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Some Related Sentences

Thus and taking
Thus, a court officer taking possession of goods under a court order may use force if reasonably necessary.
Thus, the word means taking hold of one's nerves.
Thus, the third phase of the war ( roughly August 1920 – July 1921 ) involved the IRA taking on a greatly expanded British force, moving away from attacking well defended barracks and instead using ambush tactics.
Thus, this system negates the claim that taking away any of the flagellum's parts would render it useless.
Thus nowadays the dominant intuitive idea of the conditions justifying price taking and thus rendering a market perfectly competitive is an amalgam of several different notions, not all present, nor given equal weight, in all treatments.
Thus, the United States entered into a ten-year war in Vietnam, taking over from French colonialists, and supported Portugal in its attempts to hold on to Angola.
Thus the variance is a measure of the amount of variation of the values of that variable, taking account of all possible values and their probabilities or weightings ( not just the extremes which give the range ).
Thus cutting a cake, where taking a larger piece reduces the amount of cake available for others, is a zero – sum game if all participants value each unit of cake equally ( see marginal utility ).
Thus began the Hellenistic age, a period characterized by a more absolute approach to rule, with Greek kings taking on royal trappings and setting up hereditary successions.
Thus, a proposition of the form " A is a black raven and B is a white shoe " can be considered a sample proposition by taking " black raven " and " white shoe " to be predicates.
Thus liver function tests to monitor liver enzymes are necessary when taking therapeutic doses of niacin, including alkaline phosphatase ( ALP ), aspartate transaminase ( AST ), and alanine transaminase ( ALT ).
Thus the standard was created by taking a union of the features in all proposals with no regard to their coherence.
Thus the fire spread quickly and destructively, taking the life of a security guard.
Thus, vitamin A toxicity is typically reported in Arctic explorers and people taking large doses of synthetic vitamin A.
Thus, in 1983, the Community of Madrid was constituted and a Statute of Autonomy was approved taking over all the competences of the old Diputación Provincial and the new ones the Statute considered.
Thus, by taking Scott to this territory and keeping him there for two and a half years, Emerson was breaking the law in three distinct ways.
Thus, for example, groups have a signature containing two operators: the multiplication operator m, taking two arguments, and the inverse operator i, taking one argument, and the identity element e, a constant, which may be considered an operator that takes zero arguments.
Thus on 3 September 1914 Della Chiesa, despite having been a cardinal only three months, was elected Pope, taking the name of Benedict XV.
Thus, some of his storylines featured people taking the law into their own hands.
Thus Chabad had now split into two branches, each taking the name of their location to differentiate themselves from each other.
Thus it seems possible that Shakespeare, in conforming to the growing " Tudor Myth " of the day, as well as taking into account new theologies of divine action and human will becoming popular in the wake of the Protestant Reformation, sought to paint Richard as the final curse of God on England in punishment for the deposition of Richard II in 1399.
in a ring R. Thus, they can be generated by the standard technique for Pell equations of taking powers of a fundamental solution:
Thus Larus ( argentatus ) smithsonianus means the American Herring Gull ; the notation with parentheses means that some consider it a subspecies of a larger Herring Gull species and therefore call it Larus argentatus smithsonianus, while others consider it a full species and therefore call it Larus smithsonianus ( and the user of the notation is not taking a position ).
Thus it is not uncommon to see someone teaching a class one day and taking one the next.

Thus and significant
Thus it is reasonable to believe that there is a significant difference between the two groups in their performance on this task after a brief `` structuring '' experience.
Thus there are alignments in all directions which would suggest there is little of astronomical significance, However, ethnohistorical records show that the various directions do have cosmological and astronomical significance with various points in the landscape being significant at different times of the year.
Thus it was significant which quarters had preferential opportunities in providing chief wives to imperial princes, i. e. supplying future empresses.
Thus, chronic food deficits drive resettlement into the Inner Terai to the detriment of indigenous Tharu people and eastward into Sikkim and Bhutan, where traditional practices of delayed marriage and diversion of significant population into monasteries and nunneries otherwise checked population growth.
Thus enforcing that part of the treaty which was of interest to the United States, namely, " It granted the U. S. significant transit rights over the Panamanian isthmus "
Thus, radon is considered a significant contaminant that affects indoor air quality worldwide.
Thus, Engblom v. Carey remains the only significant Third Amendment case law.
Thus the Scots won a significant victory which boosted the confidence of their army.
Thus, in the beginning of the 18th century, a French travel writer, the Baron de Lahontan, who had actually lived among the Huron Indians, put potentially dangerously radical Deist and egalitarian arguments in the mouth of a Canadian Indian, Adario, who was perhaps the most striking and significant figure of the " good " ( or " noble ") savage, as we understand it now, to make his appearance on the historical stage: Adario sings the praises of Natural Religion.
Thus, they had to represent themselves, though they received significant pro bono assistance.
Thus, despite its lack of a full guarantee of religious freedom or broad-based tolerance, the law is, " a significant step forward in the struggle for religious liberty.
Thus, the carrying capacity is the number of individuals an environment can support without significant negative impacts to the given organism and its environment.
Thus, from very early in the development of the MS-DOS software environment, many significant commercial software products were written directly to the hardware, for a variety of reasons:
Thus they are seldom grown in any significant extent, though O. viciifolia is met with somewhat more regularly.
Thus, in 1830, < span lang =" fr "> Charles X </ span > faced a significant problem.
Thus by the opening of the thirteenth century, it was already significant in trade with the continent of Europe and ranked as a port of the Hanseatic League It was one of the official " staple towns " of England, authorized to carry on the import and export trade.
Thus, saving could exceed investment for significant amounts of time, causing a general glut and a recession.
Thus, the Rabbis had significant means of " coercion " and the people seem to have followed the Rabbinic rulership.
Thus, diagnosis of appendicitis by CT is made more difficult in very thin patients and in children, both of whom tend to lack significant fat within the abdomen.
Thus, the area shows significant variations in landform and scenery.
Thus there were significant ethnic, religious, economic, and linguistic differences between these adjacent regions of settlement.
Thus the Lingnan language began to develop more significant differences with central Chinese.
Thus writings by Antonio Rosmini-Serbati were placed on the Index in 1849 but were removed by 1855, and Pope John Paul II mentioned Rosmini's work as a significant example of " a process of philosophical enquiry which was enriched by engaging the data of faith ".
Thus, in a significant sense, plaintext is the ' normal ' representation of data before any action has been taken to conceal, compress, or ' digest ' it.
Thus, transvestic fetishism is not diagnosed unless it causes significant problems for the person concerned.

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