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These and facts
) These general facts are mentioned to make clear that the total situation in the two families is similar enough to warrant comparison.
These facts were used as an argument against his succession, an oracle having warned Sparta against a " lame reign.
These facts have allowed Barbagia to preserve its cultural and natural treasures.
# These moral features of the world are not reducible to any set of non-moral facts.
These facts long placed Schmidt's posthumous reputation under a cloud.
These oral histories often contained folk-tale motifs and demonstrated a moral, yet they also contained substantial facts relating to geography, anthropology and history, all compiled by Herodotus in an entertaining style and format.
These " peers of the accused " are responsible for listening to a dispute, evaluating the evidence presented, deciding on the facts, and making a decision in accordance with the rules of law and their jury instructions.
These rules may turn out to be familiar ones such as keeping contracts ; but equally, they may not, depending on the facts about real consequences.
These facts pose serious difficulties in many developing nations where the presence of mines hampers resettlement, agriculture, and tourism.
These three facts imply that the low-energy approximation to a superstring theory is a supergravity theory.
These facts were once kept highly secretive but are now a widely accepted open secret.
These facts seemed to me to throw some light on the origin of species — that mystery of mysteries, as it has been called by one of our greatest philosophers.
These sections concern Wittgenstein's view that the sensible, changing world we perceive does not consist of substance but of facts.
These facts made it impractical to use Preece's system on either ships, boats, or ordinary islands ( ones much smaller than Great Britain or Greenland ), and the relatively short distances that a practical Preece system could span meant that it had few advantages over underwater telegraph cables.
These assumptions are justified partly by their adherence to the types of occurrence of which we are directly conscious, and partly by their success in representing the observed facts with a certain generality, devoid of ad hoc suppositions.
These facts severely limit the range of NNEMP weapons as compared to their nuclear counterparts, but allow for more surgical target discrimination.
These facts have led some historians to call the battlefield of Wörth the " cradle of Germany ".
These frauds may go unreported, either because the victim does not realize he has been cheated, or due to reluctance to admit the facts.
These facts intensify the need for calibration.
These facts definitively placed them in distant galaxies and also connected long GRBs with the deaths of massive stars, the only possible source for the energy outputs observed.
These biographies of early church leaders, mostly written in the 11th century, may for propaganda purposes have invented, exaggerated, or borrowed miracles, and altered days of death, but some argue that their authors had no reason to distort mundane facts such as the dates and places of meetings.
These historical facts make its position in Polish history similar to Canterbury or Rheims.
These claims, however, misstate the facts.
These facts tend to make this book better suited to serve as a primary reference for the cultural context and significance of The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy cult than many of the other cult texts.

These and might
These began to be apparent in a press conference held during the second illness in order that the consulting specialists might clarify the President's condition for the nation.
These proposals would reduce the amount of tax that DuPont stockholders might have to pay -- from an estimated 1.1 billion dollars under present law to as little as 192 million dollars.
These students, although they might read various articles in popular magazines, more often chose to report on articles found in the journals.
These differences in turn result from the fact that my Yokuts vocabularies were built up of terms selected mainly to insure unambiguity of English meaning between illiterate informants and myself, within a compact and uniform territorial area, but that Hoijer's vocabulary is based on Swadesh's second glottochronological list which aims at eliminating all items which might be culturally or geographically determined.
These concessionaires traded where they wished and generally dealt with the Indians through engages, who might be habitants, voyageurs, or even soldiers.
These shapes might have been mad, but there was no telling.
These results might be weaker than, equivalent to, or stronger than the axiom of choice, depending on the strength of the technical foundations.
These negotiations might have succeeded had it not been for the malignant influence of another Goth, Sarus, an Amali, and therefore hereditary enemy of Alaric and his house.
These praise songs are probably the same performed at Matilda's coronation, but might have been used at other court ceremonies before Ealdred's death.
These troops, returning home from a disastrous military expedition to Cyrene in Libya, suspected that they had been betrayed in order that Apries, the reigning king, might rule more absolutely by means of his Greek mercenaries ; many Egyptians fully sympathized with them.
These edicts often pertained to matters such as the regulation of the public markets, or what we might call " economic regulation ".
These bytes might include start bits, stop bits, or parity bits, and thus could vary from 7 to 12 bits to contain a single 7-bit ASCII code.
These observations led him to suspect that the flea might be an intermediary factor in the transmission of plague, since people acquired plague only if they were in contact with recently dead rats, who had died less than 24 hours before.
These are usually ' temps ' ( temporary workers ) or consultants who, depending on the project and their experience, might be brought on to lead a task for which the skill-set did not exist within the company, or in the case of a temp, in the vernacular sense, to perform busy-work or an otherwise low-skilled repetitive task for which an employee is deemed too valuable to perform.
These laws might have paved the way to removing the worst of the poverty during the previous regimes.
" These sentences are interpreted by many Buddhists ( especially in the West ) as an injunction against supporting any legal measure which might lead to the death penalty.
These users offer software developers an outside perspective of the project, often helping developers gain insight into potential areas of trouble that might have been overlooked or passed over because of familiarity with the system.
These high-end estimates might be considered absurd estimates by others.
These include the number of times a civilization might re-appear on the same planet, the number of nearby stars that might be colonized and form sites of their own, and other factors.
These clubs catered to varying interests, primarily sports, and might involve distinctive manners of dress and custom.
These beliefs might be justified because they are self-evident, infallible, or derive from reliable cognitive mechanisms.
These elites said that Lancaster schools might become dishonest, provide poor education and were not accountable to established authorities.
These original epigrams did the same job as a short prose text might have done, but in verse.
These words might be better regarded as a peculiar manifestation of morpho-phonemic adaptation of a foreign lexical item.

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