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Yet and another
Yet they keep running from one physician to another, largely to get a willing ear who will listen to their parade of troubles.
Yet another chronicler, John of Worcester, mentions nothing of any trouble in Rome, and when discussing the appointment of Wulfstan, says that Wulfstan was elected freely and unanimously by the clergy and people.
Yet another different set of names is found in Valerius Flaccus ' Argonautica: he mentions Euryale, Harpe, Lyce, Menippe and Thoe.
Yet all appear to treasure the truth that liberates, and Jesus taught his followers to love one another.
Yet another says she disguised herself as Isis and seduced Osiris and subsequently gave birth to Anubis.
Yet another of Timur Shah's sons, Shuja Shah ( or Shah Shuja ), ruled for only six years.
Yet another explanation is that, while derived from the afore mentioned root, the name of the sea is related to naming for various forms of water and related substances in several European languages, that might have been originally associated with colors found in swamps.
Yet another plan, the North-South Rail Link that would have connected North and South Stations ( the major passenger train stations in Boston ), was part of the original Big Dig but was ultimately dropped by the Dukakis administration as an impediment to acquiring federal funding for the project.
Yet in its position statement, the IDF writes that " there is no overwhelming evidence to prefer one species of insulin over another " and " highly purified animal insulins remain a perfectly acceptable alternative.
Yet another is the Greek saganaki, an appetizer of cheese served flambé at the table.
" Yet another excerpt where Montesqieu's comparative approach is evident is the following one from Chapter XIII of Book XXIX:
) Yet another of the remarkable events in Defoe's life, the storm was the subject of his book The Storm.
Yet another Brussels edition was called for in 1611.
Yet another possible candidate for the fourth condition of knowledge is indefeasibility.
Yet another equivalent definition of the ellipse is that it is the set of points that are equidistant from one point in the plane ( a focus ) and a particular circle, the directrix circle ( whose center is the other focus ).
Yet another counterexample 85282 < sup > 5 </ sup > + 28969 < sup > 5 </ sup > + 3183 < sup > 5 </ sup > + 55 < sup > 5 </ sup > = 85359 < sup > 5 </ sup > was found by Jim Frye in 2004.
Yet another advantage of the NIST curves is the fact that they use a = − 3 which improves addition in Jacobian coordinates.
Yet another notable esoteric strain stems from the teachings of G. I. Gurdjieff and P. D. Ouspensky.
Yet another is in the Ambrosio company version of Gli ultimi giorni di Pompei ( The Last Days of Pompeii ) ( 1913 ).
Yet another story holds that the freestyle name evolved in Miami over confusion between two tracks produced by Tony " Pretty Boy " Butler, " Freestyle Express " by Freestyle and Debbie Deb's " When I Hear Music ".
Yet another lodger, Captain Lanz, appears to be in league with Montag.
Yet another Spanish / English false friend is " America / América ", where the word " America " in English, and singular, is usually used to talk about the United States of America, and the word " América " in Spanish is used to talk about the whole American continent.
Yet the next day he headed up river on a different steamer that was captained by another.
Yet another episode of his female affairs that stands out was when he carried away the oxen of Geryones, he also visited the country of the Scythians.
Yet, less than half a century later, the strains of military expeditions produced another revolt in Astrakhan, ultimately subdued.

Yet and Latin
Yet in Arturo Uslar-Pietri's vague, ample usage, magical realism was wildly successful in summarizing for many readers their perception of much Latin American fiction ; this fact suggests that the term has its uses, so long as it is not expected to function with the precision expected of technical, scholarly terminology.
Yet the original Latin text, published by Georg Weitz in the Monumenta Germaniae Historica in 1883, contains a very significant difference from modern translations: it says the ruler of the Rhos was named not chaganus, but chacanus.
Yet it was principally as a Latin poet that he exhibited his full strength.
The motto of the Church of Scotland is nec tamen consumebatur ( Latin )-' Yet it was not consumed ', an allusion to Exodus 3: 2 and the Burning Bush.
Yet for a reader of Latin script based languages the two variations of the " a " character are both recognized as the same grapheme.
Yet the council rendered no verdict and passed the controversy to the Latin Church because Pelagius, Jerome, and Orosius were all Latin.
Yet, he became to be respected as an authority on Latin American affairs.
Yet, he soon continued the progressive elimination of the historic economic feudalism of Guatemala, which had been initiated by the predecessor Government ( 1945 – 51 ) of President Juan José Arévalo Bermejo ; which although “ favorably disposed, initially, toward the United States, was modeled, in many ways, after the Roosevelt New Deal ”; nonetheless, such relative political and economic liberalism, in the governing of a Latin American country, was worrisome to American corporate and political interests.
Yet others contain short religious inscriptions, often in Latin, such as Rex Judæorum In nomine Patris Nazarenus ( B005 ) and may have been intended as amulets.
Yet another variant is the " ixnay " fish ( from the Pig Latin for " nix ", and punning on ΙΧΘΥΣ ).

Yet and designation
Yet, the IOC code EUA ( from the official French-language IOC designation, Équipe Unifiée d ' Allemagne ) is currently applied in hindsight in the IOC medal database, without further explanation given.

Yet and for
Yet long before the scheduled time for return, Donovan would be watching for every speck in the sky.
Yet though the Southern States lost the worst errors in their case, they did not lose the truth they fought for.
Yet this passion for passion, now that I look back on it with passion spent, seems somewhat overblown and operatic, though as a diva Miss Millay perfectly controlled her notes.
Yet they have accepted most of the extant `` welfare state '' provisions for health, security, and the regulation of economic affairs, and they overwhelmingly approve of the traditional `` liberalism '' of the Bill of Rights.
Yet although the Kennedy Administration, and the Eisenhower Administration before it, have both declared themselves solidly for repeal of the Connally amendment, as contrary to our best interests, no action has yet been taken.
Yet some, like Morris Manderscheid, would bankrupt themselves for the new ideas.
Yet, the object of the element of achieving through the process of goal attaining for this population appears to have been changed by circumstances brought about by the war.
Yet, in summarizing a series of careful essays on the Yalta Conference, Forrest Pogue could find no basis for Yalta becoming `` a symbol for betrayal and a shibboleth for the opponents of Roosevelt and international cooperation ''.
Yet certain aids were valuable and quite credibly necessary for reciting long stretches of verse without a pause.
Yet last year's volume probably topped 100 million lb. and expectations are for a market of 275 million lb. by 1964.
Yet, paradoxically, according to Dr. Maurice Linden, many wives despise their husbands for not standing up to them.
Yet from the dentist's point of view, bad-fitting teeth should be corrected for physical reasons.
Yet nationalism has lost few of its charms for the historian, writer or man in the street.
`` Yet Spelman has strong, deep roots, and will live for the blessing of generations to come ''.
Yet for better or for worse, the truth of the matter is that most American Catholic colleges do not owe their existence to general Catholic support but rather to the initiative, resourcefulness and sacrifices of individual religious communities.
Yet adequate compensation -- and particularly merely adequate compensation is no substitute for those intangibles which cause a man to sacrifice part of his earning potential by taking up college teaching in the first place.
Yet there were other motivations and actions which the Belgians took after independence for which history may not find them guiltless.
Yet, even after all these stratagems, the conscience of Christian liberality is still not laid to rest, any more than is the conscience of Harvard University for having done the abject penance for its rejection of Ralph Waldo Emerson's The Divinity School Address of naming its hall of philosophy after him.
Yet for much of the globe, Hollywood is just that -- prime, if not sole, source of knowledge.
Yet there was some precedent for it.

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