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words and amendment
While he supported the idea of a federal income tax, Hughes believed the words " from whatever source derived " in the proposed amendment implied that the federal government would have the power to tax state and municipal bonds.
On April 6, with the alphabetical list of streets barely into the Es, Speaker Chris Stockwell ruled that there was no need for the 220 words identical in each amendment to be read aloud each time, only the street name.
Furthermore, the 25th Amendment does not require that the written declaration contain express words invoking the amendment itself.
In 1990, a further amendment specified that the line-item veto does not give the governor power to veto individual letters of appropriations bills, thereby forming new words.
In other words, in the event of conflict, an article of amendment will usually take precedence over the provisions of the original text, or of an earlier amendment.
The Nigeria's 1963 Republican Constitution which was an amendment of the 1960 Independent Constitution has the following words: “ Nnamdi Azikiwe shall be deemed to have been elected President and Commander in-Chief of the Armed Forces ,” as submitted by then Prime Minister Sir Abubakar Tafawa Balewa who posited that, “ Nigeria can never adequately reward Dr. Azikiwe ” for his nationalism.
The words " socialist " and " secular " were added to the definition in 1976 by constitutional amendment.
) Finally, the Speaker should vote to leave a bill or motion in its existing form ; in other words, the Speaker would vote against an amendment.
The very opposite result happened with the 1978 amendment where Congress added the words "... taking into consideration the economic impact ..." in the provision on critical habitat designation.
Katz therefore extended the reach of the fourth amendment beyond just physical intrusions ; it would also protect against the seizure of incorporeal words.
" Article XXII, however, did not include words of entrenchment, and, it was argued, was open to amendment.
In 2005, Senator Raymond Lavigne uttered the words " and to my country, Canada ," at the end of the Oath of Allegiance, which raised questions from other senators and Lavigne was instructed to take the oath again, without the amendment.
* This right, though not in the words of the first amendment, was first mentioned in the case NAACP v. Alabama, and was at that time applied to the states.
Several of the Convention's provisions are prefaced with the words, " Subject to its constitutional principles and the basic concepts of its legal system, each Party shall ..." According to Fazey, " This has been used by the USA not to implement part of article 3 of the 1988 Convention, which prevents inciting others to use narcotic or psychotropic drugs, on the basis that this would be in contravention of their constitutional amendment guaranteeing freedom of speech.
Thus, as part of an amendment to the Citizenship Act in 1977, the words Queen of Canada were inserted after the Queen's name and the oath was officially named the Canadian Citizenship Oath.
One organization, DownsizeDC. org, Inc., has proposed an amendment to this bill, one which it says would give this bill " teeth ", as it calls it, or in other words, a means of enforcement.
A slight amendment was made to the fourth and sixth lines during the Japanese occupation but the music and the rest of the words remained as they were originally composed.

words and survive
Many words derived from Norse, such as " gate " ( gade ) for street, still survive in Yorkshire and the East Midlands ( parts of eastern England ) colonized by Danish Vikings.
In other words, altruism is more likely to survive if altruists practice the ethic that " charity begins at home.
A fair number of Akkadian loan words survive in the Mesopotamian Neo Aramaic dialects spoken in and around modern Iraq by the indigenous Assyrian ( aka Chaldo-Assyrian ) Christians of the region, and the giving of Akkadian personal names, along with a number of Akkadian last names and tribal names, is still common amongst Assyrian people.
Creator's purpose was always to ensure that mankind will survive, through their clones, and with these words, Creator stops functioning.
Many Old Norse words still survive in the dialects of Northern England.
Sophocles wrote a satyr play Cedalion, of which a few words survive.
# the inability of non-property-owners ( the workers, proletarians ) to survive without selling their labor-power to the capitalists ( in other words, without being employed as wage laborers );
I survived that – I guess I can survive some bad words from this fellow.
In other words, pests develop a resistance to a chemical through natural selection: the most resistant organisms are the ones to survive and pass on their genetic traits to their offspring.
Fables belong essentially to the oral tradition ; they survive by being remembered and then retold in one's own words.
Only several dozen words ( perhaps 200, if we add Gaulish etymology ) survive in modern French, for example chêne, ‘ oak tree ’ and charrue ‘ plough '; Delamarre ( 2003, pp. 389 – 90 ) lists 167.
Otto Jespersen suggests that: " Sound symbolism, we may say, makes some words more fit to survive.
In other words, Dürrenmatt appears to believe that as society becomes increasingly capitalistic, humanist ideals are very unlikely to survive.
The descendant dialects of this branch of Mesopotamian Aramaic ( which still retains a number of Akkadian loan words ) still survive as the spoken and written language of the ethnically Mesopotamian Assyrians to this day, and is found mostly in Iraq, Iran, northeast Syria, southeast Turkey, Armenia, Georgia, southern Russia and Azerbaijan, as well as in diaspora communities in the west, particularly the USA, Canada, Australia, Sweden and Great Britain.
The work represents, in the words of Christine Riding, " the fallacy of hope and pointless suffering, and at worst, the basic human instinct to survive, which had superseded all moral considerations and plunged civilised man into barbarism ".
Indeed, in the words of the Cambridge Ancient History, they were " perhaps the most successful and influential city walls ever built – they allowed the city and its emperors to survive and thrive for more than a millennium, against all strategic logic, on the edge of extremely unstable and dangerous world ...".
In other words, natural selection does not simply state that " survivors survive " or " reproducers reproduce "; rather, it states that " survivors survive, reproduce and therefore propagate any heritable characters which have affected their survival and reproductive success ".
He believed that the British had the right to tax and govern the colonies, keep the peace, and help the colonies to survive and flourish ( although he did also believe the colonies ' words should be heard ).
In other words historians always construct larger worlds from the fragments that survive ’.
In the words of Central Queensland University based marsupial immunologist Lauren J Young, " These wallabies appear to be able to survive parasite infections, viruses and various diseases more readily than other marsupials ".
A deeply religious man, Julius spoke the defining words that would allow his company to survive and flourish for the next 158 years, " May God Prevail ".
He also rarely used Latin phrases or words, though a few of his homilies do survive in Latin form, versions that were either drafts for later English homilies, or else meant to be addressed to a learned clergy.
Many words altered through folk etymology survive beyond such resistance however, to the point where they entirely replace the original form in the language.

words and modified
Some adaptations of the Latin alphabet are augmented with ligatures, such as æ in Old English and Icelandic and Ȣ in Algonquian ; by borrowings from other alphabets, such as the thorn þ in Old English and Icelandic, which came from the Futhark runes ; and by modifying existing letters, such as the eth ð of Old English and Icelandic, which is a modified d. Other alphabets only use a subset of the Latin alphabet, such as Hawaiian, and Italian, which uses the letters j, k, x, y and w only in foreign words.
A few English words can only be distinguished from others by a diacritic or modified letter, including animé, exposé, lamé, maté, öre, øre, pâté, piqué, rosé, and soufflé.
In December 1973, this logo was modified with the addition of the words " The Line of DC Super-Stars " and the star motif that would continue in later logos.
The text of her writing and compositions reveals Hildegard's use of this form of modified medieval Latin, encompassing many invented, conflated and abridged words.
Noting that the modifying component in Germanic compound words can take the form of a genitive or a bare root, he points to behavioural similarities between genitive determinants and the modifying element in regular Old Norse compound words, such as the fact that neither can be modified by a free-standing ( declined ) adjective.
* Morphology – study of internal structures of words and how they can be modified
It is traditionally believed that the Second Ecumenical Council held in Constantinople in 381 added the section that follows the words " We believe in the Holy Spirit " ( without the words " and the Son " relative to the procession of the Holy Spirit, which would become a point of contention in the Great Schism of Orthodoxy from Catholicism ); hence the name " Niceno-Constantinopolitan Creed ", referring to the Creed as modified in the First Council of Constantinople.
The Pledge has been modified four times since its composition, with the most recent change adding the words " under God " in 1954.
Terryl Givens has suggested that the characters are early examples of Egyptian symbols being used " to transliterate Hebrew words and vice versa ," that Demotic is a " reformed Egyptian ," and that the mixing of a Semitic language with modified Egyptian characters is demonstrated in inscriptions of ancient Syria and Palestine.
: This global assumption has been modified and downgraded to single words even in single languages in many newer attempts ( see below ).
The kits usually have modified areas to accommodate recasting of the words " Made in China ", but you may see illegible " Made in England " underneath sometime.
Gold modified his hypothesis and presented it in a 1992 paper " The Deep Hot Biosphere " in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Gold suggested that coal and crude oil deposits have their origins in natural gas flows which feed bacteria living at extreme depths under the surface of the Earth ; in other words, oil and coal are produced through tectonic forces, rather than from the decomposition of fossils.
In other words, the inner loop of bubble sort, which does the actual swap, is modified such that gap between swapped elements goes down ( for each iteration of outer loop ) in steps of shrink factor.
When the 64-bit UltraSPARC was introduced, SBus was modified to use clock doubling and transfer two 32-bit data words per cycle to produce a 200 MB / s 64-bit bus.
" The two words textum and receptum were modified from the accusative to the nominative case to render textus receptus.
Note that only native Japanese verbs ( yamato kotoba verbs ) are compounded in this way ; Japanese verbs are closed class, and borrowed words, which can be used as verbs via the auxiliary verb, do not compound – the verb suru itself can be modified ( as in shitemiru – ( to ) try doing ( something )), but will not combine with another verb.
The lyrics constitute a slightly modified original first stanza of the patriotic poem written in 1862 by Pavlo Chubynsky, a prominent ethnographer from the region of Ukraine's capital, Kiev, and were influenced by the words and themes of Poland's national anthem, Poland Is Not Yet Lost.
Today, some Lunfardo terms have entered in the language spoken all over Argentina and Uruguay, while a great number of Lunfardo words have fallen into disuse or have been modified in the era of suburbanization.
If, after contemplating the splendid and heroic parts of his character, we shall inquire for the milder virtues of humanity, and seek for the man, we shall find the refined, beneficent, and social qualities of private life, through all its forms and combinations, so happily modified and united in him, that in the words of the darling poet of nature, it may be said:
Hubbard modified definitions for many existing English words, such as " clear " and " static.
Alexithymia from the Ancient Greek words λέξις ( lexis ) and θυμός ( thumos ) modified by an alpha-privative — literally " without words for emotions "— is a term to describe a state of deficiency in understanding, processing, or describing emotions in oneself.

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