lips of, and seeing the gospel lived in the sacrificial lives of, the true ministry ( the " Living Witness ").
When Melissa's neighbors tried to make her reveal the secrets of her initiation, she remained silent, never letting a word pass from her lips.

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