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would and mean
`` What else would I mean, anyways ''??
Let us prepare for peace, instead of for a war which would mean the end of civilization.
And for him to leave this job now without accomplishing anything would mean practically the end of his career in the Methodist church, if not in all churches.
They could be used to attack a nation's people ( which would inevitably mean the loss of the attacker's own people ), or they could be used with discrimination to destroy the enemy's military force.
Every new scandal which would provide more `` copy '' for Marshall's pen would thus mean more publicity for Welch.
The result, of course, would be that federal law inevitably would mean different things in different states.
It would also probably mean different things within the same state -- depending upon what court ( state or federal ) rendered decision.
It ideally removes the past event, and shows that this would render false what we mean to say, whereas on positivist grounds it should not.
This would mean, it can readily be seen, that, again, for each new visual experience, the tracing motions would have to be repeated because of the absence of visual imagery.
I do mean, however, that I take them for granted, and that everything I shall be saying would appear quite idiotic against any contrary assumptions.
Otherwise, freedom would mean removal from the state in which `` as the place of their past residence from birth, or for many years, it would be materially for their advantage to be at liberty to remain ''.
Years ago when I asked her to put me in Social Security, so's I wouldn't have to be working now, Miss Julia threatened to fire me -- all because it would mean a few more dollars a year to her ''.
For hotels with 1000 rooms, the increased license fee would mean an expense of $5000 a year, Goodis said.
Mr. Kennedy was less troubled by that possibility than by the belief that a Geneva breakdown, or even continued stalemate, would mean an unchecked spread of nuclear weapons to other countries as well as a fatal blow to any hope for disarmament.
When they say that under no circumstances would it ever be right to `` permit '' the termination of the human race by human action, because there could not possibly be any proportionate grave reason to justify such a thing, they know exactly what they mean.
He does not mean, in fact he addresses himself specifically to reject the proposition, that `` if we took the risk of surrendering, a new generation in Britain would soon begin to amass its strength in secret in order to reverse the consequences of that surrender ''.
And this would mean that we live in a mechanistic universe, governed by the laws of cause and effect, bound in chains of determinism that hold the universe on a completely predetermined course in which there is not room for soul or spirit or human freedom.
Starting from Julian Date 2443144. 5 ( 1 January 1977 00: 00: 00 ), corrections were applied to the output of all participating clocks, so that TAI would correspond to proper time at mean sea level ( the geoid ).
The arithmetic mean of a variable is often denoted by a bar, for example ( read " x bar ") would be the mean of some sample space.
The term " android " can mean either one of these, while a cyborg (" cybernetic organism " or " bionic man ") would be a creature that is a combination of organic and mechanical parts.

would and bodily
As the criminal law evolved, element one was weakened in most jurisdictions so that a reasonable fear of bodily injury would suffice.
The development of Sensor Web technology may lead to wearable bodily sensors to monitor ongoing conditions, like diabetes or epilepsy, which would alert patients and doctors when treatment is required using wireless communication and PDAs.
Which name he used to indicate that he would stand for ever, and had no cause in him for bodily decay.
Very few in the ecology movement would accept doing bodily harm by non-legal means to achieve their goals-they have no organized presence and are rejected by almost all players in the ecology movement.
Some would prefer to define actions as requiring bodily movement ( see behaviorism ).
In the Bardengau in 785, Widukind agreed to surrender in return for a guarantee that no bodily harm would be done to him.
Deadly force, as defined by the United States Armed Forces, is the force which a person uses, causing — or that a person knows, or should know, would create a substantial risk of causing — death or serious bodily harm.
Even in sex ( perhaps especially in sex ), men and women are haunted by a state in which consciousness and bodily being would be in perfect harmony, with desire satisfied.
Self defense would still be available even if the defendant mistakenly believes that he was in imminent danger of harmful or offensive bodily contact.
Arrian wrote of Alexander the Great planning his own bodily disappearance so that he would be revered as a god.
" of Songs 8: 5 and applying them in a kind of accommodated sense to the Blessed Virgin, he reasons thus: " From this we can see that she is there bodily ... her blessedness would not have been complete unless she were there as a person.
" She alleged Judson compelled her to transfer considerable property to him and promise to pay him $ 12, 000 under threats that he would do her " great bodily harm.
In contrast, the Court found that the appellate court had set the bar too low, finding that implied malice would be possible if the defendant were aware her conduct risked causing serious bodily injury.
** Murder committed on the property of a public or private school, at an activity sponsored by a public or private school or on a school bus while the bus was engaged in its official duties by a person who intended to create a great risk of death or substantial bodily harm to more than one person by means of a weapon, device or course of action that would normally be hazardous to the lives of more than one person.
*** The murder was committed on the property of a public or private school, at an activity sponsored by a public or private school or on a school bus while the bus was engaged in its official duties by a person who intended to create a great risk of death or substantial bodily harm to more than one person by means of a weapon, device or course of action that would normally be hazardous to the lives of more than one person.
This initially causes a great deal of trouble for his new master when, for instance, he would scratch at a door to indicate he wanted to go out and unintentionally gouged big chunks out of the door with his super strength, or inflicting grievous bodily harm when combating villains ( since Krypto bites the way a regular canine would, only without being careful about his super strength ).
He declaimed the girls ' means of hiding from bodily examination that would expose their fraud:
Likewise, bodily pain that induces fear, such as a cut, wound or fracture, evoke sympathy because of the danger that they imply for ourselves ; that is, sympathy is activated chiefly through imagining what it would be like for us.
This is one of the classic examples of an ethical decision clashing or conflicting with an organismic decision, one that would be made only from the perspective of animal survival: an animal is thought to act only in its immediate perceived bodily self-interests when faced with bodily harm, and to have limited ability to perceive alternatives-see fight-or-flight response.
Section 213 ( a ) provided that a conviction for murder would lie for any killing that was " objectively forseeable as a result of the abominable nature of the predicate crimes ... inter alia ... coupled with intentional infliction of bodily harm ".
If I saw you outside, it would be a different story " and threatened him " with some form of bodily harm.
It would take an injury of such magnitude that it dispersed a major portion of her bodily molecules to cause her a physical death.

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