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Page "Messiah (Handel)" ¶ 20
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accommodate and Cibber's
It is known from Cibber's autobiography that Vanbrugh had a decisive say in the ongoing casting changes made during these seven months ; it is not known whether he altered his text to accommodate them.

accommodate and voice
The 1980s version had to accommodate a larger production staff including dozens of voice actors, this closing credits segment was replaced with static multicolored backgrounds with pictures of The Jetsons arranged next to numerous credits.
Kurt Weill adopted sprechstimme to accommodate Lotte Lenya's distinctive, though non-lyric, voice for her part as Jenny in Die Dreigroschenoper.
Because of the primary role as an instrument for the accompaniment of the voice, the construction and playing technique was adapted in order to better accommodate these functions.
2000 Years: The Millennium Concert also marked the first time several songs had to be transposed to lower keys to accommodate Joel's deepening voice (" I Go To Extremes ", " I've Loved These Days ", " Goodnight Saigon " and " Only The Good Die Young " are in the key of B ♭ vs. C ).
In modern performances the latter part of Eumete's role is usually transposed to a lower range, to accommodate the tenor voice throughout.
In practice, worker co-operatives have to accommodate a range of interests to survive and have experimented with different voice and voting arrangements to accommodate the interests of trade unions, local authorities, those who have invested proportionately more labour, or through attempts to mix individual and collective forms of worker ownership and control.
It is fairly common for Russian guitar players ( particularly those accompanying themselves singing, such as bards ) to bring the tuning up or down several steps as desired, either to accommodate the voice or for varying string tension.
Whatever the general merits of the view that war silences law or modulates its voice, that view has no place in the interpretation and application of a Constitution designed precisely to confront war and, in a manner that accords with democratic principles, to accommodate it.

accommodate and range
Finally, in a move to accommodate the majority of junior members on the College site rather than in hostels in the town, in the 1990s Eric Parry designed a new range of buildings on the site of the Master's Lodge, with a new Lodge at the west end.
However, most cable systems could not accommodate the full 54-890 MHz VHF / UHF frequency range and the twelve channels of VHF space were quickly exhausted on most systems.
When the line weight is significantly less than the rod's recommended range the line may part prematurely, as the rod cannot fully flex to accommodate the pull of a given weight fish.
Maps can be more useful than globes in many situations: they are more compact and easier to store ; they readily accommodate an enormous range of scales ; they are viewed easily on computer displays ; they can facilitate measuring properties of the terrain being mapped ; they can show larger portions of the Earth's surface at once ; and they are cheaper to produce and transport.
Marr often tuned his guitar up a full step to F-sharp to accommodate Morrissey's vocal range, and also used open tunings.
Classical players must carry a wide range of mallet types to accommodate the changing demands of composers who are looking for particular sounds.
Known as the Hospitium of St. John and founded in 1189, the surviving building is the main building of a larger range of buildings that could accommodate 400 people.
The north range houses the library and senior common rooms ; designed in the Neoclassical style by James Wyatt, it was built between 1788 and 1796 to accommodate the books bequested by Edward, Baron Leigh, formerly High Steward of the University and an Orielensis, whose gift had doubled the size of the library.
The advantage is that it can accommodate a larger range of PCIe cards without requiring motherboard hardware to support the full transfer rate.
IMAX platters range from diameter to accommodate 1 to 2. 75 hours of film.
Kaknäs was already used as a shooting range, but alterations were needed to accommodate shooting events.
Although able to accommodate a range of vessels from coastal ships to inter-continental cargo liners, the canal is not large enough for all modern vessels.
The whole TE range had a higher centre pressing in the bonnet to accommodate the six-cylinder engine's air cleaner.
Like the TE, the whole TF range had a higher centre pressing in the bonnet to accommodate the six-cylinder engine's air cleaner.
In the late 1950s, the runways at West Berlin's city centre Tempelhof Airport had become too short to accommodate the new-generation jet aircraft such as the Aérospatiale Caravelle, Boeing 707, de Havilland Comet and Douglas DC-8, without imposing payload or range restrictions.
; Dynamic range and Signal-to-noise ratio ( SNR ): The difference between the maximum level a component can accommodate and the noise level it produces.
The Model C, made from 1903 to 1930, was a cheap rifle made to accommodate a range of cartridges for hunting.
The William Aston Hall at Glyndŵr University is a 900-seat venue which has recently undergone extensive refurbishment, and is now designed to accommodate a range of events from conferences and exhibitions to theatrical performances and pop / rock concerts.
Its fine acoustic is suitable for nearly all forms of music and its versatility in terms of space enables it to accommodate a wide range of music without losing its special atmosphere of elegant intimacy.
Several other properties are also desirable in a good detector scintillator: a low gamma output ( i. e., a high efficiency for converting the energy of incident radiation into scintillation photons ), transparency to its own scintillation light ( for good light collection ), efficient detection of the radiation being studied, a high stopping power, good linearity over a wide range of energy, a short rise time for fast timing applications ( e. g., coincidence measurements ), a short decay time to reduce detector dead-time and accommodate high event rates, emission in a spectral range matching the spectral sensitivity of existing PMTs ( although wavelength shifters can sometimes be used ), an index of refraction near that of glass (≈ 1. 5 ) to allow optimum coupling to the PMT window.
In younger people, the lens of the eye is still flexible enough to accommodate over a wide range of distances.
The college provides a range of maritime qualifications, including at academic degree level, and its facilities can accommodate 750 students.
Together with a new raised-style bonnet to accommodate the VR6 engine, these body improvements were carried across the model range.

accommodate and Then
Then will be three large dining-rooms extending from the main hall on the second story to the Mercer street wall, the largest of which will accommodate 500 guests.
Then for a short time after the move, some classes were also held at a Boeing facility in south Puget Sound ( about 30 miles from Everett ) to accommodate currently-enrolled students living in that area.

accommodate and shall
This system shall accommodate installation of equipment in new and existing motor vehicles.
The Residence Act gave authority to President Washington to appoint three commissioners to oversee the survey of the federal district and " according to such Plans, as the President shall approve ," provide public buildings to accommodate the Federal government in 1800.
The above-said Abraham Jordan gives notice to all masters and performers, that he will attend every day next week at the said Church, to accommodate all those gentlemen who shall have a curiosity to hear it ".

accommodate and eyes
The hyperope, in an attempt to " accommodate " or focus the eyes, converges the eyes as well, as convergence is associated with activation of the accommodation reflex.
Myopes considering refractive surgery are advised that surgically correcting their nearsightedness may be a disadvantage after age 40, when the eyes become presbyopic and lose their ability to accommodate or change focus, because they will then need to use glasses for reading.

accommodate and aria
Periodically on SNL he sang classical music: once a Mozart aria when guest-host Walter Matthau designated him as a " musical guest ... in place of the usual crap ", and once a Schubert lied while the titles on the screen purported to express his colleagues ' displeasure at having to accommodate a misguided request by him.

accommodate and feed
In 1980 the government decided to start sending funding to the homeless, but it was not until 1984 that shelters were built to accommodate and feed them.
It was built to feed and accommodate 800 paupers, but at the height of famine in 1847, (" Black ' 47 "), there were 1, 500 people there.
It begins to feed voraciously on yolk, acquiring an enormously distended stomach ; to accommodate this, the muscles on the belly split down the middle and the skin on the abdomen stretches greatly.
Until September 2009, to accommodate Here and Nows 6: 00 p. m. timeslot, the network provided a separate Newfoundland Time feed of its weekday afternoon schedule between 4: 00 and 6: 00 local.
The theater includes: a fly loft where sets can be pulled down from the rafters, a video feed in the dressing rooms, lighting in the catwalks above the house that can generate visual effects, and an orchestra pit that can accommodate an 80-piece ensemble.
Spratt and Watson gradually transformed the Mill into a feed and seed operation to keep up with the changing times and to accommodate the local dairy and livestock farmers.

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