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Page "Schaff–Herzog Encyclopedia of Religious Knowledge" ¶ 12
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Yet and has
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 no detail was too small to receive attention from this master, and as a result the playing here has humor, delicacy, and radiant humanity.
Yet one has to go back only some sixty years.
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 the truth, according to the New Testament, is that every local church has its existence only by being the embodiment of the whole church in that particular place.
Yet it exists and has an objective reality which can be experienced and known.
Yet Ruth is not any foreigner ; she has embraced Israel's religion and way of life.
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 Cuba has managed to retain reasonably high levels of healthcare and education.
Yet Fulham's comfortable Premier League table positions in the previous years and the fact that, for the previous three seasons the ground has been filled to capacity, means stadium expansion is a viable option.
Yet, most importantly, the observer has no influence on the specific element of the world that becomes reality.
Yet in nations or regions where traditional folk music is a badge of cultural or national identity, the loss of traditional music can be slowed ; this is held to be true, for instance in the case of Bangladesh, Hungary, India, Ireland, Scotland, Latvia, Turkey, Portugal, Brittany, and Galicia, Greece and Crete all of which retain their traditional music to some degree, in some such areas the decline of traditional music and loss of traditions has been reversed.
Yet, this would not mean that the Muslims in that nation has to agree with that fatwā, or that the fatwā is religiously binding for them.
Yet, Cicero could also refer to his popularist opponent Clodius, publicly and scathingly, as a bustuarius – literally, a " funeral-man ", implying that Clodius has shown the moral temperament of the lowest sort of gladiator.
Yet Q1 has value: it contains stage directions that reveal actual stage practices in a way that Q2 and F1 do not ; it contains an entire scene ( usually labelled 4. 6 ) that does not appear in either Q2 or F1 ; and it is useful for comparison with the later editions.
Yet, one modern scholar, reading between the lines, has described the work of Hecataeus as " a curious false start to history " because, despite its critical spirit, it failed to liberate history from myth.
Yet from the still surviving recollections in his mind, the Author has frequently purposed to finish for himself what had been originally, as it were, given to him.
Wall has also alluded to his faith when he has spoken at conferences, including a rather straightforward statement of his beliefs at the August, 1997 Perl Conference and a discussion of Pilgrim's Progress at the YAPC ( Yet Another Perl Conference ) in June, 2000.
Yet time has told a different story.
Yet for other critics, it has not been so easy to resolve the question of Macbeth's motivation.
Yet, the ability to establish and conduct business easily has been cause for economic hardship ; the 2010 the World Economic Forum ranked Poland near the bottom of OECD countries in terms of the clarity, efficiency and neutrality of the legal framework used by firms to settle disputes.
" Yet without a detailed argument against authenticity, Daegling notes that " the film has not gone away.
Yet the most popular, and at the same time most stigmatized, use of psychedelics in Western culture has been associated with the search for direct religious experience, enhanced creativity, personal development, and " mind expansion ".

Yet and been
Yet had he not visited the girl at Saw Buck he would never have been involved in this latest tangle.
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, the idea imbedded in each was identical: to surround the unknown with mystery and to isolate that class which had been given special dominion over the secrets of God.
Yet it could not have been more than a matter of seconds, and then the front of the British army came into view.
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 when the dear baby came, he had Tillie over here in a jiffy, and was as attentive and sweet and worried and happy when it was all over as any husband could have been.
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 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 it had been the capital of the state for over a thousand years, and it might have seemed unthinkable to suggest that the capital be moved to a different location.
Yet, confirmed reports of coyotes killing a human have been documented.
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.
:" Anyone who studies Bahá ' ísm learns very soon of the volume sacred to those who profess this religion and known as " The Most Holy Book ... Yet, strange to say, although the teachings of Bahá have been widely proclaimed in Great Britain and America, only fragments of al-Kitab al-Aqdas have been translated previously into English.
Yet their respective stories have in many ways been very different.
Yet this kind of duos have not always been the case.
Yet cooperation and seemingly even altruism have evolved and persist, and naturalists have been hard pressed to explain why.
Yet Adorno's attempts to break out of the sociology of music were, at this time, twice thwarted: neither the study of Mannheim he had been working on for years nor extracts from his study of Husserl were accepted by the Zeitschrift.

Yet and useful
Yet a machine cannot be left " on " for any length of time either, as this would drain the battery too much to make it useful for carrying around.
Yet another useful identity follows from these three:
Yet through this William Motherwell carried out useful literary and cultural work, simply by the act of writing down and recording.
Yet another useful identity follows from these three:
Yet, it still may be useful as an ethical guide for a speaker and a critical tool for a reader or audience.
Yet the issuing such proclamation is useful as publishing to all living in the district occupied those rules of conduct which will govern the conqueror in the exercise of his authority.
One farmer whose place is located near the reservation has been continually bothered by the Indians cutting his fences and turning their cattle in to graze on his property .” Yet, in the very same year we hear this report in the Creston Review, June 21, 1912: “ Agent Galbraith says everything is in good condition and the majority of the Indians are at work picking berries for the ranchers who find their help useful and profitable .”
Yet, while Born's definition was not applicable on rigid bodies, it was very useful in describing rigid motions of bodies.
Yet her husband Alfred became increasingly obstructive to the cause of women's education, believing that women had nothing useful to say.

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