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These woes are distinct from the Seven Woes of the Pharisees that appear later in Luke 11: 37 – 54.
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These and woes
These threats strain Anatoly's relationship with Florence (" You and I "), and she shares her woes with Svetlana (" I Know Him So Well ").
These 1974 models timed to coincide precisely with the 1973 OPEC oil embargo, and were a significant part of Chrysler's economic woes in the late 1970s.
These are the Umar Hills, where people have been disappearing ; a temple ruins, fallen under the shadow of the Shade Lord ; the de ' Arnise Keep, home of the de ' Arnises, but recently overrun by trolls ; the town of Trademeet, being attacked by animals ; a druid grove, connected with Trademeet's woes ; the Windspear Hills, where the player becomes entangled in the intrigues of Firkraag, a dragon ; the underwater Sahuagin city ; and the Planar Prison.
These and are
These are traversed by another line of vaults, and thus rooms, arched on all four sides, are formed.
These songs ( practically all Persian music, for that matter ) are limited to a range of two octaves.
These my grandmother left in their places ( they are still there, more persistent and longer-lived than the generations of man ) and planted others like them, that flourished without careful tending.
These are like the initial ways in which the world forces itself upon the self and thrusts the self into decision and choice.
These assumptions lead to an organization with one man at the top, six directly under him, six under each of these, and so on until there are six levels of personnel.
These ways are absolutely irreconcilable because they offer two different recipes for man's redemption from chaos.
These are, if the research is done with subtlety and skill, researchable topics, but the research is missing.
These moments are historical events in the lives of individual authors with which the student of comparative literature must be frequently concerned.
These lives are in themselves outside of the moral order and are unburdened with moral responsibility.
These conceptions and the manner in which they were transposed into poetry or engendered by poetic form are intrinsic to western life from the time of Aeschylus to that of Shakespeare.
These biographical analogies are obvious, and far too much time has been spent speculating on their possible implications.
These women whose organization grew out of the old suffrage movement are dedicated to Thomas Jefferson's dictum that one must cherish the people's spirit but `` Keep alive their attention ''.
These are, of course, the same people whose support he has only now rejected to seek the independent vote.
These and distinct
These teeth show " primitive morphology and wear pattern " which demonstrate that A. kadabba is a distinct species from A. ramidus.
These are distinct phonemes in English, but both allophones of the phoneme / व / ( or / و /) in Hindi-Urdu.
These anthropologists continue to concern themselves with the distinct ways people in different locales experience and understand their lives, but they often argue that one cannot understand these particular ways of life solely from a local perspective ; they instead combine a focus on the local with an effort to grasp larger political, economic, and cultural frameworks that impact local lived realities.
These unequal and distinct privileges were sanctioned by law or social mores, confined to only that specific social subset of the society, and were inherited automatically by the offspring.
These popular religious practices were distinct from, but closely linked with, the formal rituals and institutions.
These ganglion cells, which contain melanopsin, convey their signals to the " circadian clock " via the retinohypothalamic tract ( distinct from the optic nerve ), linking the retina to the pineal gland.
These manual alphabets ( also known as finger alphabets or hand alphabets ), have often been used in deaf education, and have subsequently been adopted as a distinct part of a number of sign languages around the world.
These meanings often coincide within proper context, but the fallacious arguer does a semantic shift, slowly changing the context by treating, as equivalent, distinct meanings of the term.
These changes can result in tissue elongation, thinning, folding or separation of one tissue into distinct layers.
These generalizations should not, however, obscure the distinct differences existing among particular locations.
These have a distinct plant and animal life from the main island but the natural forest has been cleared in places for logging and agriculture.
These commentators speak thus: For example, a particular tree, with a branch or two missing, possibly alive, possibly dead, and with the initials of two lovers carved into its bark, is distinct from the abstract form of Tree-ness.
These four surrounding areas are further subdivided into distinct neighborhoods ( in total, Pittsburgh contains 90 neighborhoods.
These Saharan mountains are home to two distinct ecoregions ; the West Saharan montane xeric woodlands in the Ahaggar, Tassili n ' Ajjer, Aïr, and other ranges in the western and central Sahara, and the Tibesti-Jebel Uweinat montane xeric woodlands in the Tibesti and Jebel Uweinat of the eastern Sahara.
These form key transport arteries between the distinct towns and regional centres as laid out in Singapore's urban planning, with the main purpose of allowing vehicles to travel from satellite towns to the city centre and vice-versa in the shortest possible distance.
These versions constitute two distinct ideological conceptions, not two variations of a single plan.
These servers work within the hierarchical computing environment which treat users, computers, applications and files as distinct but related entities on the network and grant access based on user or group credentials.
These overlay network may implement certain organizational structures of the nodes according to several distinct models, the network architecture of the system.
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