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Yet and at
Yet had he not visited the girl at Saw Buck he would never have been involved in this latest tangle.
Yet when, at war's end, the ex-Tory made the first move to resume correspondence, Jay wrote him from Paris, where he was negotiating the peace settlement:
Yet somehow, when officers were prodded into visiting Taliesin to execute the warrants, they would find neither Wright nor Olgivanna at home.
Yet you feel the orchestra is near at hand, and the individual instruments have the same firm presence associated with listening from a good seat in an acoustically perfect hall.
Yet a fresh inspection will indicate one crucial amendment: Beowulf and the Homeric poems are not at all formulaic to the same extent.
Yet the men all moved at the same instant.
Yet the most difficult problem in the Church's program of evangelism is right at this point -- helping new members to become participating, growing parts of the fellowship.
Yet the fact remains that such institutions do set men at odds with their fellows.
Yet, if he used all of the little means at his disposal, he would be instructing his students wrongly.
Yet we may with better reason suppose that it came originally from a foreign mythology, and that the accident of its numerical value in Greek merely caused it to be singled out at Alexandria for religious use.
Yet a simpler alternative interpretation of the conflict between these two figures is that the Historia Brittonum is preserving traditions hostile to the purported descendants of Vortigern, who at this time were a ruling house in Powys.
" Of the scholastics he says :" Yet they will have us beleeve, that by the Almighty power of God, one body may be at one and the same time in many places problem of the universals ; and many bodies at one and the same time in one place whole and the parts ; ... And these are but a small part of the Incongruencies they are forced to, from their disputing philosophically, in stead of admiring, and adoring of the Divine and Incomprehensible Nature ...."
Yet somehow they reached their second consecutive FA Cup final, and the big day at Wembley coincided with Busby's return to work.
Yet, at first, Constantine's new Rome did not have all the dignities of old Rome.
Yet another is the Greek saganaki, an appetizer of cheese served flambé at the table.
Yet at the same time, a maximum ceiling height of 2. 6 m ( 8. 5 ft ) in office area could still be achieved with careful coordination and dedicated integration.
Yet, at the 5th Congress of the Communist International ( July 1924 ), Grigory Zinoviev formally denounced Georg Lukács's heterodox definition of orthodox Marxism as exclusively derived from fidelity to the " Marxist method ", and not to Communist party dogmas ; and denounced the Marxism developments of the German theorist Karl Korsch.
Yet, when a distinction is made, Epipaleolithic is used for those cultures that were not much affected by the ending of the Ice Age ( like the Natufian and Khiamian cultures of Western Asia ) and the term Mesolithic is reserved for Western Europe where the extinction of the Megafauna had a great impact on the Paleolithic populations at the end of the Ice Age ( like European post-glacial cultures: Azilian, Sauveterrian, Tardenoisian, Maglemosian, etc.
" Yet, he was married according to the rites of the Church of England in both his first marriage at the church at Wallington, and in his second marriage on his deathbed in University College Hospital, and he left instructions that he was to receive an Anglican funeral.
Yet it was probably only in the middle of the next century, at the earliest, that Jerusalem again became the capital of Judah.
Yet in 1971 the teams were engaged in a heated race that went down to the final week of the season, where Miami won its first division title with a 10 – 3 – 1 title compared to the 10 – 4 Baltimore record after the Colts won the Week 13 matchup between them at home, but proceeded to lose the last game of the season to Boston.
Yet despite their mutual insistence on the self-evidence that " all men are created equal ", their insistence that the citizens of a republic be educated at public expense, and the evident parallel between the concepts of the " general welfare " and Rousseau's " general will ", some scholars maintain there is little to suggest that Rousseau had that much effect on Thomas Jefferson and other founding fathers.
Yet the full motivation for this ambitious operation is, at best, unclear.

Yet and one
Yet paradoxically my liberal friends continue to view Jefferson as one of their patron saints.
Yet often fear persists because, even with the most rigid ritual, one is never quite free from the uneasy feeling that one might make some mistake or that in every previous execution one had been unaware of the really decisive act.
Yet one has to go back only some sixty years.
Yet many psychologists and marriage counselors agree that domination of the sex relationship by one partner or the other can be unhealthy and even dangerous.
Yet Laos was now one of the most explosive headaches of statesmen around the globe.
Yet with all their skills, the appeal of Mantle and Maris in 1961 comes down to one basic: The home run.
Yet in the contemporary context this is precisely what one must not do.
Yet they keep running from one physician to another, largely to get a willing ear who will listen to their parade of troubles.
Yet this quaint dandified little man who, I was sorry to see, now limped badly, had been in his time one of the most celebrated members of the Belgian police.
Yet all appear to treasure the truth that liberates, and Jesus taught his followers to love one another.
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 because of its oil reserves and favorable agricultural conditions, Cameroon still has one of the best-endowed primary commodity economies in sub-Saharan Africa.
Yet, one cannot always trust Caesar and Tacitus when they ascribe individuals and tribes to one or the other category, although Caesar made clear distinctions between the two cultures.
" Yet another excerpt where Montesqieu's comparative approach is evident is the following one from Chapter XIII of Book XXIX:
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, writer Gore Vidal, in his autobiography Point to Point Navigation, recounted that Gable demanded that Cukor be fired off Wind because, according to Cukor, the young Gable had been a male hustler and Cukor had been one of his johns.
Yet, for most of its time, it produced one of the most liberal and tolerant Haitian governments ever.

Yet and point
Yet from the dentist's point of view, bad-fitting teeth should be corrected for physical reasons.
Yet, as Lemke and O ’ Connor point out, The Book of Lamentations, while adapting several traditional literary, historical, and cultural Near Eastern elements, is a unique literary composition, scripted to a specific historical situation, in response to an historical catastrophe, addressing the survivors of this catastrophe in a distinctive religious context.
Yet this art angers Guildenstern to the point where he strikes the Player because this theater makes it seem as if there are definite answers to all of Guildenstern's philosophical question.
In early development, the story department wrote their analysis of Hook's character: " He is a fop ... Yet very mean, to the point of being murderous.
Yet, a prince must ensure that he is not feared to the point of hatred, which is very possible.
Yet at this point in his career, Helms " hadn't played much role in the battle " over various strategies and choices ; he had then considered himself " below the salt ".
Yet, by 1600, another classification of the North Germanic language branches had arisen from a syntactic point of view, dividing them into an insular group ( Icelandic and Faroese ) and a continental group ( Danish, Norwegian and Swedish ).
Yet, apart from the title, we find only traditional Italian musical terms within the work, suggesting that Beethoven was probably trying to make a point in his use of Veränderungen.
Yet another negotiation point was the British expectation that the RAF would absorb Canadian air training graduates without restrictions, as in World War One, and distribute them across the RAF.
Yet the point has been made of the elaborate preparations for the attack in the dead of the night, after Kira's staff was tired out by entertaining guests and when snow muffled the footsteps of the attackers.
He is commonly thought of as being a proponent of Theory Y, but, as Edgar Schein tells in his introduction to McGregor's subsequent, posthumous ( 1967 ), book The Professional Manager: " In my own contacts with Doug, I often found him to be discouraged by the degree to which theory Y had become as monolithic a set of principles as those of Theory X, the over-generalization which Doug was fighting .... Yet few readers were willing to acknowledge that the content of Doug's book made such a neutral point or that Doug's own presentation of his point of view was that coldly scientific ".
Yet, at this point, does Farmer Franco really know it?
Yet Mahathir has not hesitated to point to America for justification of his own actions.
Yet another variation balances on a single point.
Yet the result of this process is an object entirely physically distinct from the starting point.
Yet according to historian James Belich, his achievements were gradually watered down to the point where his name was erased from the most widely-read New Zealand histories.
Yet this point has been contested by J. D. A Oglivy, who notes that the poem itself offers another explanation.
Yet Holmwood states that the most sophisticated forms of functionalism are based on “ a highly developed concept of action ”, and as was explained above, Parsons took as his starting point the individual and their actions.
Yet one can point to zones within the assemblage where less than a full charge resides, such as the area around an atom's nucleus.
Yet for Schmitt the political was not an autonomous domain equivalent to the other domains, but rather the existential basis that would determine any other domain should it reach the point of politics ( e. g. religion ceases to be merely theological when it makes a clear distinction between the " friend " and the " enemy ").
Yet because the wheels are not independent, when viewed from the side under acceleration or braking the pivot point is at infinity ( because both wheels have moved ) and the spring is directly inline with the wheel contact patch.

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