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Page "lore" ¶ 614
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often and shifts
In these French stories, the narrative focus often shifts from King Arthur himself to other characters, such as various Knights of the Round Table.
As such, she shifts alliances often.
However, medical practitioners often work long and inflexible hours, with shifts at unsociable times.
Since determinants of supply and demand other than the price of the good in question are not explicitly represented in the supply-demand diagram, changes in the values of these variables are represented by moving the supply and demand curves ( often described as " shifts " in the curves ).
Practical uses of supply and demand analysis often center on the different variables that change equilibrium price and quantity, represented as shifts in the respective curves.
" In practice, the application of the principle often shifts the burden of proof in a discussion.
Usually divided into scenes that are often defined by shifts in time and place.
It often shifts a neighbourhood's characteristics, e. g., racial-ethnic composition and household income, by adding new stores and resources in previously run-down neighbourhoods.
The vocabulary of a creole language consists of cognates from the parent languages, though there are often clear phonetic and semantic shifts.
However, the spectral resolution of most EEL spectrometers ( 0. 3-2 eV, typically 1eV ) is often too crude for the small pressure-induced shifts.
The relation between characters and the action of the story shifts historically, often miming shifts in society and its ideas about human individuality, self-determination, and the social order.
Because bit shifts are often much faster operations than division, replacing a division by a shift in this way can be a helpful step in program optimization.
With the first three generations of Haole playing key roles in the rise of the economic and political power shifts that have lasted through the current day, " Haole " evolved into a term that was often used in contempt.
Margolin said of his longtime colleague that despite Garner's health problems in the later years of The Rockford Files, he would often work long shifts, unusual for a starring actor, staying to do off-camera lines with other actors, doing his own stunts despite his knee problems.
The result of these two factors is that the usable spectrum shifts towards the lower frequencies and into the Medium Frequency ( MF ) range during winter nights, while on a day in full summer the higher frequencies tend to be more usable, often into the lower VHF range.
The Cherrycoke narrative shifts internally from one point of view to another, often relating events from the view of people Cherrycoke has never met.
Neurological symptoms most often are due to very low serum sodium levels ( usually < 115 mEq / L ), resulting in intracerebral osmotic fluid shifts and brain edema.
While the Christian religious view of things as Created, Fallen and being Redeemed has often been blended with speculative and dualistic schemes, it has never really become fully identified with them, so that there is historical continuity in Christian thought despite the fact that it has undergone numerous significant shifts, in Dooyeweerd's view.
However, a recent case described a savanna increasing its range at the expense of forest in response to climate variation, and potential exists for similar rapid, dramatic shifts in vegetation distribution as a result of global climate change, particularly at ecotones such as savannas so often represent.
The long period of evolution and shifts from one kind of waterbird lifestyle to another have obscured many plesiomorphies, while apomorphies apparently are quite often the result of parallel evolution, for example the " non-diving duck " type displayed by such unrelated genera as Dendrocygna, Amazonetta, and Cairina.
Each has a spouse who works and often leaves them alone on overtime shifts.
The early years proved somewhat chaotic as the club had little regular competition to play in, and matches would often start with players short, as men failed to turn up on time after their shifts in the local ironworks.
Thus, these time shifts can often be jarring and confusing, and require particularly close reading.

often and cannot
While my memory holds with relentless tenacity, as I cannot too often stress, to my wrongs, when it comes to my shames, it gestures and jokes and toys with chronology like a prestidigitator in the hope of distracting me from them.
Nevertheless, their conclusions and recommendations cannot please everybody, and they often represent a particular economic or political point of view.
`` Unfortunately '', says Chief Postal Inspector David H. Stephens, who has prosecuted many device quacks, `` the ghouls who trade on the hopes of the desperately ill often cannot be successfully prosecuted because the patients who are the chief witnesses die before the case is called up in court ''.
Impressions often appear in a symbolic form and cannot be taken at face value.
An Englishman he says often, " A fellow who thinks as much of himself as that cannot be worth much.
Aircraft with special characteristics that give them unique capabilities will often display those in their demos ; For example, Russian fighters with Thrust vectoring may be used to perform Pugachev's Cobra or the Kulbit, among other difficult manoeuvers that cannot be performed by other aircraft.
While they can synthesize arginine and histidine, they cannot produce it in sufficient amounts for young, growing animals, and so these are often considered essential amino acids.
When a player is genuinely deceived, he will often lose the point immediately because he cannot change his direction quickly enough to reach the shuttlecock.
He knew rhetoric, and often used figures of speech and rhetorical forms which cannot easily be reproduced in translation, depending as they often do on the connotations of the Latin words.
* The curve at a fixed offset from a given Bézier curve, often called an offset curve ( lying " parallel " to the original curve, like the offset between rails in a railroad track ), cannot be exactly formed by a Bézier curve ( except in some trivial cases ).
These anthropologists continue to concern themselves with the distinct ways people in different locales experience and understand their lives, but they often argue that one cannot understand these particular ways of life solely from a local perspective ; they instead combine a focus on the local with an effort to grasp larger political, economic, and cultural frameworks that impact local lived realities.
Goals frequently cannot be separated from each other and often conflict.
However in Daoism it refers more often to a meta-physical term that describes a force that encompasses the entire universe but which cannot be described nor felt.
It remains a matter of Canon Law ( and often a criterion for certain religious orders, especially Franciscans ) that priests do not own land and therefore cannot pass it on to legitimate or illegitimate children.
They often cite Christian Science's views on the nature / existence of evil or sin, the divinity and resurrection of Jesus, the Trinity, and a few other matters as demonstrating that it cannot be considered a Christian denomination.
This often leads to the neglect of badly needed repairs when the communities cannot come to an agreement among themselves about the final shape of a project.
There will always be an ethical remainder that cannot be taken into account or often even recognized.
In this sense, Euclidean geometry is more concrete than many modern axiomatic systems such as set theory, which often assert the existence of objects without saying how to construct them, or even assert the existence of objects that cannot be constructed within the theory.
Sally further displays her intelligence in the various mysteries in that she often can deduce who committed the crime, or whether a certain person is lying, but she simply cannot always prove it.
It is often associated with the pinning of the arms of an opponent so that they cannot cushion the impact of their head on the ground.
While noir is often associated with an urban setting, many classic noirs take place in small towns, suburbia, rural areas, or on the open road ; so setting cannot be its genre determinant, as with the Western.
Subjects are shielded from all time cues, often by a constant light protocol, by a constant dark protocol or by the use of light / dark conditions to which the organism cannot entrain such as the ultrashort protocol of one hour dark and two hours light.
He made a few mistakes ; he may well have made others that we cannot detect because he is our sole authority ; when he tried to describe buildings his command of language was usually inadequate ; he is often confused and obscure, though this may be as much his printer's fault as his own ; his prose is frequently difficult to read and painful to translate ; but he seems to us to be free from the dishonesty of the traveller who tries to exaggerate his own knowledge, importance, or courage.

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