Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Female ejaculation" ¶ 16
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

latter and paper
A detailed study of this latter phenomenon was not attempted in this paper.
The FSF recommends using the term " free software " rather than " open source software " because, as they state in a paper on Free Software philosophy, the latter term and the associated marketing campaign focuses on the technical issues of software development, avoiding the issue of user freedoms.
The latter group wanted a government-owned central bank that could print paper money as Congress required.
A rebuttal paper by John Leslie points out a difference between the observation of double sixes and the observation of fine tuning, namely that the former is not necessary ( the roll could have come out differently ) while the latter is necessary ( our universe must support life, which means ex hypothesi that we must see fine tuning ).
He next published a paper on the production of water by burning inflammable air ( that is, hydrogen ) in dephlogisticated air ( now known to be oxygen ), the latter a constituent of atmospheric air ( phlogiston theory ).
The latter publication, a weekly paper published on Thursdays, continues to be published as the Hastings Banner.
The latter part of the 1960s saw the paper chart the rise of psychedelia and the continued dominance of British groups of the time.
* The term kitchen towel can refer to either a dish towel or to a paper towel, the latter usage being primarily British.
In about 1900, the latter then evolved into the modern legal pad when a local judge requested for a margin to be drawn on the left side of the paper.
The preferred forms of paper money were gold certificates and National Gold Bank Notes, the latter having been created specifically to address the desire for hard money in California.
The most divisive political issue of the day was the use of hard money, or specie, versus the use of paper money, and Hopkins sided with the latter group.
As the latter paper revealed, the commonplace convergent evolution of bill morphology hampered Raikow's analysis.
Le Sage's own theory became a subject of re-newed interest in the latter part of the 19th century following a paper published by Kelvin in 1873.
In May 2006 the paper announced a week-end magazine called Libé week-end, with a supplement called Ecrans ( covering television, internet and film ), and another called R. ( The latter was abandoned in September of the same year )
The paper also has regular weekly sections devoted to ' Food ', ' Home & Garden ', and ' Wine ', the latter of which is unique.
As an attempt at atonement, the paper established a charity fund for the victims of mental illness, although some mental health charities condemned The Suns latter action that day as being grossly cynical in the light of the former.
For more demanding applications, the filter paper in the latter two may be replaced with a sintered glass frit.
Some early examples used for computer-output recording were the 1954 IBM 740 CRT Recorder, and the 1962 Stromberg-Carlson SC-4020, the latter using a Charactron CRT for text and vector graphic output to either 16mm motion picture film, 16mm microfilm, or hard-copy paper output.
( 4 ) The following peasant Mandate, compiled by the newspaper Izvestia Vserossiiskogo Soveta Krestyanskikh Deputatov from 242 local peasant mandates and published in No. 88 of that paper ( Petrograd, No. 88, August 19, 1917 ), shall serve everywhere to guide the implementation of the great land reforms until a final decision on the latter is taken by the Constituent Assembly.
Mixed Dirichlet / Neumann boundary conditions were first considered by Warren Siegel in 1976 as a means of lowering the critical dimension of open string theory from 26 or 10 to 4 ( Siegel also cites unpublished work by Halpern, and a 1974 paper by Chodos and Thorn, but a reading of the latter paper shows that it is actually concerned with linear dilation backgrounds, not Dirichlet boundary conditions ).
His resignation from the latter position after eight months prompted a letter of protest signed by more than a hundred of the paper ’ s writers.
In the 5 / 17 / 2012 strip, during which Ann Eiffel plans to sue Toni and her niece, Shannon ( the latter having bit her finger in an April 2012 strip ), Ox returns and upon learning of the event and Ann's cruel way of forcing him to sign a paper to file lawsuit, he refuses and sees Ann as another bully.
In the latter half of part II of that paper, Maxwell gives a separate physical explanation for each of the two phenomena.

latter and which
Those three other great activities of the Persians, the bath, the teahouse, and the zur khaneh ( the latter a kind of club in which a leader and a group of men in an octagonal pit move through a rite of calisthenics, dance, chanted poetry, and music ), do not take place in buildings to which entrance tickets are sold, but some of them occupy splendid examples of Persian domestic architecture: long, domed, chalk-white rooms with daises of turquoise tile, their end walls cut through to the orchards and the sky by open arches.
So great a man could not but understand, too, that the thing that moves men to sacrifice their lives is not the error of their thought, which their opponents see and attack, but the truth which the latter do not see -- any more than they see the error which mars the truth they themselves defend.
The latter tried to arbitrate through a delegation from Providence, which offer was declined by the invaders.
In all the talk of feudal rights, the knights and bishops must never forget the woolworkers, nor was it easy to do so, for all along the road to Italy they passed the Florentine pack trains going home with their loads of raw wool from England and rough Flemish cloth, the former to be spun and woven by the Arte Della Lana and the latter to be refined and dyed by the Arte Della Calimala with the pigment recently discovered in Asia Minor by one of their members, Bernardo Rucellai, the secret of which they jealously kept for themselves.
Particularly hard for the therapist to grasp are those instances in which the patient is manifesting an introject traceable to something in the therapist, some aspect of the therapist of which the latter is himself only poorly aware, and the recognition of which, as a part of himself, he finds distinctly unwelcome.
They must do something with the acquiescence of the latter, or some of them, which amounts to an acceptance of the law in its entirety beyond all possibility of misconstruction ''.
The latter now furnishes the area with electricity distributed from a modern sub-station at Manchester Depot which was put into operation February 19, 1930 and was improved in January 1942 by the installation of larger transformers.
Under the circumstances, the only protection for the relatively small manufacturers is to engage in exactly the kind of conspiracy with the giants for which the latter were convicted.
and the latter is the total sum of all the numbers in the square, by which all the other numbers are overshadowed and in which they may be said to be absorbed.
The latter is not to be confused with TA ( NPL ), which denotes an independent atomic time scale, not synchronised to TAI or to anything else.
The former is basically a giant multinucleate amoeba, while the latter lives solitary until food runs out ; in which a colony of these functions as a unit.
The latter represents a choice between any number of possible interpretations, none of which may have a standard agreed-upon meaning.
The term allegiance was traditionally often used by English legal commentators in a larger sense, divided by them into natural and local, the latter applying to the deference which even a foreigner must pay to the institutions of the country in which he happens to live.
His Elo rating shot from 2540 in 1971 to 2660 in 1973, when he shared second in the USSR Chess Championship, and finished equal first with Viktor Korchnoi in the Leningrad Interzonal Tournament, with the latter success qualifying him for the 1974 Candidates Matches, which would determine the challenger of the reigning world champion, Bobby Fischer.
The latter estimate was based on the angle between the half moon and the Sun, which he estimated as 87 ° ( the true value being close to 89. 853 °).
These authors, the former a medieval historian and the latter an early modernist, quickly became associated with the distinctive Annales approach, which combined geography, history, and the sociological approaches of the Année Sociologique ( many members of which were their colleagues at Strasbourg ) to produce an approach which rejected the predominant emphasis on politics, diplomacy and war of many 19th and early 20th-century historians as spearheaded by historians whom Febvre called Les Sorbonnistes.

latter and traces
The latter can be immediately traced to a grid reference according to the transmitter being used, however this is only accurate to a certain wide area — for more specific traces senior authority must be acquired and an expensive operation can be conducted to trace the mobile phone to within a few metres.
It traces back to John Locke in late 17th century England and to Montesquieu in 18th century France, the latter especially via Emmanuel-Joseph Sieyès pamphlet What Is the Third Estate ?.
Russian academic staff and students took refuge in Voronezh in Russia, giving rise to the foundation of Voronezh State University, which traces its own history back to the foundation of the University of Tartu and still holds several physical properties of the latter.
In the former he argues that immediate revelations are no longer vouchsafed to the church, in the latter he traces temptation to the work of a personal devil.
The former traces its roots to Tilak, and the latter is synonymous with the name Vinayak Damodar Savarkar, who was one of the first alumni of the college.
All indicate traces of interisland population movements, and even sources from Europeans, Africans, and Asians, though the latter were at a low level.
The former traces its roots to 1908, and the latter was founded in 1926-both trace their legacy to Baden Powell's Scout Movement.
The latter, Sheikh al Yaqoubi, traces his lineage in the tariqa through his father and grandfather.
The latter initially served as a library and now serves as a reception room with antique marble columns and arched ceilings bearing traces of late Renaissance style frescos.

2.825 seconds.