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Some Related Sentences

use and is
But there is no use causing him to worry at this time ''.
But apart from racial problems, the old unreconstructed South -- to use the moderate words favored by Mr. Thomas Griffith -- finds itself unsympathetic to most of what is different about the civilization of the North.
Only the President is permitted to authorize the use of nuclear weapons.
The sequence is determined by chance, and Mr. Cunningham makes use of any one of several chance devices.
If they avoid the use of the pungent, outlawed four-letter word it is because it is taboo ; ;
This is the rhetoric of righteousness the beatniks use in defending their way of life, their search for wholeness, though their actual existence fails to reach these `` religious '' heights.
Part of the ritual of sex is the use of marijuana.
Holmes is addicted to the use of cocaine and other refreshing stimulants ; ;
But what a super-Herculean task it is to winnow anything of value from the mud-beplastered arguments used so freely, particularly since such common use is made of cliches and stereotypes, in themselves declarations of intellectual bankruptcy.
`` The argument that is cutting most ice is that Hearst is the only candidate who is fighting the trusts fearlessly and who would use all the powers of government to disrupt them if he were elected.
for if this can be proved we shall surely be the gainers -- I mean, if there is a use in poetry as well as a delight ''.
It is even true that some among them use the sheer fact of conformity -- `` everyone does it '' -- as a criterion for conduct.
Without a precise knowledge of Germanic philology, however, it is debatable whether their use was not more often a source of confusion and error than anything else.
Often the historian must consider the use of intuition or instinct by those individuals or nations which he is studying.
Easily the best known of these three novels is The Space Merchants, a good example of a science-fiction dystopia which extrapolates much more than the impact of science on human life, though its most important warning is in this area, namely as to the use to which discoveries in the behavioral sciences may be put.
The narrator is an Alsatian serving with the French Army, and he has the same name ( Berger ) that Malraux himself was later to use in the Resistance ; ;
And by a skillful and unobtrusive use of imagery ( the enclosure is called a `` Roman-camp stockade '', the hastily erected lean-to is a `` Babylonian hovel '', the men begin to look like `` Peruvian mummies '' and to acquire `` Gothic faces '' ), Malraux projects a fresco of human endurance -- which is also the endurance of the human -- stretching backward into the dark abyss of time.

use and analogous
The CIRA is an illegal organisation under UK ( section 11 ( 1 ) of the Terrorism Act 2000 ) and Irish law due to the use of ' IRA ' in the group's name in a situation analogous to that of the Real Irish Republican Army ( RIRA ).
It is analogous to the way a processor caches memory for short term use, but the only implication by this reference was that it was something that a human ( or maybe a Martian ) would do.
The system is somewhat analogous to a system of pennant numbers the Royal Navy and some European and Commonwealth navies ( 19 in total ) use.
Peter never bore the title of " pope ", which came into use three centuries later, but Catholics traditionally recognize him as the first pope, while official declarations of the Church only speak of the popes as holding within the college of the Bishops a role analogous to that held by Peter within the college of the Apostles, of which the college of the Bishops, a distinct entity, is the successor.
A level 2 signature is highly analogous to the trust assumption users must rely on whenever they use the default certificate authority list ( like those included in web browsers ); it allows the owner of the key to make other keys certificate authorities.
The common, generic use of the term, as defined above in terms of rule by a church or analogous religious leadership, would be more accurately described as an ecclesiocracy.
Even though the term " 401 ( k )" is a reference to a specific provision of the U. S. Internal Revenue Code section 401, it has become so well known that some other nations use it as a generic term to describe analogous legislation.
Of these remaining 48 states, 46 use the term " county " while Alaska and Louisiana use the terms " borough " and " parish ", respectively, for analogous jurisdictions.
This is analogous to a human throwing an arrow by hand versus using a bow ; the use of elastic storage ( the bow ) allows the muscles to operate closer to isometric on the force-velocity curve.
Impersonal verbs ( e. g., pleuvoir — to rain ) use the impersonal pronoun il ( analogous to English it ).
A LEO satellite constellation can also provide more system capacity by frequency reuse across its coverage, with spot beam frequency use being analogous to the frequency reuse of cellular radio towers.
However, modern geophysics organizations use a broader definition that includes the hydrological cycle including snow and ice ; fluid dynamics of the oceans and the atmosphere ; electricity and magnetism in the ionosphere and magnetosphere and solar-terrestrial relations ; and analogous problems associated with the Moon and other planets.
The term " Mass " is generally used only in the Latin Church, while the Byzantine-Rite Eastern Catholic Churches use the analogous term " Divine Liturgy " and other Eastern Catholic Churches have terms such as Holy Qurbana.
This is analogous to a contemporary problem in which many businesses feel compelled to purchase and use Microsoft Word in order to be compatible with associates who use that software.
Mechanical movements also use a balance wheel together with the balance spring ( also known as a hairspring ) to control motion of the gear system of the watch in a manner analogous to the pendulum of a pendulum clock.
This is analogous to the use of antenna diversity in an attempt to improve links in wireless communications.
The process could also be seen as analogous to cycling uphill or charging a battery for later use, as it produces potential energy.
Some Marxist-feminists use a Marxian-style theory to understand relations of exploitation under patriarchy, while others see a kind of exploitation analogous to the Marxian sort as existing under institutional racism.
One could choose to use litres per second ( analogous to grays ) to express the real flow rate of water or foam, and cubic decimetres per second ( analogous to sieverts ) to describe the equivalent flow of plain water that would produce the same effect as the foam.
An ODBC driver can be thought of as analogous to a printer or other driver, providing a standard set of functions for the application to use, and implementing DBMS-specific functionality.

use and parentheses
Binary operations sometimes use prefix or ( probably more often ) postfix notation, both of which dispense with parentheses.
Because the group operation associates, parentheses have only one necessary use in group theory: to set the scope of the inverse operation.
In order to represent this, we need to use parentheses to indicate which proposition is conjoined with which.
They have been credited with popularizing the practice of ending sentences with the colon or full stop, inventing the semicolon, making occasional use of parentheses and creating the modern comma by lowering the virgule.
* Brackets and parentheses are unnecessary: the user simply performs calculations in the order that is required, letting the automatic stack store intermediate results on the fly for later use.
When the original name is changed, e. g. the species is moved to a different genus, both Codes use parentheses around the original authority ; the ICN also requires the person who made the change to be given.
While a parenthesis need not be written enclosed by the curved brackets called parentheses, their use principally around rhetorical parentheses has made the punctuation marks the only common use for the term in most contexts.
" However, never have two parentheses pointing in different ways abut each other ; always use a space between them.
This document also counsels against the use of parentheses.
The keywords, the use of parentheses and the C shell's built-in expression grammar and support for arrays were all strongly influenced by C.
A way to avoid completely the use of parentheses is prefix notation.
In 1934 Stock agreed to the use of Roman numerals but preferred keeping the hyphen and dropping the parentheses.
In the following list, the dates in parentheses are the earliest approved use of the drug.
Currently, most international maps and documents use either the name Sea of Japan ( or equivalent translation ) by itself, or include both the name Sea of Japan and East Sea, often with East Sea listed in parentheses or otherwise marked as a secondary name.
A specific guide on how to use punctuation in journalistic materials, this section includes rules regarding hyphens, commas, parentheses and quotations.
Where known, the year of its first use is annotated in parentheses.
This body's use of Original in parentheses reflects the belief that it is true to the original faith, purpose and practice of the Church of God movement.
Alternatively, one can use the identity, where both terms in the parentheses vanish.
IDL programmers can avoid many of these problems by using square brackets for array indexing, thereby avoiding conflicts with function names which use parentheses.
On the US layout and similar keyboard layouts, characters that typically require the use of the shift key include the parentheses, the question mark, the exclamation point, and the colon.

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