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Page "Crannog" ¶ 6
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narrowness and definition
Emancipations are not easily granted because of the subjectivity and narrowness of the definition of " best interest.

narrowness and has
He was as far removed from the narrowness of the specialist who has no ideas or sympathies beyond just one author or corner of science as he was from the shallow dabbler who feverishly attempts to master the details of a half-dozen unrelated pursuits.
A dendritic spine has high input resistance, the resistance increases with smallness of headsize and narrowness of stemsize.
The landing strip wax has become popular with models who must wear garments of an extreme narrowness in the crotch region.
Its counterpart on the south bank of the River Thames, Gravesend, has long been an important communications link, and it was there that a cross-river ferry ( see below ) was connected, mainly due to the narrowness of the river at this point.
The composer Boris Tishchenko has aptly compared thenarrownessof her style with the concentrated light of a laser beam that is able to pierce through metal.
Nolte restated his axiom-one which perhaps reflects the naiveté of an historian who has devoted his life's work to the power of ideologies-in a blunter, more pointed form than ever before in the fall of 1987: " To view Hitler as a German politician rather the anti-Lenin ", he reproved hundreds of knowledgeable historians, " strikes me as a proof of a regrettable myopia and narrowness ".
There is a narrowness in such a notion, / Which makes me wish you'd change your lakes for Ocean-and specifically-And Coleridge, too, has lately taken wing, / But like a hawk encumbered with his hood ,- /-Explaining Metaphysics to the nation — / I wish he would explain his Explanation ; Wordsworth-T is poetry-at least by his assertion ,; and Southey's predecessor as Laureate, Henry James Pye in the use of and pun on the old song Sing a Song of Sixpence, four and twenty Blackbirds in a pye.
Due to its narrowness and about 3, 500 illegal hutments along its banks, it has not been recently desilted, which has closed it to river traffic.

narrowness and caused
Other cases of non-retractile foreskin may be caused by preputial stenosis or narrowness that prevents retraction, by fusion of the foreskin with the glans penis in children, or by frenulum breve, which prevents retraction.

narrowness and some
He demonstrates the absurdity with the narrowness of the assumptions by some economists with the following example of two strangers meeting on a street.
Particularly well-trained and talented twisters, however, can blow-up several balloons at once, and some can even blow up 160s, which are much more difficult to mouth-inflate than the more common 260s, as their narrowness requires a great deal more strength and breath pressure to inflate.

narrowness and over
Historians committed to a social science approach, however, have criticized the narrowness of narrative and its preference for anecdote over analysis, and its use of clever examples rather than statistically verified empirical regularities.
Historians committed to a social science approach, however, have criticized the narrowness of narrative and its preference for anecdote over analysis, and clever examples rather than statistical regularities.

narrowness and years
Twenty years after it ceased production, the large glass area, and the narrowness of the Visa with its tucked in door mirrors, with its suspensions ability to totally absorb large bumps in the road, make the few remaining examples better adapted to the modern so-called ' traffic calmed ' urban environment, than most of the current generation of ( albeit more crashworthy ) cars that are much wider and / or have very firm suspensions.

narrowness and its
It was completed in 1893, but due to the canal's narrowness, navigational problems and periodic closures to repair landslips from its steep walls, it failed to attract the level of traffic anticipated by its operators.
Section 112 ), describes the Pharos and how it was a key landmark to his subduing Ptolemy XIV's armies ( 48 BC ), describing its strategic importance in his sentences " Now because of the narrowness of the strait there can be no access by ship to the harbour without the consent of those who hold the Pharos.
An internal review from the Ford Foundation found that " although the quality and impact of this endeavour cannot be denied, its ideological narrowness constituted a serious deficiency ".
It was this process which gave the Silver Pit its depth and narrowness.
It was completed in 1893, but due to the canal's narrowness, navigational problems and periodic closures to repair landslips from its steep walls, it failed to attract the level of traffic anticipated by its operators.
The narrowness of the canal makes navigation difficult ; its high rock walls channel high winds down its length, and the different times of the tides in the two gulfs cause strong tidal currents in the channel.
This ancient routeway had been for centuries the passage south out of Ulster into the Kingdom of Mide, Leinster and Munster but because of its narrowness Ulster armies had frequently ambushed and been ambushed at the pass.
A low transmittance gel will produce relatively little light on stage, but will cast a much more vivid color than a high transmission gel, because the colorfulness of a light source is directly related to narrowness of its spectral linewidth.
The central bay of the façade is a concave curve with angled pies at its edges, perhaps in recognition that this façade would always be seen at an oblique angle because of the narrowness of the street.
Armed with the knowledge gained from their prisoners, Alvarado sent 40 men to cover the exit from the cave and launched another assault along the ravine from the west, in single file owing to its narrowness, with crossbowmen alternating with soldiers bearing muskets, each with a companion sheltering him from arrows and stones with a shield.
Mitchells Pass, travelling is now one way eastbound between Lennox Bridge and the highway, due to its narrowness.
A deciduous tree that once commonly grew < 35 m tall, its Latin synonym carpinifolia alluding to the superficial similarity of the leaves to those of Hornbeam Carpinus sp., while the common names contrast the smooth upper surface and narrowness of the leaves with those of the Wych Elm, which are rough and broad.
The narrowness of the top opening and widening of the lower part are also common to slot caverns elsewhere, as is its serpentine shape.
The modern village retains the traces of the densely-built fortified village in the narrowness of its streets.

narrowness and result
The narrowness of the Japanese band ( 14 MHz compared to slightly more than 20 MHz for the CCIR band ) limits the number of FM stations that can be accommodated on the dial with the result that many commercial radio stations are forced to use AM.
Typically the 200 psi inlet water pressure is reduced to 95 psi discharge pressure as a result of the narrowness of the venturi in the eductor device.

narrowness and from
However, doubts have been cast that any existing whale or fish would be either capable and / or inclined to repeat the feat described, either due to size of mouth, narrowness of throat, or because it diverges so wildly from these animals ' normal eating habits.
The narrowness of the bridge prevented many soldiers from crossing together ( possibly as few as three men abreast ), so while the English soldiers crossed, the Scots held back until half of them had passed and then killed the English as quickly as they could cross.
But the essential narrowness and timidity of his general outlook prevented him from detecting and estimating latent forces, either in politics or in matters strictly intellectual and moral ; and this lack of understanding and sympathy accounts for his distrust and dislike of the passion and fancy of Shelley and Keats, and for his praise of the half-hearted and elegant romanticism of Samuel Rogers and Thomas Campbell.
As snakes evolved, their gape size increased from the narrowness of the scolecophidians.
“ Through these demands he is stimulated to act as a member of a unity, to emerge from his original narrowness of action and feeling and to conceive of himself from the standpoint of the welfare of the group to which he belongs ”.
Patrick Kavanagh ( 1904 – 1967 ), who came from a small farm, wrote about the narrowness and frustrations of rural life.
He lives in history, apart from his three hymns, mainly as a man of unstained purity and invincible fidelity, to conscience, weak only in a certain narrowness of view which is a frequent attribute of the intense character which he possessed.
The word " isthmus " comes from the Ancient Greek word for " neck " and refers to the narrowness of the land.
The narrowness of the isthmus, and the gap in the Sierra Madre, allow the trade winds from the Gulf of Mexico to blow through to the Pacific.
It satirizes religious hypocrisy and the narrowness of country life, and was denounced from a London pulpit as immoral.
The Transport Department also prohibits coaches and private buses from using the Shing Mun Road leading to the park because of the narrowness of the road.
The narrowness of the strait would prevent the Joseon fleet from being flanked by the numerically superior enemy fleet, and the roughness of the tide prevented the Japanese from effectively enveloping them.
The sheer walls and extreme narrowness of the Black Canyon are appreciated along this trail as well as views from the base of the Morrow Point Dam.

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