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terminology and was
The terminology of the range, in speakin' of `` dry stock '' and `` wet stock '', was confusin' to the tenderfoot.
The term " Anasazi " was established in archaeological terminology through the Pecos Classification system in 1927.
Historically, cryptography was split into a dichotomy of codes and ciphers ; and coding had its own terminology, analogous to that for ciphers: " encoding, codetext, decoding " and so on.
Because of the use of computational metaphors and terminology, cognitive psychology was able to benefit greatly from the flourishing of research in artificial intelligence and other related areas in the 1960s and 1970s.
It was not uncommon for an organisation under Roman private law to copy the terminology of state and city institutions for its own statutory agents.
The Council of Chalcedon, from the perspective of the Alexandrine Christology, has deviated from the approved Cyrillian terminology and declared that Christ was one hypostasis in two natures.
In Christian terminology, docetism ( from the Greek dokein ( to seem ) / dókēsis ( apparition, phantom ), according to Norbert Brox, is defined narrowly as " the doctrine according to which the phenomenon of Christ, his historical and bodily existence, and thus above all the human form of Jesus, was altogether mere semblance without any true reality.
The second one was about the numerical resolution of equations ( root finding in modern terminology ).
It was not until 1922 that Alfred W. Porter proposed the symbol " H " as the accepted standard, thus finalizing the terminology still in use today.
But in 1885, Mittag-Leffler was concerned about the philosophical nature and new terminology in a paper Cantor had submitted to Acta.
This terminology was replaced by the names Arzawa and Kizzuwatna with the rise of those kingdoms.
Later, in his The Physiology of Fascination ( 1855 ), Braid conceded that his original terminology was misleading, and argued that the term " hypnotism " or " nervous sleep " should be reserved for the minority ( 10 %) of subjects who exhibit amnesia, substituting the term " monoideism ", meaning concentration upon a single idea, as a description for the more alert state experienced by the others.
Because the terminology is ambiguous (" el " in Yisra ` el ) and inconsistent, and because this being refused to reveal his name, there are varying views as to whether he was a man, an angel, or God.
Nonetheless, much of the terminology that was developed in the theory of associative rings or associative algebras is commonly applied to Lie algebras.
Indeed, the name " Supreme Soviet ", by which the parliament was called ; and that of the Soviet Union itself make use of this terminology, but they do not imply any decentralization.
Other terminology was in use, too.
Jobs was explicit in ensuring NeXT staff did not use the latter terminology, lest the NeXT machines be compared to competing Sun workstations.
This terminology survived in the Byzantine East as late as the reign of Athalaric, who was called του Ουαλεμεριακου ( tou Oualemeriakou ) by John Malalas.
Because it was equipped with online and offline printers that were based on IBM electric typewriter mechanisms, it was capable of what, in 1980s terminology, would be called " letter-quality printing " and therefore inspired TJ-2, arguably the first word processor.
This terminology was developed by Zera Fink in the 1960s but some modern scholars, such as Brugger, consider it confuses the " classical republic " with the system of government used in the ancient world.
As to the standard Imperial terminology that was used, the words were localized for different elements used in construction and varied from region to region.
Conrady's terminology was widely used, but there was uncertainty regarding his exclusion of Vietnamese.
It was popularized and became the standard terminology by the work of Johannes Schefferus, Acta Lapponica ( 1673 ), but was also used earlier by Olaus Magnus in his Description of the Northern peoples ( 1555 ).

terminology and later
Xun Zi chapter ( 22 ) " On the Rectification of Names " claims the ancient sage-kings chose names () that directly corresponded with actualities (), but later generations confused terminology, coined new nomenclature, and thus could no longer distinguish right from wrong.
This terminology has gained in recent popularity when describing the entire range of robust, drystone structures which exist in later prehistoric Atlantic Scotland.
In terminology close to that found in later Gnostic works, one tract, generally known as " The Trimorphic Protennoia ", must either be dependent on John or the other way round.
The early 1980s also saw a number of experimental " hyperediting " functions in word processors and hypermedia programs, many of whose features and terminology were later analogous to the World Wide Web.
Modern scholarship dating from the Wissenschaft des Judentums movement of 19th century Germany, as well as textual analysis influenced by the 20th Century discovery of the Dead Sea Scrolls, suggests that dating from this period there existed " liturgical formulations of a communal nature designated for particular occasions and conducted in a centre totally independent of Jerusalem and the Temple, making use of terminology and theological concepts that were later to become dominant in Jewish and, in some cases, Christian prayer.
In ICS terminology, from upper ( later, more recent ) to lower ( earlier ):
In Freud's original formulation the latent dream-thought was described as having been subject to an intra-psychic force referred to as " the censor "; in the more refined terminology of his later years, however, discussion was in terms of the super-ego and " the work of the ego's forces of defense.
He would then be what in later Anglo-Saxon terminology could be described as an ealdorman.
" The Word of Unbinding " may be set any time before The Other Wind, but the differences in magical terminology, the presence of the otherwise unknown " trolls " ( whom Le Guin notes " became extinct in Earthsea at some point "), and the character of the evil wizard Voll the Fell suggest that it might be appropriately placed either before the time of Morred, or later, in the Dark Times after the death of Maharion and before the founding of the school on Roke ; in either case before " The Finder ".
Thus, Lester Grabbe points to a number of parallels between the Azazel narrative in 1 Enoch and the wording of Leviticus 16, including “ the similarity of the names Asael and Azazel ; the punishment in the desert ; the placing of sin on Asael / Azazel ; the resultant healing of the land .” Daniel Stökl also observes that “ the punishment of the demon resembles the treatment of the goat in aspects of geography, action, time and purpose .” Thus, the place of Asael ’ s punishment designated in 1 Enoch as Dudael is reminiscent of the rabbinic terminology used for the designation of the ravine of the scapegoat in later rabbinic interpretations of the Yom Kippur ritual.
( According to later terminology, Mary Beth would be considered a traditional surrogate, as opposed to a gestational surrogate, because she was the genetic mother of the child.
Gorin v. United States was cited in many later espionage cases for its discussion of the charge of " vagueness " argument made against the terminology used in certain portions of the law, such as what constitutes " national defense " information.
His innovative methodology and terminology, especially in the field of conics, influenced many later scholars including Ptolemy, Francesco Maurolico, Johannes Kepler, Isaac Newton, and René Descartes.
" Princeps " is the root and Latin rendering of modern words as the English title and generic term prince ( see that article, also for various equivalents in other languages ), as the Byzantine version of Roman law was the basis for the legal terminology developed in feudal ( and later absolutist ) Europe.
In the discussion which followed Paul's deposition, Dionysius, the Bishop of Alexandria, used much the same language as Arius did later, and correspondence survives in which Pope Dionysius blames him for using such terminology.
Ten years later, after World War II, with the minor leagues poised for unprecedented growth, classification terminology was changed.
Although later technological advances brought about better and more portable EKG devices, much of the terminology used in describing an EKG originated with Einthoven.
System calls to CICS ( for example to read a record from a file ) were elicited by a macro call and this gave rise to the later terminology " Macro-level CICS.
It is equally clear that to be a universal, the definition must express what is essential about the thing defined, and be in terms of genus, species, and its differentiae ( this terminology is somewhat later than Socrates, made more famous with Aristotle ).
The sonata's name comes from Beethoven's later practice of using German rather than Italian words for musical terminology.
Microsoft Windows NT and its successors ( including Windows 2000, Windows XP, and later versions ) use the " service pack " terminology.
Public user interfaces were added later, providing the general public with free access to multilingual terminology in the fields of activity of the European Union.
In the 20th century Dietrich Bonhoeffer expressed the concept in similar terminology in letters he wrote while in a Nazi prison during World War II, which were not made public until years later.
*, was a Mitscher-class guided-missile destroyer-leader ( a frigate in the terminology of the time ), later re-designated as the destroyer DDG-36, commissioned in 1953 and decommissioned in 1978
His Hebrew terminology, therefore, occasionally lacks the clearness and precision of later writers and translators.

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