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Page "Music of Romania" ¶ 35
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new and style
As a matter of fact you could probably find a new home development in every populated county in the country with three-bedroom ranch style cottages in the $14,000 range.
The vulnerability of Protestantism to social differences stems from the peculiar role of the new religious style in middle-class life, where the congregation is a vehicle of social and economic group identity and must conform, therefore, to the principle of economic integration.
In the new style, the Department was berated as intellectually barren and unable to produce the vital ideas needed to outwit the Russians.
As an educator, Alcott pioneered new ways of interacting with young students, focusing on a conversational style, and avoided traditional punishment.
: Hart's Rules and the Oxford Dictionary for Writers and Editors call the British style " new " quoting.
Puck went on to describe his belief in contemporary, new style American cuisine in the introduction to The Wolfgang Puck Cookbook:
However, Dürer's influence became less dominant after 1515, when Marcantonio perfected his new engraving style, which in turn traveled over the Alps to dominate Northern engraving also.
The new style used voices to emulate modern rock instruments, including vocal percussion /" beatboxing ".
A wide range in space was proved by the identification of the Inselsteine and the Ialysus vases with the new style, and a wide range in time by collation of the earlier Theraean and Hissarlik discoveries.
In Rome, Both had developed a new style of composition due, at least in part, to his interaction with Claude Lorrain.
This new style was focused on changing the direction of light in the painting.
Both, and subsequently Cuyp, used the advantages of this new lighting style to alter the sense of depth and luminosity possible in a painting.
Cuyp was one of the first Dutch painters to appreciate this new leap forward in style and while his own Both-inspired phase was quite short ( limited to the mid 1640s ) he did, more than any other contemporary Dutch artist, maximize the full chromatic scale for sunsets and sunrises.
When problems with poor control at high speed were first encountered, they were addressed by designing a new style of control surface with more power.
He wanted to create a new architectural style to reflect this new era.
The style from Einbeck was later adopted by Munich brewers in the 17th century and adapted to the new lager style of brewing.
A new style, during World War I, known as trench warfare, developed nearly half a century later.
After the record rose to number one, Haley was quickly given the title " Father of Rock and Roll ," by the media, and by teenagers that had come to embrace the new style of music.
In 2008, the graphics were again relaunched, using the style introduced in 2007 and a new colour scheme.
As a direct result of this, a brand new style across all presentation for the channel launched on 8 December 2003 at 09: 00.
The conclusion of the countdown was altered in 2008 to feature the new presentation style, rather than a data stream moving in towards the camera.
The architecture of the new house is considered to be somewhat dated for its time, being similar in style to the demolished castle of the 1830s, in contrast to the richer forms of Scots Baronial being developed by William Burn and others during the 1850s.
By 1932, Pasternak had strikingly reshaped his style to make it acceptable to the Soviet public and printed the new collection of poems aptly titled The Second Birth.

new and borrowed
His comment on Numbers 23: 19 has a still more polemical tone: “ God is not a man that he should lie ; neither the son of man, that he should repent ; < font face =" times new roman " size = 3 > if a man says: ‘ I am a god ’ he is a liar ; if he says: ‘ I am a son of man ’ he will have cause to regret it ; and if he says, ‘ I will go up to heaven ’ he has said but will not keep his word ” last phrase is borrowed from B ' midbar 23: 19 ( Yer.
However, technology transfer requires knowledgeable managers and engineers who are able to operate new machines or production practices borrowed from the leader in order to close the gap through imitation.
A new object oriented GUI was not originally planned as part of the release, although elements of the Cairo user interface were borrowed and added as other aspects of the release ( notably Plug and Play ) slipped.
With this new vocabulary, additional vocabulary borrowed from Latin ( with Greek, another approximately one-third of Modern English vocabulary, though some borrowings from Latin and Greek date from later periods ), a simplified grammar, and use of the orthographic conventions of French instead of Old English orthography, the language became Middle English ( the language of Chaucer ).
Sometimes a borrowed shoe is used then when the expected child is born the shoe is returned to its owner along with a new pair as a " thank you " gift.
When he feels as if " dressed in borrowed clothes ", after his new title as Thane of Cawdor, prophesied by the witches, has been confirmed by Ross ( I, 3, ll.
It was from this French " new left " that the " First New Left " of Britain borrowed the term.
When an alphabet is borrowed to represent a different language than that for which it originally developed ( as has been done with the Latin alphabet for many languages in Europe and elsewhere or Japanese Katakana being used for foreign words ), it often proves to be defective in representing the new language's phonemes.
This was an entirely new product, not a port of the existing OS / 2, that borrowed certain sections of code from both the existing OS / 2 and AIX products while using an entirely new microkernel code base and adding major features including a system registry and a new driver model.
To meet these goals PL / I borrowed ideas from contemporary languages while adding substantial new capabilities and casting it with a distinctive concise and readable syntax.
By the late 1810s, under siege from the Quadrille, dancing masters began to invent " new " forms of country dance, often with figures borrowed from the Quadrille, and giving them exotic names such as the Danse Ecossoise and Danse Espagnuole which suggested entire new dances but actually covered very minor variations in the classic form.
In the beginning some films mixed some of these new devices ( more or less uneasily ) with the borrowed US Western devices typical for most of the 1963 – 64 Spaghetti Westerns.
McNeill wrote The Rise of the West ( 1965 ) to improve upon Toynbee by showing how the separate civilizations of Eurasia interacted from the very beginning of their history, borrowing critical skills from one another, and thus precipitating still further change as adjustment between traditional old and borrowed new knowledge and practice became necessary.
After hiding the greater part of the stone with travellers in Kent for a few days, they risked the road blocks on the border and returned to Scotland with this piece, which they had hidden in the back of a borrowed car, along with a new accomplice John Josselyn.
Marx also borrowed Engels characterisation of Hegel's notion of the World Spirit that history occurred twice, " once as a tragedy and secondly as a farce " in the first paragraph of his new book.
A 2010 television adaptation by Howard Overman for BBC Four borrowed some of the characters and some minor plot elements of the novel to create a new story.
Shakespeare also borrowed heavily from a speech by Medea in Ovid's Metamorphoses in writing Prospero's renunciative speech ; nevertheless, the combination of these elements in the character of Prospero created a new interpretation of the sage magician as that of a carefully plotting hero, quite distinct from the wizard-as-advisor archetype of Merlin or Gandalf.
" improvised-borrowed-words ") come into use when a native spoken word has no corresponding character, and hence another character with the same or a similar sound ( and often a close meaning ) is " borrowed "; occasionally, the new meaning can supplant the old meaning.
In the mid-1820s, when Manuel José García was Minister of Finance, the government borrowed heavily to finance new projects and to pay off war debts.
The plan has very limited Anglo-Saxon elements and is clearly influenced by the French work at Cluny, Bernay, and Caen and shares a similar floor plan to St Etienne and Lanfranc's Canterbury — although the poorer quality building material was a new challenge for Robert and he clearly borrowed some Roman techniques, learned while gathering material in Verulamium.
Persian words in common parlance were slowly replaced by Sanskrit words, sometimes borrowed wholesale, or in new compounds.
Soissons enters written history under its Celtic name ( as later borrowed in Latin ), Noviodunum, meaning " new hillfort ".

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