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These and were
These were the ones Keith sought out -- the loners, the ones who killed for the joy of it, like himself.
These were the last words he ever uttered.
These two were going to be easy pickins.
These performances were being staged at historical monuments throughout Europe.
These were Oneida Indians.
These conceptions and the manner in which they were transposed into poetry or engendered by poetic form are intrinsic to western life from the time of Aeschylus to that of Shakespeare.
These basic ideas concerning the nature of religion were, Adams believed, some of the major keys to the understanding of history and the movement of society.
These were his public academic activities, domi forisque, in the college and in the university.
These early experiments were evidently not altogether satisfying to Patchen.
These people were not talking much about it, but you, a foreigner, sensed their apprehension and disappointment.
These public efforts were rare because Mr. Rayburn normally did his counseling, persuading and educating long before an issue reached its test on the House floor.
These microfossils indicate the swamp was `` formed during the Lower Cretaceous period when dinosaurs were at their heyday and when the first flowering plants were just appearing.
These were heroes nine feet tall to him ''.
These little songs, however, were sweet nothings from the heart, tender memories of his childhood, little melodies that anyone could hum and that would make one want to weep.
These were the ships of His Majesty's Navy, herding the hulks of the East Indies merchants and the yachts and ketches of the loyalists.
These trumps were more touching than they were anything else, and seemed to imply that the nights were long, her children ungrateful, and her marriage bewilderingly threadbare.
These were selected carefully and included not only detailed clinical information but adequate pathology of value for research and educational purposes.
These amendments to the Vocational Rehabilitation Act were designed to help provide for more specialized rehabilitation facilities, for more sheltered and `` half-way '' workshops, for greater numbers of adequately trained personnel, for more comprehensive services to individuals ( particularly to the homebound and the blind ), and for other administrative improvements to increase the program's overall effectiveness.
These plans, like Du Pont's, contained provisions for passing the vote on Du Pont's General Motors shares on to the ultimate stockholders of Du Pont, Christiana, and Delaware, except that officers and directors of the three companies, their spouses, and other people living in their households, as well as other specified persons, were to be totally disenfranchised.
These curves were derived by an analysis of extensive skywave measurement data.
These were educated men, who, as Mr. Justice Holmes was fond of saying, formed their inductions out of experience under the burden of responsibility.
These boys acknowledged an introduction to anybody by gently pressing one of his hands in both of theirs, while they gazed, misty-eyed with care, into the eyes of the person they were meeting.

These and characteristically
These tics characteristically wax and wane, can be suppressed temporarily, and are preceded by a premonitory urge.
These early songs for communal singing were arguably the first examples of contemporary worship music, and were characteristically simple, often only involving a three chord structure.
These corporations were not popularly elected: characteristically they were self-selecting oligarchies, were nominated by tradesmen's guilds or were under the control of the lord of the manor.
These rock formations are characteristically composed of sandstone with layers of quartz.
These characteristically use polling inside the driver loops, and can exhibit tremendous throughput.
These lakes frequently have a broad littoral zone ; still water or flow-through ; sand or peat substrate ; variable water chemistry, but characteristically colored to clear, acidic to slightly alkaline, soft to moderately hard water with moderate mineral content sodium, chloride, sulfate ; oligo-mesotrophic to eutrophic.
These were characteristically tall, with slightly ovoid bodies, flat bases, parrot-beak spouts and strap handles.
These systems characteristically use < ch, sh, zh > rather than < č, š, ž >, and < y > rather than < j >.

These and derived
These affairs temporarily relieved the monotony of school or work activities containing no anticipation of achievement and joy of craftsmanship, no sense of dignity derived from a job well done.
These drugs have been derived from NSAIDs.
These uniforms differentiated them from the Army and the Regular RIC, and gave rise to the force's nickname: Christopher O ' Sullivan wrote in the Limerick Echo on 25 March 1920 that, meeting a group of recruits on a train at Limerick Junction, the attire of one reminded him of the Scarteen Hunt, whose " Black and Tans " nickname derived from the coloration of its Kerry Beagles.
These include fracture patterns in crystals of quartz and feldspar, and formation of high-pressure materials such as diamond, derived from graphite and other carbon compounds, or stishovite and coesite, varieties of shocked quartz.
These words are usually derived from non-English words.
These alkaloids are derived from plants and block cell division by preventing microtubule function.
These chloroplasts are surrounded by three membranes and contain chlorophylls A and C, along with other pigments, so are probably derived from a captured green alga.
These equations are derived from Maxwell's equations.
These are discussed below, and may each be derived by means of a special case of continuous-time Markov processes known as a birth-death process.
These half-cell potentials are derived from the assignment of 0 volts to the standard hydrogen electrode ( SHE ).
These ideas were informed by a moral philosophy derived from epistemological concerns regarding the inherent limits of human knowledge.
These words are cognates derived from Germanic rīdan " to ride ", derived from the Proto-Indo-European root reidh -.
These include sphingosine-1-phosphate, a sphingolipid derived from ceramide that is a potent messenger molecule involved in regulating calcium mobilization, cell growth, and apoptosis ; diacylglycerol ( DAG ) and the phosphatidylinositol phosphates ( PIPs ), involved in calcium-mediated activation of protein kinase C ; the prostaglandins, which are one type of fatty-acid derived eicosanoid involved in inflammation and immunity ; the steroid hormones such as estrogen, testosterone and cortisol, which modulate a host of functions such as reproduction, metabolism and blood pressure ; and the oxysterols such as 25-hydroxy-cholesterol that are liver X receptor agonists.
These are primarily triglyceride esters derived from plants and animals.
These are described with a word before the acronym: a " mini MPV " is derived from a supermini, a " compact MPV " is based on a small family car and a " large MPV " has about the same size as a large family car.
These laws are derived from the Torah.
These separate plots were almost immediately resurrected in a separately developing tradition that partly derived from the commedia dell ' arte, a long-flourishing improvisatory stage tradition of Italy.
These properties are illustrated in the formula ( derived from the formula for the orbital period )
These two terms are from Greek ἁπλόος haplóos " single " and διπλόος diplóos " double " combined with εἶδος eîdos " form " ( compare idol from Latin īdōlum, that from Greek εἴδωλον eídōlon derived from εἶδος eîdos ).
These equations of motion are then supplemented by commutation relations derived from the canonical quantization procedure described below, thereby incorporating quantum mechanical effects into the behavior of the field.
These observations corroborated Alexander Friedman's 1922 work, in which he derived the famous Friedmann equations.

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