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Thus and quite
Thus a colonial bishop and colonial diocese was by nature quite a different thing from their counterparts back home.
Thus, departments carrying the name " biostatistics " may exist under quite different structures.
Thus like many of Cassidy's derivations, this proposed explanation appears quite improbable.
Thus, for an American to say that he or she is a member of the Democratic or Republican party, is quite different from a Briton's stating that he or she is a member of the Conservative or Labour party.
Thus, she is revealed as a figure of cosmic capacity, quite capable of unsettling the divine order ( Slatkin 1986: 12 ).
Thus the use of farmer-retained seed remains quite common.
Thus, if the measured temperatures were actually cloud temperatures instead of surface temperatures, these clouds would have to be quite thick.
Thus it would seem that Lewis Carroll did not intend care and hope from the repeating stanza to stand for two women, but was quite pleased with the interpretation after the fact.
Thus, a Christian symbolic theme was applied quite naturally to a form borrowed from civil semi-public precedents.
Thus, farming of the area proved quite impossible until deficiencies of zinc, copper and molybdenum were identified in the 1940s.
Thus, the work requires great strength and is quite hazardous to the back, hands, and feet.
Despite his rejection of the Macchiaioli approach, Modigliani nonetheless found favour with his teacher, who referred to him as " Superman ", a pet name reflecting the fact that Modigliani was not only quite adept at his art, but also that he regularly quoted from Nietzsche's Thus Spoke Zarathustra.
Thus, it seemed quite logical to promote the group as " Captain Beefheart and His Magic Band ", around the concept that Captain Beefheart had ' magic powers ' and, upon drinking a ' Pepsi ', could summon up " His Magic Band " to appear and perform behind him.
Thus, it was quite normal for a powerful person to use a T-form but expect a V-form in return.
Thus, although uranium is not dangerously radioactive when pure, some pieces of naturally-occurring pitchblende are quite dangerous owing to their radium content.
Thus, the strategic position of Antony and Octavian became quite serious, since the already depleted regions of Macedonia and Thessaly were unable to supply their army for long, while Brutus could easily receive supplies from the sea.
Thus, the Moselle department was reborn, but its borders were quite different from those before 1871.
" ( 7 ), Thus, Frye launched the pursuit which was to occupy the rest of his career — that of establishing criticism as a " coherent field of study which trains the imagination quite as systematically and efficiently as the sciences train the reason " ( Hamilton 34 ).
Thus, the county of Cerdanya was actually quite an important county.
Thus, the engineering trade-offs involved are quite complex, and highly sensitive to the design assumptions made.
Thus began a field of research which is still quite active today.
Thus they ended up on opposite sides in the conflict, as regional stability gives way to national discord and social breakdown, and the war begins to quite literally tear families apart.
Thus, through the Norwegian language struggle, the story got quite a lot of attention in Norwegian media.
Thus, particularly in documentary television, video was resisted for quite a long time.
Thus, in this theory electrons are quite clearly particles -- when a double-slit experiment is performed, its trajectory goes through one slit rather than the other.

Thus and effective
Thus the lack of effective recognition of the responsibilities involved in caring for two babies showed signs of becoming a disabling problem.
Thus, if public pressure sets the effective limit to the price that the industry may charge, this pressure is itself a function of the wage rate.
Thus, a well-planned adobe wall of the appropriate thickness is very effective at controlling inside temperature through the wide daily fluctuations typical of desert climates, a factor which has contributed to its longevity as a building material.
Thus the adverb-adjective " effective " is used in a sense of " 1a: producing a decided, decisive, or desired effect ", and " capable of producing a result ".
Thus, by 1939, both Church ( 1934 ) and Turing ( 1939 ), neither having knowledge of the other's efforts, had individually proposed that their " formal systems " should be definitions of " effective calculability "; neither framed their statements as theses.
Thus, during the 1960s and early 1970s, Portuguese development plans promoting strong economic growth and effective socioeconomic policies, like those applied by the Portuguese in the other two theaters of war ( Portuguese Angola and Portuguese Mozambique ), were not possible.
Thus, according to this hypothesis, the death of the adult clone is due to resource exhaustion, as it would be more effective for parent plants to devote all resources to creating a large seed crop than to hold back energy for their own regeneration.
Thus, in both a military and an economic sense, MIRVs render ABM systems less effective, as the costs of maintaining a workable defense against MIRVs would greatly increase, requiring multiple defensive missiles for each offensive one.
Thus the effective border of dynasty was pushed further south and east.
Thus, gesture therapy has been found to be the most effective treatment for apraxia at the current time.
Thus, nothing effective was formulated.
Thus, when analyzing earthbound motions, the Earth frame is not an inertial frame, but rather rotates about the local vertical at an effective rate of radians per day.
Thus the consistency of a sufficiently strong, effective, consistent theory of arithmetic can never be proven in that system itself.
Thus, one cannot satisfactorily specify the intelligence of an individual or design effective interventions programs unless both the general processes and the domains of interest are evaluated.
Thus it holds that technical analysis cannot be effective.
Thus, if leadership amounts to getting the greatest number of followers, then among the bonobos, a female almost always exerts the strongest and most effective leadership.
Thus, effective leadership can result from nature ( i. e., innate talents ) as well as nurture ( i. e., acquired skills ).
Thus, if each presiding officer makes the announcement at a different time ( for instance because one House is not sitting on a certain date ), assent is regarded as effective when the second announcement is made.
Thus began a marked decline in effective communication between Gordy and Ballard.
Thus, specific theories, hypotheses, and conceptualizations must be ( and have successfully been ) derived from the general framework that symbolic interactionism provides before interactionist theories can be assessed on the basis of the criteria a good theory ( e. g., containing falsifiable hypotheses ), or interactionist-inspired conceptualizations can be assessed on the basis of effective conceptualizations.
Thus, Whig ideas of the commons growing in authority as against royal power are somewhat simplistic-the Crown used the Commons as and when it found it advantageous to do so, and the speakership was part of the process of making the Commons a more cohesive, defined and effective instrument of the king's government.
Sakamoto observes, " Thus, the major goal was how to create an effective mix of all the separate elements.
Thus, the more developed market economies agreed with the U. S. vision of post-war international economic management, which was to be designed to create and maintain an effective international monetary system and foster the reduction of barriers to trade and capital flows.
" Thus, the political insurgency of the UFW was successful because of effective strategizing in the right kind of political environment.

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