Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Belgians" ¶ 3
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

These and sometimes
These childhood experiences are sources of the self-certainty that the adolescent needs, for experimenting with many roles, and for the freedom to fail sometimes in the process of exploring and discovering her skills and abilities.
These antigens can sometimes be presented by tumor cells and never by the normal ones.
These were sometimes combined into the one device.
These are also sometimes called simply AC1, AC2, etc., and, somewhat confusingly, sometimes Roman numerals are used for these isoforms that all belong to the overall AC class III.
These compounds, e. g. calicheamicin, are some of the most aggressive antitumor drugs known, so much so that the ene-diyne subunit is sometimes referred to as a " warhead.
These two sequences converge to the same number, which is the arithmetic – geometric mean of and ; it is denoted by, or sometimes by.
These Sunday laws enacted at the state and local levels would sometimes carry penalties for doing non-religious activities on Sunday as part of an effort to enforce religious observance and church attendance.
These four-bit quantities are sometimes called nibbles, and correspond to hexadecimal digits.
These are sometimes known as signature bridges.
These may include a tire patch kit ( which, in turn, may contain any combination of a hand pump or CO < sub > 2 </ sub > Pump, tire levers, spare tubes, self-adhesive patches, or tube-patching material, an adhesive, a piece of sandpaper or a metal grater ( for roughing the tube surface to be patched ), and sometimes even a block of French chalk.
These fruit versions sometimes contain colored pearls ( and / or " jelly cubes " as in the related drink taho ), the color chosen to match whatever fruit juice is used.
These two styles ( K = 1024 and truncation ) were used loosely around the same time, sometimes by the same company.
These are sometimes called " the four pillars of the Big Bang theory ".
These toxins and the organisms that produce them are sometimes referred to as select agents.
These have sometimes been identified as another, separate work, the Ezra Memorial ( EM ), but other scholars believe the EM to be fictional and heavily altered by later editors.
These women are sometimes referred to as " keeners " and the best keeners would be in much demand.
These are sometimes referred to partial-inpatient programs.
These are often the same person, and the terms are sometimes used interchangeably.
These are sometimes called Weber functions after Heinrich Martin Weber, and also Neumann functions after Carl Neumann.
These groups are sometimes classified under denominations, though for theological reasons many groups reject this classification system.
These continued to dominate throughout the period, but during late Carboniferous, several other groups, Cycadophyta ( cycads ), the Callistophytales ( another group of " seed ferns "), and the Voltziales ( related to and sometimes included under the conifers ), appeared.
These peoples, sometimes referred to as the neo-Taíno nations, had migrated north along the Caribbean island chain.
" These extra copulas are sometimes called " semi-copulas " or " pseudo-copulas ".
These are also sometimes known as communities of practice.

These and competing
These booze customers had until then been buying their supplies from the Sheldon, Saltis-McErlane, and Druggan-Lake gangs, and now they were competing for trade with the Torrio-Capone saloons ; ;
These medications are among those most commonly prescribed by psychiatrists and other physicians, and their effectiveness and adverse effects are the subject of many studies and competing claims.
These declines have been due to competing technologies, cadmium ’ s toxicity in certain forms and concentration and resulting regulations.
These opponents of central planning argue that the only way to determine what society actually wants is by allowing private enterprise to use their resources in competing to meet the needs of consumers, rather those taking resources away and allowing government to direct investment without responding to market signals.
These proposals ranged from various forms of worker cooperatives coordinated by free markets such as Mutualism ( economic theory ), to state-owned enterprises competing with each other in open and unregulated markets.
These competing claims led to a war in the colonies called the French and Indian War ( 1754 – 62 ), and contributed to the start of the global Seven Years ' War ( 1756 – 63 ).
These guilds exclude other actors and writers who do not abide by the strict rules for competing within the film and television industry in America.
These three constraints are often competing constraints: increased scope typically means increased time and increased cost, a tight time constraint could mean increased costs and reduced scope, and a tight budget could mean increased time and reduced scope.
These competing colonial nations claimed the land and resources as their own and divided it into colonies.
These included infighting between China's qigong establishment and Falun Gong, speculation over blackmailing and lobbying by qigong opponents and " scientists-cum-ideologues with political motives and affiliations with competing central Party leaders ", which caused the shift in the state's position, and the struggles from mid-1996 to mid-1999 between Falun Gong and the Chinese power elite over the status and treatment of the movement.
These trading companies engaged palagi traders who lived on the islands, some islands would have competing traders with dryer islands only have a single trader.
These three competing products by Avid, Adobe, and Apple are the foremost NLEs, often referred to as the A-Team.
These teeth also play an important role in competing to control a harem.
These gangs were competing with one another during the prohibition era and would often beat or even murder an opposing gang member for attempting to sell or distribute illegal liquor on their " turf ".
These ERCs replicate and preferentially segregate to the mother cell during cell division, and are believed to result in cellular senescence by titrating away ( competing for ) essential nuclear factors.
These actions are also used in defence of a gallery by competing males.
These meetings eventually selected a competing semi-mechanical field-sequential color system being promoted by CBS.
These introductions have the potential to significantly alter the structure and composition of savannas worldwide, and have already done so in many areas through a number of processes including altering the fire regime, increasing grazing pressure, competing with native vegetation and occupying previously vacant ecological niches.
These days most top wave sailors spend very little time competing as the type of conditions required ( massive swells producing clean, well-spaced waves and strong winds blowing cross-offshore ) are very hard to guarantee months in advance ( when planning an event ).
These appeared first in the early 1990s in the IBM PS / 2, and later in systems based on the 486, Pentium, Pentium Pro, early Pentium II, and contemporary / competing chips of other brands.
These are at times competing, at times complementary – either debating the overall level of government involvement, or the effects of specific government involvement.
These isolated links developed during the railway boom of the 1840s into a national network, although still run by dozens of competing companies.
The league consisted of six divisions with a total of 72 teams competing These teams play from Monday to Thursday during the season, which stretches from early September through to late May.
These criteria lend themselves to differing forms of presentation that have sometimes been taken as competing.
These drugs are given with the intent of inhibiting proper DNA polymerization by competing with deoxy triphosphate nucleotides or specifically inactivating viral DNA polymerases.

0.544 seconds.