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According to this view, a contingent effect of the type ut in pluribus is in its cause before its occurence in a determined way, albeit changeably. |
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Critics view the decision as an example of moral bankruptcy on the part of the administration. |
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The overall grade is a compilation of input from these sources. Thus it provides a true 360-degree view of the officer evaluated. |
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If the general view is declining Coe price because supply increasing steadily, then why chiong to showroom now? |
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In an alternate view John Gillingham points out that for centuries Richard was considered a model king. |
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A male god stands in three-quarter view to right, wearing a chlamys fastened at his right shoulder with a round clasp. |
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This view has been challenged recently and modern historians credit him with some significant achievements. |
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This view persisted for a while but, with time, the image of the king changed. |
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In the view of chronobiologists, individual biological rhythms are always regulated in a similar manner. |
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Intention is when the mind, with great earnestness, and of choice, fixes its view on any idea. |
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Standing on the hilltop, Richard had a wide, unobstructed view of the area. |
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The mountain road had several lookouts where you could enjoy the view. |
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Faith, not pious acts, prayers or masses, in this view, can secure the grace of God. |
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I was of the view that there ought to be clear blue water between us and the Tories on this issue. |
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Recent historians, however, have taken a more complicated view of Elizabeth. |
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In response and reaction to this hyperbole, modern historians and biographers have tended to take a more dispassionate view of the Tudor period. |
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If he could get our point of view and let some woman take a hand at him, she might efface his irresistibleness and make a man of him. |
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Textual evidence also supports the view that several of the plays were revised by other writers after their original composition. |
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From a legal point of view, use of clickwrap clarifies matters considerably. |
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In the early decades of the 20th century the Whig school was the dominant theoretical view. |
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This view was confirmed by a court ruling during the treason trial of Henry Vane the Younger. |
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This view, which by a mass of evidence may be shown to be erroneous, is exerting a very prejudicial effect on the progress of actinochemistry. |
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There is his view discussed earlier, for instance, that the actional realm is inimical to human purpose. |
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A reader has shared with us a Facebook post by jambu ICA officer Adilla Ramli. She gives her view on the recent ICA jams. |
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Comestibles of all sorts came to view, and a smell of cooking spread itself among the trees. |
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We watched the ship gradually fade from view as it sailed away. |
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It was a pity, Mel Bakersfeld reflected, that runway snow teams were not on more public view.... Airport men called the group a Conga Line. |
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Looking back on Charles's reign, Tories tended to view it as a time of benevolent monarchy whereas Whigs perceived it as a terrible despotism. |
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James refused to view Hough's election as valid and told the fellows to elect the Bishop of Oxford. |
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Some said he was the greatest of his time but with the amount of talent around that view was contestable. |
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Pepys was a senior official in the Navy Office by then, and he ascended the Tower of London on Sunday morning to view the fire from a turret. |
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Or the merely verbal pressure of jawbonings by prominent people may try to silence a certain point of view. |
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In this view, the tendency of the philosophes in particular to apply rationality to every problem is considered the essential change. |
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Everyone in the crowd was jostling each other trying to get a better view. |
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In his view the malady had been triggered by stress over the death of his youngest and favourite daughter, Princess Amelia. |
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James, view Churchill's motives as honourable and disinterested, in that he felt deeply for the King. |
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An aerial view of the countryside shows wide swathes of green. |
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They know it's wrong but as soon as they have an opportunity to view these images or chat with their cyberlover again, they grab it. |
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From this point of view all the diseases of the nervous system may be represented as disturbances of the motor functions or as kinesioneuroses. |
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The Conservative Party upholds the view that NATO should remain the most important security alliance for the United Kingdom. |
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Many people inside and outside Northern Ireland use other names for Northern Ireland, depending on their point of view. |
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A decimate tool allows us to obtain a more coarse-grained view of the data over the full n-dimensional space. |
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Certainly, you would have to be of the view that a case is incorrectly decided, but I think even that is not adequate. |
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On such a view, the despoilment of pristine wilderness is the loss of something intrinsically good. |
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The lambers sometimes brought their friends and acquaintances to see the view and relax in what must have seemed a bohemian atmosphere. |
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Queen Victoria and the Prince of Wales attended to view a working dairy, agricultural machinery and a wide range of farm animals. |
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A very superficial and Americanocentric view of history was a necessary adjunct to the reigning Americanocentric view of world affairs. |
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Another good place to see the spectacle is Over Bridge, but the view here is rather restricted by the adjacent railway bridge. |
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Considered from this point of view, we say Punch is a really amusing and laughtersome publication. |
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As the highest ground in England, Scafell Pike naturally has a very extensive view, ranging from the Mourne Mountains to Snowdonia. |
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Yet, there is no empirical evidence for this theory from an anthropological point of view. |
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In the south aisle of the cathedral a glass panel in the floor enables a view of the remains of a Roman mosaic pavement. |
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Another view considers systems with significant market power, inequality of bargaining power, or information asymmetry to be less than free. |
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Soon we had a good view of the diprotodons, relatives of the present-day wombat but vastly larger. |
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Anyway, bums were always on view in our family, getting leathered with a heavy belt. |
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Since inflation lowers real wages, Keynesians view inflation as the solution to involuntary unemployment. |
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The IIR sensor has a stabilised mount so that it can maintain a target within its field of view. |
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This approach can lead to a Disneyland of a garden that busily vies for attention with the view, bringing out the best in neither. |
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Signor Papini, the leader of italian pragmatism, grows fairly dithyrambic over the view that it opens, of man's divinely-creative functions. |
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The view is very different when it is seen from another angle. |
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The best ecopoetry, in Bate's view, is not overtly political, let alone propagandistic. |
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Not surprisingly, in view of their country's defeat in the Crimean War, they were Anglophobes to a man. |
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This idea arose in view of the anomotreme pollen-grains studded with apertures. |
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From then on I have been waiting for a new opportunity to enjoy them more intensively than through a view from the summit of an eight-thousander. |
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There is a long argument to prove that foreign conquest is not the end of the State, showing that many people took the imperialist view. |
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In a medicinal point of view it may be considered as an inferior sort of epicerastic. |
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He feels that wealthy people view him with contempt because he is poor. |
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In another case an etheromaniac earl committed extravagances which, from a moral point of view, classified him among mental deficients. |
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The second challenge in talking about marketing leadership is the persistent view that marketing leaders are born, not made. |
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The cosmicity of the empty, blank view from the telescope made him feel lonely. |
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She had a fantastic view of her own importance that none of her colleagues shared. |
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There are feeble-mindednesses rather than a single condition of feeble-mindedness from this point of view. |
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Fire-worship brings into view again, though under different aspects and with different results, the problems presented by water-worship. |
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The minute he was out of sight I follered him, but when it come into view, him and Gaspar was high-tailing through the hills. |
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The hill provides a commanding view of the surrounding countryside. |
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We are all in the same pot, we are all guilty, or innocent, depending on whether we take the frog's view or the Olympian view. |
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On the first view, emotions are purely biological phenomena.... They are arational and amoral, like other natural bodily functions. |
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In 3 of his cases, abnormal findings were equivocal or absent in the anteroposterior view but clearly demonstrable in the frog view. |
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She installed frosted windows, since there was a clear view of her bathroom from her neighbor's bedroom. |
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It turned out that a neighbor's ailanthus tree was blocking her view. Ms. Powis's answer was meant to discourage both trespassing and arborcide. |
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Undoubtedly the age of the Antonines was much better than any later age until the Renaissance, from the point of view of the general happiness. |
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How close he didn't realize until the machine slipped over the grasstops, coming into view just two meters away. |
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The haveli was a world within a world, self-contained and totally hidden from the view of the casual passer-by. |
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They, under false pretence of amity and cheer, the British peers invite, the German healths to view. |
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The 'traditional' view is that settlers from Ireland founded the kingdom, bringing Gaelic language and culture with them. |
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Note the mirror next to the rear warning lights that allows the driver to view the backstep area of the apparatus. |
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From this point of view we shall more readily understand many cases of height-dizziness and height-fear. |
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And not the least, they smashed the racialist view of peasants as uncultured recipients of cultures from beneficient foreigners. |
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A different view has been taken by the Scottish judge Lord Cooper of Culross. |
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Knowing the real reasons for his actions enabled her to view them in a better light. |
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Adams' knowledge of the area offers the reader a precise view of the natural beauty of the Lake District. |
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Our spirits, biggened by their griefs and fears, Sadden and dwindle, with their backward view, All they behold. |
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Moorman, claimed the first extant work of English literature, Beowulf, was written in Yorkshire, this view does not have common acceptance today. |
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From the 3rd century to the 16th century, the dominant view held that the Earth was the rotational center of the universe. |
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Such a teleological view gave Aristotle cause to justify his observed data as an expression of formal design. |
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This contrasts with the traditional view that their origin lies in mainland Europe with the Hallstatt culture. |
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From the point of view of human archaeology, it falls in the Paleolithic and Mesolithic periods. |
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This allows a modern view of Bell Beakers to contradict results of anthropologic research. |
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This migrationist view long informed later views of the origins of the British Iron Age and the making of the modern nations. |
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Overall, the traditional view is that religion was practised in natural settings in the open air. |
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However, several sites interpreted as Iron Age shrines seem to contradict this view which may derive from Victorian and later Celtic romanticism. |
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Several authors have supposed it to be Celtic in origin, while others view it as a name coined by Greeks. |
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This view has been challenged by the hypothesis that the Celtic languages of the British Isles form a phylogenetic Insular Celtic dialect group. |
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While they can be seen as motivated by outright aggression and imperialism, historians typically take a much more nuanced view. |
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The incipient bipolarist undertone of this document also owed much to Hansen's view of the economic factors. |
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The following is not the popular view of marriage in our hyperfeminist culture, nevertheless it is God's view. |
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The traditional view is that northern Britain descended into anarchy during Albinus's absence. |
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Looking down from the seventh floor balcony gave them a bird's-eye view of the street below. |
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Stalin certainly held this view, and so did many Bolsheviks, with their hypostasization of social forces over individual desires and intentions. |
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From this point of view it makes no sense to stick rigidly to the idea of our own bodyhood as something with bounded extension in space. |
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The traditional view of inspiration is that God worked through human authors so that what they produced was what God wished to communicate. |
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The first Broad Church, in her view, included Coleridge, Arnold, Kingsley, and Maurice, and was spiritual in the same way as the Evangelicals. |
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This, reacting to a world dominated by Enlightenment rationalism, expressed a romantic view of a Golden Age of chivalry. |
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In this view, held by the majority of historians until the mid to late twentieth century, much of England was cleared of its prior inhabitants. |
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Another view, probably the most widely held today, is that the migrants were relatively few, centred on a warrior elite. |
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To view this mountain I and my little family set off in a caleche on the third morning after our arrival at Bangor. |
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This view has influenced much of the linguistic, scholarly and popular perceptions of the process of anglicisation in Britain. |
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Another theory has challenged this view and started to examine evidence that the majority of Anglo Saxons were Brittonic in origin. |
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In Michael Wood's view, the poem confirms the truth of William of Malmesbury's account of the ceremony. |
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So maybe the phenomenon is not so alien, after all but this view raises some other issues, such as why are cellotaphs everywhere now? |
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In the view of historians David Dumville and Janet Nelson he may have agreed not to marry or have heirs in order to gain acceptance. |
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However, the English nobility took a different view, and the Witenagemot recalled Aethelred from Normandy. |
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Newton's Principia formulated the laws of motion and universal gravitation that dominated scientists' view of the physical universe for the next three centuries. |
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Let us, indeed, see how the point of view has changed which was held in regard to those cultivated and glib accumbents who in former days were taken for real social workers. |
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Sizing the acetabulum on an orthogonal lateral view of the acetabulum will provide additional insight on sizing, particularly in the nonhemispheric acetabulae. |
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Afrikanerdom is being repositioned as an endangered minority within a liberal democracy. From a strategic point of view this must be judged a good move. |
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Oh! could I paint his figure as I see it now, still present to my transported imagination! a whole length of an allperfect, manly beauty in full view. |
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The princess of whom his majesty had an ambulatory view in his travels. |
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To the degree that my universe intersects with the Angelverse, I view Angel as far more than a creature tormented by blood cravings, past horrors, and mystical forces. |
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My view is free from apeirophobia, the horror of the infinite, which colored so much of what was written at the beginning of this century about the foundations of mathematics. |
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A view South across the Kent Weald from the North Downs Way near Detling. |
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One would not be able to return from an extended holiday and drive off in the family car in view of the boiloff from even the best insulated tank. |
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When you look at a chair, you are aware of its shape from a particular point of view, but defenders of this objection insist that you are also aware of its chairness. |
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While he may not agree with the design aesthetic, Mr. King's essay smacks of a citycentric view that suggests that authentic experiences are impossible in the suburbs. |
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That citycentric view has not always gone over well outside New York. |
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A worldwide TV audience had a close-up view of the astronauts when they splashed down and as they emerged from the bobbing spaceship they call Gumdrop. |
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My voice and the rising voices of millions of other Americans who share this view represent more than the codgy old attempt of one generation to steal the fun of another. |
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Most people seem to take the common-sensical view that or sometimes functions inclusively and sometimes exclusively, and this is the position that the OED takes. |
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Since indirect speech consists of only one experience, the only point of view is that of the quoting speaker, and present and NOW are cotemporal with the act of quotation. |
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In contradistinction to this view, Abraham and Torok's theory of cryptonymy construes the bar or sign of repression as an object of investigation that gives itself to be read. |
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The knowledge of men hitherto hath been determined by the view or sight. |
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From a workflow point of view, the access to these tools seems to have been guided by artists with experience with exposure sheets and traditional animation. |
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This gets to the heart of the matter because, in the parthenogenic state, the fruits are more edible and the trees more productive from the human's point of view. |
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Although eggcrate louvers can effectively cut off the view of bright lamps, the grid itself can become rather bright, especially when it is white. |
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Some thinkers take the view that, beginning with the work of Descartes, epistemology began to replace metaphysics as the most important area of philosophy. |
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When it reported in 1908, it took a strongly hereditarian view of mental deficiency, which was not surprising given that many of its members were paid-up eugenists. |
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As each skull was taken out, the exhumer held it up to the view of the onlookers, when a wailing cry would be heard as they greeted the remains of their dead relative. |
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The frog's view sees the world and its problems from the bottom up. |
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We routinely use a lateral frog view for followup hip evaluation but occasionally obtain a cross-table lateral view to evaluate acetabular component version. |
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The hoblin leaned over to get a better view of Princess's backside. |
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However, some archaeologists have argued against this view, saying there is no archaeological or placename evidence for a migration or a takeover by a small group of elites. |
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Therefore, the president of the bench's view of the case is not neutral and may be biased while conducting the trial after the reading of the dossier. |
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As the highest ground in England, Scafell Pike naturally has a very extensive view on a clear day, ranging from the Mourne Mountains in Northern Ireland to Snowdonia in Wales. |
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This project has been pronounced as one of the best places to view birds by Bill Oddie, the celebrity bird watcher and former host of the BBC's Spring Watch Programme. |
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Seneca's Apocolocyntosis reinforces the view of Claudius as an unpleasant fool and this remained the official view for the duration of Nero's reign. |
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The traditional view of historians, informed by the work of Michael Rostovtzeff, was of a widespread economic decline at the beginning of the 5th century. |
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However, the generally accepted view of British history, is that the inhabitants of Britain at this time spoke a Celtic language related to modern Welsh. |
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In its preface, he argued that Zosimus' picture of Constantine was superior to that offered by Eusebius and the Church historians, offered a more balanced view. |
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Others view baptism as a purely symbolic act, an external public declaration of the inward change which has taken place in the person, but not as spiritually efficacious. |
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Supporters of the Celtic hypothesis criticise the view taken in many textbooks that because there are only a few loanwords from Celtic there was no other influence. |
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It takes a little time for the personal fatty acids to impregnate new shoes or boots, but from the scent point of view leather is a sponge, and the personal scent is left. |
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In view of this incommensurableness of most numbers and their respective logarithms, only an approximate definition can be given of a logarithm in general. |
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Although earlier historians argued that women became less free and lost rights with the conquest, current scholarship has mostly rejected this view. |
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From a political point of view, continental issues were given more attention from the monarchs of England than the British ones already under the Normans. |
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Influential as Stubbs was, it was long before this view was challenged. |
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The classical view is that the many casualties among the nobility continued the changes in feudal English society caused by the effects of the Black Death. |
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In view of this biochemical diversity, the possibilities of interspecies hybridization in this genus are very interesting and worthy of attention. |
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In 1534, Cromwell initiated a Visitation of the Monasteries ostensibly to examine their character, but in fact, to value their assets with a view to expropriation. |
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Some commentators have seen this change in mood as evidence of a more serene view of life on Shakespeare's part, but it may merely reflect the theatrical fashion of the day. |
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In recent decades, most historians have criticised him, the main exception being Kevin Sharpe who offered a more sympathetic view of Charles that has not been widely adopted. |
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He became an Independent Puritan after undergoing a religious conversion in the 1630s, taking a generally tolerant view towards the many Protestant sects of his period. |
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Although Professor Davidson took a very jaundiced view of the Neptune probe, it had already been approved and he saw no point in sending more good money after bad. |
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If we have experienced a hostile world in childhood, we will continue to view almost everyone with a jaundiced eye and react to them according to our perception. |
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Unfortunately for him, the House of Commons failed to view him as a reluctant participant in the scandal, instead believing that he was the author of the policy. |
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The proponents of this view, most famously Adam Smith in 1776, argued that wealth was created by human endeavour and was thus potentially infinite. |
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They stayed at Worsley Hall, with a view of the canal, and were given a trip between Patricroft railway station and Worsley Hall, on state barges. |
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In the Luftwaffe, there was a cautious view of strategic bombing. |
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From the German point of view, March 1941 saw an improvement. |
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This is the result of the legal positivist view that the court is only interpreting the legislature's intent and therefore detailed exposition is unnecessary. |
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In earlier eras, people often suggested that this presumption did not apply if the past decision, in the view of the court's current members, was demonstrably erroneous. |
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Chiswick Eyot is a familiar landmark on the Boat Race course, while Glover's Island forms the centrepiece of the spectacular view from Richmond Hill. |
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The latter view implies a free market is not necessarily deregulated, although some of those with the former belief speak of free markets and deregulated markets as similar. |
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