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words and originate
Extraterrestrial life ( from the Latin words: extra or " not of " and ‎ terrestris or belonging to Earth ") is defined as life that does not originate from Earth.
Both the Czech name Vltava and the German name Moldau are believed to originate from the old Germanic words * wilt ahwa (" wild water ") ( cf.
In words coming from Middle English, most cases of the Modern English diphthongs originate from the Middle English long monophthongs through the Great Vowel Shift, although some cases of originate from the Middle English diphthongs.
Despite the use of French words in the phrase nom de plume, the term did not originate in France.
Later, signal modulation was found to produce sounds or words that appeared to originate intracranially.
According to another theory, the name is a corruption of two words which mean the Friars ’ Hill ; those who favour this idea allege that St. Ninian, by planting a religious house near the head of what is now the Friars ’ Vennel, at the close of the fourth century, became the virtual founder of the Burgh ; however Ninian, so far as is known, did not originate any monastic establishments anywhere and was simply a missionary.
The term is believed to originate from the words jabber ( rapid, indistinct talk ) and shivaree ( noisy celebration ), with " m " from jam ( crowd ).
Nevertheless, the Westphalian dialect of German includes some words that originate from the dying Westphalian language, which are otherwise unintelligible for other German speakers from outside Westphalia.
There are many possible explanations for these findings and they may originate in translation ambiguities over the words " justified ", " true ", " belief " and " knowledge " and possibly depend on the mother-tongue make-up of the survey respondents.
Craig Conley, a scholar of magic, writes that the magic words used by conjurers may originate from " pseudo-Latin phrases, nonsense syllables, or esoteric terms from religious antiquity ," but that what they have in common is " language as an instrument of creation.
Etymological theory recognizes that words originate through a limited number of basic mechanisms, the most important of which are borrowing ( i. e., the adoption of " loanwords " from other languages ); word formation such as derivation and compounding ; and onomatopoeia and sound symbolism, ( i. e., the creation of imitative words such as " click ").
In applying this principle, scholars have studied the dialogues of the New Testament and in some cases claim that how a choice of words that apparently seem completely unrelated or awkward in Greek may originate from an original Aramaic source that employed puns, or vice-versa.
With these precedents is no surprise that words such as brandy and holandas originate from that country.
The villagename Kemnay is believed to originate from the Celtic words that mean bend and river due to
( In other words, CBAC can inspect traffic for sessions that originate from the external network.
The related theory, proposed by William Wang in 1969, is that all sound changes originate in a single word or a small group of words and then spread to other words with a similar phonological make-up, but may not spread to all words in which they potentially could apply.
* The words " all right " and " next page " in parentheses above originate from the days in the 1960s and 1970s when the UCLA student spirit organization, Rally Committee, wrote the words in markers on cards borrowed from the card stunts performed at football games.
These words originate from the Latin word for servant or slave, servus.

words and from
He heard cries from behind him, but he could make out no words.
Mary Jane took the page from him and began reading it, moving her lips with the words.
The German's words worked on the newspaperman like a reprieve from an odious duty.
But apart from racial problems, the old unreconstructed South -- to use the moderate words favored by Mr. Thomas Griffith -- finds itself unsympathetic to most of what is different about the civilization of the North.
The Australian stopped trying to talk a pidgin I could understand, and spoke strange words from deep in his chest.
He ordered his editors to tone down on sensationalism and to refrain from using such words as `` seduction '', `` rape '', `` abortion '', `` criminal assault '' and `` born out of wedlock ''.
As I have said, words from Tennyson remain ever in my memory: `` That mind and soul, according well, May make one music as before ''.
His words were the more ungracious to come from a man who lent his name to the Eisenhower Exchange Fellowships dedicated to the same goal of international understanding.
Once her trembling hand, with the pen grasped tight in it, was pressed against the paper the words came sharply, smoothly, as authoritatively as they would dropping from her own lips.
Ejaculated the surprised woman, looking at Alex for an explanation but he, parting from her without ceremony, only offered a few words about the doctor's provincial American speech and a state of nerves brought on by the demands of his work.
In their own words, it had aided them to get a clearer picture of how they had gotten into their marriages, and perhaps they had obtained some insights on why certain troubles appeared from time to time.
Eventually such incidents became more sporadic, and more sharply demarcated from her day-after-day behavior, and in one particular session, after several minutes of such behavior -- which, as usual, went on without any accompanying words from her -- she asked, eagerly, `` Did you see Granny ''??
and which, more often than all these, conveys a welter of feelings which could in no way be conveyed by any number of words, words which are so unlike this welter in being formed and discrete from one another.
in working with these patients the therapist eventually gets to do some at least private mulling over of the possible meaning of a belch, or the passage of flatus, not only because he is reduced to this for lack of anything else to analyze, but also because he learns that even these animal-like sounds constitute forms of communication in which, from time to time, quite different things are being said, long before the patient can become sufficiently aware of these, as distinct feelings and concepts, to say them in words.
In other words, like automation machines designed to work in tandem, they shared the same programming, a mutual understanding not only of English words, but of the four stresses, pitches, and junctures that can change their meaning from black to white.
Also Lucy and Winslow had a private contest to see which one could make the most words from the letters in `` importunately ''.
Her words jumbled together and she all but ran from the office and from the question in Rev's face.
Or, in the words of Anatole France, `` The law in its majestic equality must forbid the rich, as well as the poor, from begging in the streets and sleeping under bridges ''.
And many advertisers have been happy with the results of letting a Negro disc jockey phrase the commercial in his own words, working only from a fact sheet.
I took great comfort from his words, and smiled to myself in the darkness.
The Greek words " ida " ( οίδα: know ) and " idos " ( είδος: species ) have the same root as the word " idea " ( ιδέα ), indicating how the Greek mind moved from the gift of the senses, to the principles beyond the senses.

words and phrasing
The words attributed to Occam, entia non sunt multiplicanda praeter necessitatem ( entities must not be multiplied beyond necessity ), are absent in his extant works ; this particular phrasing owes more to John Punch.
The poem has some aspects characteristic of much of Carroll's poetry: it utilizes technically adept meter and rhyme, grammatically correct phrasing, logical chains of events — and largely nonsensical content, frequently employing made-up words such as " Snark ".
An idiom (, " special property ", f., " special feature, special phrasing ", f., " one ’ s own ") is an expression consisting of a combination of words that has a figurative meaning.
" during the phrasing of the words as the National Anthem is sung.
Cavendish concludes the collection by stating that she is aware that she does not write elegantly and that her phrasing and placement of words will likely be criticized.
This translation uses current colloquialisms and contemporary phrasing in an effort to provide a contemporary sense of the gospel authors ' styles, if not their literal words.
has caused the mere sound of the phrasing of the words and inflections to be " written ", as if hammer-to-stone, into the long-term memory.
The full phrasing is unclear but the words FRAECH and SON OF MEDB have been translated.
Other titles might be tailored down to a single individual being officially honored for a particular achievement, with or without executive portfolio following the granting of the title, and might truly be titles outside the executive government structure, even when words used in their phrasing would otherwise imply executive office.
The transcriptions of the tune for different sets of words vary both in notes and in rhythmic phrasing.
He also cited a number of rare words, similarities of phrasing, and the use of similar examples, which he regarded as evidence of Darwin's debt to Blyth.
Based on the notion that lifting the pen between words would have a heavy speed cost, phrasing is the combination of several smaller distinct forms into one outline.
Her surviving scores reveal Caccini to have taken extraordinary care over the notation of her music, focusing special attention on the rhythmic placement of syllables and words, especially within ornaments, on phrasing as indicated by slurs, and on the precise notation of often very long, melodically fluid vocal melismas.
Her husband once swore that she was a natural malapropper, but in radio character Jane became the unchallenged mistress of the kind of malaprops that ( unlike Gracie Allen's " illogical logic ") substituted words in seemingly ordinary phrasing and still made perverse sense, after a fashion.

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