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How To Use Cf. In A Sentence

  • bawd:" Cf. Letter 60, note 14 and Feb. 18, 1712-13. The Journal to Stella
  • With this technology, theorists can distinguish the values of the two descriptions above, since they are structures with different components (cf. Carnap's [1947] notion of intensional isomorphism). Names
  • Osons le dire: nos arbitrages ont une forme maniaco-dépressive avec de fortes amplitudes émotionnelles pouvant conduire à la folie ou au suicide cf. Archive 2009-04-10
  • Abbiamo pranzato in un posto piuttosto chic, e ammirato il ghiaccio che galleggiava sull'Hudson - cf. la foto piu' su, e qualche altra sulla mia pagina di Flickr. Archive 2009-01-01
  • Dioecious Flowers unisexual; the male and female flowers on different plants (cf. monoecious). Chapter 9
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  • ECF does much more than implement RFC 119, so in order to use distributed services, you must create an instance of the ecf. r_osgi.peer container. PlanetJava
  • Far from being just a communication of factual data - "informative" - the loving truth of the Gospel is creative and life-changing - "performative" cf. Archive 2008-04-13
  • Cf. Spectator, No. 454: "I went afterwards to Robin's, and saw people who had dined with me at the fivepenny ordinary just before, give bills for the value of large estates. The Journal to Stella
  • Sputum induction using inhalation of hypertonic saline appears to be safe for individuals with CF.
  • Greek; for the Greek _arthron_ [* Cf. William of Auxerre, Summa Aurea] which the Latin renders "articulus," signifies a fitting together of distinct parts: wherefore the small parts of the body which fit together are called the articulations of the limbs. Summa Theologica, Part II-II (Secunda Secundae) Translated by Fathers of the English Dominican Province
  • The edition of Leibniz's philosophical works in Latin and French, published by Rudolph Erich Raspe (Leibniz 1765; cf. Hallo 1934) contained some up to then unpublished letters and six pieces from the unpublished papers, of which two, “Difficultates quaedam logicae” and “Historia et commendatio linguae charactericae”, are relevant to logic. Leibniz's Influence on 19th Century Logic
  • _ H. - So. supposes hēafod-weard, _a guard of honor_, such as sovereigns or presumptive rulers had, to be meant by hafalan hȳdan; hence, _you need not give me any guard_, etc.Cf. Schmid, _Gesetze der A. _, 370-372. l. Beowulf
  • The British bourgeoisie always pursued its interests in a transnational context (cf. Global Capitalism and National Decline
  • Cf.Theogn. 1244, {ethos ekhon solion pistios antitupon}. Hiero
  • With these goes the Wadman, who dealt in, or grew, the dye-plant called woad; cf. Flaxman. The Romance of Names
  • This is shown by the form; cf. ne'er-do-well, Fr. vaurien, Ger. The Romance of Names
  • Fine sentiment, this noblesse oblige (cf. the archangelic dignity in Milton, Paradise Lost, I think). Cyropaedia
  • With 1-3 cf. MacLennan SNR (1909), 50: "Ride horsie, ride, ride horsie, ride, Ride awa 'to Aiberdeen, and buy white breid. Carle Rade tae Aberdeen
  • Freudian (cf. "Die Zelle") than in Jungian pan-mystical terms of lower ego versus higher Self, or ignorance versus Wisdom. Kafka and the Coincidence of Opposites
  • AmE lieuténant, BrE lefténant littérateur literatër lorgnette, lorgnon lornyét, lornyón louche loôsh luthier-a maker of stringed instruments such as violins or guitars məshêen madame brothel, Madame title madáme, cf. mádam shopping madeleine mádeleíne mademoiselle madame wàzél maisonette maizonét maître d'hôtel métradô-tél, mâitradô-tél maladroit maladrŏit malcontent malines malêen mandoline (also 'mandolin' in English) mándə-lín margarine marjərìne marque type Citizendium, the Citizens' Compendium - Recent changes [en]
  • In branch II there may be an onomatop ic element; for formation and meaning cf. dimple, rimple, rumple, wrimple.] Medallion Vulcan | SciFi, Fantasy & Horror Collectibles
  • The trouble is that the analysis ” absurdly ” makes it seem as though when two things have one degree of brightness there could be a substantive question which of the two ” x or y ” it was ” as though a degree of brightness were some kind of corpuscle whose association with a thing made it bright (cf. Klagge and Nordmann, Wittgenstein's Logical Atomism
  • It cannot altogether be granted that the value of a process for diluting acetylene with carbon dioxide has been established, except in so far as the mere presence of the diluent may somewhat diminish the tendency of the acetylene to polymerise as it passes through a hot burner (_cf. Acetylene, the Principles of Its Generation and Use
  • Protestant theology emphasizes Grace over Law — Jewish and Muslim theologies are all about Law; while Catholic theology certainly gives some importance to Grace (hard not to, given the Pauline epistles), its praxis is extremely legalistic (cf. Luther, M.). The Volokh Conspiracy » Why Catholics and Jews?
  • Since the "f" sign was an Etruscan innovation, it could have been identical in name to Latin ef, or another possibility is *fau a rhyme with the digamma *vau, cf. waw. An online Etruscan Dictionary has arrived
  • With sense 2 cf. French morion punishment inflicted on soldiers (1605), so called in allusion to the hat suspended at the end of the shaft of the halberd which held the soldier while the punishment was inflicted. Medallion Vulcan | SciFi, Fantasy & Horror Collectibles
  • The gerundial inf. with tō expresses purpose, defines a noun or adjective, or, with the verb be, expresses duty or necessity passively; cf. Beowulf
  • W. proposes the compd. eafor-heáfodsegn, = _helm_; cf. l. Beowulf
  • On the term Amata, Cf. Questions of Milinda (S.B.E.), Vol. i. Psalms of the Sisters
  • This shows that just as locative repine and inessive repinθi are forms of *repin, so too are locative haθe and haθrθi forms of *hanθ cf. hanθin. Oddly formed locatives with inessive postclitic in Etruscan
  • Gr. kotyledon a cup-shaped hollow, navelwort, fr. kotyle Cf. Cotula) 1. VERBATIM: The Language Quarterly Vol XIV No 3
  • Osirian cycle were born during the epagomenal day (cf.p. 247 of this History), and the allusions to the Osirian legend which are met with in the Pyramid texts, prove that the days were added long before the time when those inscriptions were cut. History Of Egypt, Chaldæa, Syria, Babylonia, and Assyria, Volume 1 (of 12)
  • [72] Another _reductio ad absurdum_ or _ad impietatem_, cf. _supra_, p. 98, note b. The Theological Tractates and The Consolation of Philosophy
  • 'doxies, which is quite an assumption on my part [if I were really to make it], cf. Midwest Conservative Journal
  • Cf. ‘no jutty, frieze, buttress, nor coign of vantage, but this bird hath made his pendent bed and procreant cradle.’ Quentin Durward
  • [1427] cf. Epictetus, Ench.i. eph 'hemin men hupolepsis, horme, orexis, ekklisis, kai heni logo hosa hemetera erga. NPNF2-08. Basil: Letters and Select Works
  • There are two companies that have shown interest in tooling up a production facility in Mexico for the manufacture of ICF. Insulated Concrete Forms
  • In the first place, I refer to the reform of ecclesiastical studies of philosophy, a project which has now reached the last stages of its elaboration, in which the metaphysical and sapiential dimensions of philosophy, mentioned by John Paul II in his Encyclical Fides et Ratio cf. n. 81, will certainly be emphasized. Archive 2008-02-01
  • However, from an Ethiopian perspective, pottery was a low-status profession, associated with fire and dangerous beliefs that the Beta Israel were buda, supernatural beings who disguised themselves as humans during the day and at night became hyenas that could attack humans (cf. Salamon 1999). Ethiopian Jewish Women.
  • Formerly 'betime'; "the final 's' is due to the habit of adding '- s' or '- es' to form adverbs; cf. 'whiles' (afterwards The New Hudson Shakespeare: Julius Cæsar
  • Old English cwene, akin to the etymon of queen]. rig [Middle English riggen, of uncertain derivation] dialectal English; cf. riggish ` sluttish, 'as in Shakespeare's Antony and Cleopatra, where Enobarbus speaks thus of Cleopatra: VERBATIM: The Language Quarterly Vol VIII No 3
  • So I've tentatively extrapolated that gamma, delta, iota, chi, and rho are *cemla (cf. gimel), *talta (cf. daleth), *eiata (cf. yod), *χei and *rusa (cf. resh). An online Etruscan Dictionary has arrived
  • The Israelites must look upon the bronze serpent lifted on the pole, to be healed from the poison of the snakes (cf. Numbers 21, 4b-9). Mauro Gagliardi on the Centrality of the Crucified Christ in the Liturgical Celebration
  • = blónde female person blòodstained one word blòodthirsty one word blürred cf. cûred bŏard wooden, directors Citizendium, the Citizens' Compendium - Recent changes [en]
  • $3 / mcf, which is the number that appears in a release that does not include the $4-7 million it cost to buy the land and drill the hole - costs that Dell suggests basically doubles the breakeven level of the well to $6 / mcf. SeekingAlpha.com: Home Page
  • The development of the main senses took place in OF., and is not free from obscurity (cf., however, couth and known). 5 posts from September 2009
  • No one has ever found the linguistic prototype or origin of this curious denominative, but it is not unremarkable that in the Gospel of John he is also called "Judas the son" or "brother of Simon Iscariot" and, at one point, even "the Iscariot" (cf. John 6: 71, 14: 22, etc.). Robert Eisenman: Redemonizing Judas: Gospel Fiction or Gospel Truth?
  • 51-7: = Fernando VII =: cf. note _Fernando_, p. 34, 5. Novelas Cortas
  • Therefore also dikē is the implacable foe of that peculiar trespassing of the bounds of propriety which the Greeks called hybris (W. & D. 213, 238-39; Archilochus, frag. 94), and even though hybris may degrade dikē to violence in the Iron Age (W. & D. 190-93; cf. Theognis 'complaints at 44-45 and 291-92), dikē will win out in the end Dictionary of the History of Ideas
  • [40] Cf. Ulpian, Tit., vi, 6: Divortio facto, si quidem sui juris sit muller, ipsa habet rei uxoriae actionem, id est, dotis repetitionem; quodsi in potestate patris sit, pater adiuncta filiae persona habet actionem. A Short History of Women's Rights From the Days of Augustus to the Present Time. with Special Reference to England and the United States. Second Edition Revised, With Additions.
  • He'll undoubtedly be called a carpetbagger, but New Yorkers don't ultimately care about that (cf. Robert Kennedy, Hillary Clinton). NY Post: News
  • Over the chiton is the aegis, much less long behind than in earlier art (cf. A History of Greek Art
  • Apps is sometimes for asp, the tree now called by the adjectival name aspen (cf. linden). The Romance of Names
  • Sometimes temptation means putting a person's faithfulness to the test; in this sense it can be said that God "tempts" certain people, as happened in the case of Abraham (cf. Latest Articles
  • Nevertheless the philosopher [* Andronicus; Cf.Q. 48, Obj. 1] who calls shrewdness a part of prudence, takes it for _eustochia_, in general, hence he says: "Shrewdness is a habit whereby congruities are discovered rapidly. Summa Theologica, Part II-II (Secunda Secundae) Translated by Fathers of the English Dominican Province
  • The Church in the diocese manifests herself in the most visible way when the Bishop celebrates the Eucharistic Sacrifice in his cathedral church, with the concelebration of his priests, the assistance of the deacons, and the participation of the faithful (cf. SC 41). Insight Scoop | The Ignatius Press Blog:
  • Cf. also _rendíos_, etc., where the _o_ of _os_ combines with the _í_ by synalepha. Modern Spanish Lyrics
  • Fructans appear to be special in their membrane protective action, since other polymers such as dextran and HES failed to protect the membrane barrier function during freeze-drying, whereas chicory inulin was able to retain CF.
  • CLXXXVIII, 135-160), also edited by Watterich (Vitae Pontificum II, 323 - 374), and now to be read in Duchesne's edition of the Liber Pontificalis (II, 388-397; cf. proleg XXXVII-XLV), states that Boso, the author of it; was created cardinal-deacon of the title of Sts Cosmas and Damian, was chamberlain to Adrian and in constant and familiar attendance upon him from the commencement of his apostolate. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 1: Aachen-Assize
  • So I call it a directive case and I identify tra not as an "ablative postposition" as some claim but as a directive postposition borrowed from an Italic language cf. Ipa ama hen
  • [9] According to Sheikh Abdullah Dougan, the "djinn," as they are called in Islam (cf. Signs of the Times
  • For its later application to a firearm cf. falconet. The Romance of Names
  • _ Camphor had a high reputation as an antaphrodisiac. cf. The Works of Aphra Behn Volume IV.
  • On the concept of transversality cf. Félix Guattari, 'La Transversalité' in Mute magazine - Culture and politics after the net - CULTURE AND POLITICS AFTER THE NET
  • Mahout currently provides tools for building a recommendation engine through the Taste library — a fast and flexible engine for CF.
  • Normative teleosemantics can be construed as making a similar move: Here, it is those dispositions realizing the biological function of the mechanism of using an expression that determine meaning (where ˜biological function™ is taken to be something normative; cf. Millikan 1990, The Normativity of Meaning and Content
  • Judaeo-Spanish, Italian, Spanish), rather than as the Israeli unique lax uvular approximant cf. many Yiddish and German dialects). Languagehat.com: HEBREW OR ISRAELI?
  • The "envelop" was probably similar to the wooden ones found by Stein in the Tarim basin; cf. Serindia, vol. IV, pl. xxi. The History of the Former Han Dynasty
  • 12 Forster reads, "devil's brood"; probably the second word is "bawd:" Cf. Letter 60, note 14 and Feb. 18, 1712-13. The Journal to Stella
  • This shows that just as locative repine and inessive repinθi are forms of *repin, so too are locative haθe and haθrθi forms of *hanθ cf. hanθin. Oddly formed locatives with inessive postclitic in Etruscan
  • V., cxix, "That lay waste", a mistranslation), an equivalent of Heb. rothem, a sort of broom (Retama retem, cf.Arab. ratam). The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 12: Philip II-Reuss
  • But the fact that aliha is probably not an independent verbal stem but only a denominative from ilah, signifying originally "possessed of God" (cf. enthousiazein, daimonan) renders the explanation more than precarious. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 5: Diocese-Fathers of Mercy
  • That may change, but for now surely we are witnessing the wages of eight years of FISA, the Patriot Act, overseas renditions, Guantanamo, tens of thousands of Islamists 'attrited' in Iraq (cf. the much ridiculed 'flypaper trap' theory), the routing of the Taliban from Afghanistan, Predator attacks in Pakistan, and quiet European intelligence work that would be classified as "shredding the Constitution" if it were done here in the US. Latest Articles
  • The "Le Pen" of American public life (cf. the French you love to hate) apparently believes that demagogic national chauvinism is a ticket to political success. Lou Dobbs weighing White House run in 2012
  • Via debats. sncf.com customers asked questions mainly about services and pricing, and provided a wide range of feedback. while SNCF through its staff asked questions in order to solicit customers 'advice and better understand what kinds of new features and services customers were wanting or looking for. The FASTForward Blog
  • [598] Cf. for this syntaxis, Matt. 19: 16-22 and Ex. 20: 13-16. Confessions and Enchiridion, newly translated and edited by Albert C. Outler
  • Indeed, the ministry of every priest is essentially "cultic", in the fullest sense of the word: it is meant to enable the faithful to offer their lives to God as a pleasing sacrifice (cf. Rom 12: 1). Latest Articles
  • Of the older dipnoi (Paladipneusta) we have now only one specimen, the remarkable Ceratodus of East Australia; its amphiblastic gastrulation has been recently explained by Richard Semon (cf. Chapter 2.21). The Evolution of Man — Volume 1
  • He also contributed much to the elucidation of the structure of chlorophyll, and for these important achievements he was awarded the Nobel Prize for Chemistry in 1930 (cf. Section 3.5). The Nobel Prize in Chemistry: The Development of Modern Chemistry
  • _Do on_, put on; often shortened into "don"; cf. doff, which is shortened from do off. The Story of Sigurd the Volsung
  • Indeed, material dependence is a rather weak kind of conventionalism and could even be made compatible with some versions of realism (cf. Hacking Natural Kinds
  • The gerundial inf. with tô expresses purpose, defines a noun or adjective, or, with the verb be, expresses duty or necessity passively; cf. Beowulf
  • Cf. Spectator, No. 454: “I went afterwards to Robin’s, and saw people who had dined with me at the fivepenny ordinary just before, give bills for the value of large estates.” The Journal to Stella
  • McFadden used it to develop his own multinomial logit model, a mathematical formula that assigns preference values to discrete choices for calculating the probability of each choice cf. discrete sets. Korea University: Daniel McFadden's Lecture
  • The endoplasm is finely granular with, however, larger food particles in the process of digestion, while specimens are occasionally seen with the natural form completely lost through distortion caused by over-large captures (Cf. also Wrzesniowski '70, p. XXIII, fig. 32). Marine Protozoa from Woods Hole Bulletin of the United States Fish Commission 21:415-468, 1901
  • Note the idiomatic use of _bien_, and cf. _je le veux bien_, ‘I am _perfectly_ willing’; _voulez-vous bien vous en aller_, ‘_won’t_ you go away!’ Le Petit Chose (part 1) Histoire d'un Enfant
  • So I've tentatively extrapolated that gamma, delta, iota, chi, and rho are *cemla (cf. gimel), *talta (cf. daleth), *eiata (cf. yod), *χei and *rusa (cf. resh). An online Etruscan Dictionary has arrived
  • Apart from that we could say the objective of every priest's mission is "cultic": so that all people can offer themselves to God as a living host, holy and pleasing to Him (cf. Romans Latest Articles
  • The shophar was made of horn, as we see from its now and then being called qeren, "horn" (cf. Jos., vi, 5); in fact, in the foregoing passage, it is designated a "ram's horn", qeren yobel. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 15: Tournely-Zwirner
  • Cf., for example, Bishop Manuel Larrain Errazuriz of Talca, Chile, President of CELAM, Lettre pastorale sur le developpement et la paix . Populorum Progressio
  • Philosopher says that things connected with prudence "seem to be natural," namely "synesis, gnome" [* _synesis_ and _gnome_, Cf. I-II, Summa Theologica, Part II-II (Secunda Secundae) Translated by Fathers of the English Dominican Province
  • Strabo xi. 507, et sq. [1532] The obelus (/-) is used by Jerome to mark superfluous matter in the lxx.cf. Jer.p. 494, in Canon Fremantle's Translation. NPNF2-08. Basil: Letters and Select Works
  • The idea of demonic possession by which a man becomes demonized, that is possessed or controlled by a demon, was present in many ancient ethnic religions, and in fact it is found in one form or another wherever there is a belief in the existence of demons, and that is practically everywhere (cf. DEMONOLOGY). The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 4: Clandestinity-Diocesan Chancery
  • Hedges for approximately 40\% to 45\% of natural gas production in 2009 are at prices that are well above market with swaps averaging approximately $8.73 per thousand cubic feet (Mcf) and collars ranging between $8.52 per Mcf and $9.56 per Mcf. Consequently hedges effectively insolate overall financial performance from depressed energy prices for the remainder of the year. Digital50.com Digital 50 Daily Industry News RSS Feed
  • (O.F. “asseour”, M.L. “adsessor” ‘one who sets the table’; cf.F. “asseoir” ‘to set’, ‘place’, Lat. “ad sedere”), older English for an upper servant who brought on and removed the dishes from the table. The Nibelungenlied
  • Several Nobel Prizes for Chemistry have been awarded for work in photosynthesis and respiration, the two main processes in the energy metabolism of living organisms (cf. Section 3.5). The Nobel Prize in Chemistry: The Development of Modern Chemistry
  • é, cf. párallel des Mŏines * dəmŏin despãir désperate cf. dísparate, séparate desperâtion despícable dessërt meal - zërt = desërt leave detêriorate detërmíne detérrent detrîtus dévastate devastâtion devélop rhymes with envélop verb, cf. énvelôpe noun devélopment devîce - ss, cf. divîde devîse - z, cf. Citizendium, the Citizens' Compendium - Recent changes [en]
  • Rightly, therefore, the Church venerates him as an "eminent teacher of the monastic life" and "doctor of spiritual wisdom in the love of prayer and work; shining guide of people in the light of the Gospel" who, "raised to heaven by a luminous road" teaches people of all ages to seek God and the eternal riches prepared by him (cf. Preface of the Holy in the monastery to the MR, 1980, 153). More from Montecassino
  • Natural gas is by far the biggest raw-material cost for making anhydrous ammonia, the base nitrogen fertilizer made by CF. Shale-Gas Boom Spurs Race
  • His long sentences remain at times incomplete, thus giving rise to so-called anacolutha (cf. Dt., vi, 10-12; viii, 11 - The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 11: New Mexico-Philip
  • In the purely legendary Acts of St. Lawrence, the ostiary Romanus is transformed into a soldier, and an account in accordance with this statement was inserted in the historical martyrologies and in the present Roman Martyrology, which latter places his feast on 9 August (cf. Duchfourcq, "Les Gesta The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 13: Revelation-Stock
  • For the date cf. 13, 8, 'Sullam ultimum Romanorum protulisse pomoerium.' The Student's Companion to Latin Authors
  • By predefinition, in contradistinction to predestination to glory, theologians understand the absolute, positive, and efficacious decree of God from all eternity, that certain persons shall at some time in the future perform certain good works (cf. Franzelin, "De Deo Uno" Rome, 1883, pp. 444 sqq.). The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 10: Mass Music-Newman
  • (De specialibus legibus I, 203) and later in the Testa - ment of the XII Patriarchs (Reuben 4, 2) it is connected with the notion of syneidesis, conscience (cf. also Dictionary of the History of Ideas
  • Hence it follows that it is utterly impossible to call a concordat an international treaty in the real and true sense of the word (cf. a pamphlet anonymously edited in Rome, 1872, under the title: "Della Natura e carattere essenziale dei Concordati", whose author was Cardinal Cagiano de The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 4: Clandestinity-Diocesan Chancery
  • What may sound like 'of' is the weak form of háve and so this or apostrophes should be written instead: woùld have, shoùld've, cān't have, mîght've etc. - * óv óf goôf cf. plural âgeing cf. sing sínging -- j - singe síngeing. *âking âcheing mâking snooker, drama cûeing = line cf. singe síngeing - j -- sing sínging thíng often mispronounced 'Beizhing': Citizendium, the Citizens' Compendium - Recent changes [en]
  • It presumes a rigid adherence to a unilinear model and rigid assumption of the necessity for reinforcement of every behavior (cf. ‘partial reinforcement’).
  • Since the "f" sign was an Etruscan innovation, it could have been identical in name to Latin ef, or another possibility is *fau a rhyme with the digamma *vau, cf. waw. An online Etruscan Dictionary has arrived
  • W. proposes the compd. eafor-hēafodsegn, = _helm_; cf. l. Beowulf
  • [717] On the word organon, a tool, as used of the Word of God, cf. Nestorius in Marius Merc. NPNF2-08. Basil: Letters and Select Works
  • Je voudrais vous donner aujourd'hui quelques conseils pour bien pr é parer le TCF.
  • In particular, those uses of a term involved in the expression of belief, either in thought or talk, will likely be explained by the same processes of confirmation that Quine argued were dependent on the character of one's belief system as a whole, and not upon some local feature of that system in the way that an “analytic” claim would have to be (cf. Gibbard 2008). The Analytic/Synthetic Distinction
  • [21] Cf. here the later communication on the pregenital phases of the sexual development, in which this view is confirmed. Three Contributions to the Theory of Sex
  • Cf. "stepped-up" basis, where the recipient's income tax basis in property devised by will or distributed in intestacy will be its value as of the date of the passing of the donor. Define That Term #208
  • Conception (cf. "Annali delli scienze religiose", VII). The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 11: New Mexico-Philip
  • ` sandal '(cf. Latin calligula, ` soldier's boot'); German, from the Celtic gairm, a battle cry transmitted via the Latin Germanus; golf, from the Gaelic gowf ` blow with the hand '(an acceptable pronunciation for golf is "gof"); gull, from the Welsh gwylan or the Breton gwelan, ` sea bird'; havoc, from the Welsh hafog ` devastation '; hooligan, VERBATIM: The Language Quarterly Vol II No 4
  • Michel has later also crystallized and determined the structure of the terminal enzyme in respiration, and his two structures have allowed detailed studies of electron transfer (cf. Sections 3.3 and 3.4) and its coupling to proton pumping, key features of the chemiosmotic mechanism for which Peter Mitchell had already received the The Nobel Prize in Chemistry: The Development of Modern Chemistry
  • _ The ablative denoting the _place where_ is called the _locative ablative_ (cf. «locus», _place_). Latin for Beginners
  • At one point, he felt his soul felt itself carried to the other side of the veil, to contemplate the revealed face of him who dwells in inaccessible light (cf. AI Schuster, History of Saint Benedict and his time, Ed Abbey Viboldone, Milan, 1965, p. 11 et seq.). More from Montecassino
  • Plutarch, _De Iside_, 46 ff.; cf. Zeller, _Philos. der Griechen_, V, p. 188; Eisele, _Zur Demonologie des Plutarch_ (_Archiv für Gesch. der The Oriental Religions in Roman Paganism
  • MS. reads cerwen, a word conceived by B. and others to be part of a fem. compd.: - scerwen like - wenden in ed-wenden, - ræden, etc. (cf. Beowulf
  • While the Church looks upon all religions with respect, dignity, collaboration and dialogue, it cannot subtract from its divine mandate "to teach all nations". (cf.
  • [2043] The simpler explanation of the use of the word hypostasis in the passage under discussion is that it has the earlier sense, equivalent to ousia.cf. Athan., NPNF2-08. Basil: Letters and Select Works
  • a youth, foot-soldier: L. infntem INFANT n. 1 For the development of the It. infante cf. the apocopated form fante 'a man or woman servant or attendant; also, a footman or soldier seruing on foot; also the knaue or varlet at cards ' Army Rumour Service
  • Gladstone.] [Footnote 49: Cf. his _Histoire diplomatique de l'Europe_.] [Footnote 50: The promulgation was a surprise to him; it was also a defeat, as he had aimed at a direct understanding between Greeks and Bulgars and not at a solution which left the Porte as arbitrator between these two Christian races. The Birth of Yugoslavia, Volume 1
  • All applicants must complete a test of general cognitive ability and achieve a pre-established minimum score to be considered eligible for entry into the CF.
  • ˜pleasure™ sometimes to refer to (a) a certain kind of mental state or sensation and at other times to refer to (b) non-mental items, such as actions, activities, and pursuits that do or can cause pleasurable mental states (cf. the way in which someone might refer to sexual activity as a bodily pleasure). Mill's Moral and Political Philosophy
  • Cf., for example, Bishop Manuel Larrain Errazuriz of Talca, Chile, President of CELAM, Lettre pastorale sur le developpement et la paix . Populorum Progressio
  • The cesura is frequently not in evidence (cf. lines 14 and 22, both of which are also metrically incorrect); the lines are often deficient in length (p.  29, line 26; p.  31, line 19; p.  32, line 19). The Translations of Beowulf A Critical Bibliography
  • According to most of the philological authorities, it denotes "dried clay that emits a sound" (i.e., when it is struck); and since it is used in the Quran exclusively with reference to the creation of man, it seems to contain an allusion to the power of articulate speech which distinguishes man from all other animal species, as well as to the brittleness of his existence (cf. the expression "like pottery" in 55:14). Mike Ghouse: Sikhs and Muslims Can Come Together For Guru Nanak's Birthday
  • Hartshorne's theory is not without its own puzzles, not least of which is coordinating the concept of a divine temporal world-line with the relativistic view of space-time in contemporary physics (cf. Griffin 1992). Process Theism
  • Mahout currently provides tools for building a recommendation engine through the Taste library — a fast and flexible engine for CF.
  • Cf. especially Statius, _Silvae_, ii. 7, on which the author, in his preface to the book, says, 'Cludit volumen genethliacon Lucani, quod The Student's Companion to Latin Authors
  • _Avoir beau_ + infinitive is ironical, and elliptical for _avoir beau temps pour_, i.e. to have a fine opportunity, but to no purpose; cf. the English ‘it is all very _fine_ for you to tell him.’ Le Petit Chose (part 1) Histoire d'un Enfant
  • AmE lieuténant, BrE lefténant littérateur literatër lorgnette, lorgnon lornyét, lornyón louche loôsh luthier-a maker of stringed instruments such as violins or guitars məshêen madame brothel, Madame title madáme, cf. mádam shopping madeleine mádeleíne mademoiselle madame wàzél maisonette maizonét maître d'hôtel métradô-tél, mâitradô-tél maladroit maladrŏit malcontent malines malêen mandoline (also 'mandolin' in English) mándə-lín margarine marjərìne marmalade - màrmalâde marmite marquee Citizendium, the Citizens' Compendium - Recent changes [en]
  • So I've tentatively extrapolated that gamma, delta, iota, chi, and rho are *cemla (cf. gimel), *talta (cf. daleth), *eiata (cf. yod), *χei and *rusa (cf. resh). An online Etruscan Dictionary has arrived
  • It is extremely difficult to distinguish in observation between vagueness of the illusion due to feebleness in the after-image depending on faint illumination, dark-colored discs or lack of the desirable difference in luminosity between the sectors (cf.p. 171) and the indefiniteness which is due to broad transition-bands existing between the (relatively) pure-color bands. Harvard Psychological Studies, Volume 1 Containing Sixteen Experimental Investigations from the Harvard Psychological Laboratory.
  • Don Imus was not the blind instrument of his superiors, even assuming that automatist young law professors might be (and might be forgiven for being so, a debatable proposition cf. E.g. Kyle.) Balkinization
  • Another traditional problem for expectational views is a charge of circularity (cf. Robins 1979, Prichard 1940, Warnock 1971). Transport: a Flash-Fiction Triptych
  • Address to the world of culture, Paris, 12 September 2008, I desired to highlight the exemplarity of monastic life in history, stressing that its aim is at the same time both simple and essential: "quaerere Deum," to seek God and to seek him through Jesus Christ who has revealed him cf. The New Beginning
  • Masturbation_, pp. 11-18; also, Arthur MacDonald, _Le Criminel Type_, pp. 227 et seq.; cf.G. Stanley Hall, _Adolescence_, vol. i, pp. 432 _et seq. Studies in the Psychology of Sex, Volume 1 The Evolution of Modesty; The Phenomena of Sexual Periodicity; Auto-Erotism
  • Scottish ch, like Arabic 'kh', phonetic symbol χ, cf. Citizendium, the Citizens' Compendium - Recent changes [en]
  • Suckling is a nickname applied to a helpless person; cf. Littlechild and "milksop," which still exists, though rare, in the forms Milsopp and Mellsop. The Romance of Names
  • The interatomic distances in the inner ring of factor VIa, which has been called the corrin ring, conform very closely with the distances proposed 12 for a structure containing six resonating double bonds, so closely as to leave almost no doubt of the correct formulation of its chemical structure (cf.Fig. 9). Nobel Lecture The X-Ray Analysis Of Complicated Molecules
  • The few surviving capitula from Cluny thus show the Christological symbols of the individual modes cf. ibid. p. The singing of Psalms and the Divine Office
  • - tuo, rellqui tyranni abdicant tyraimidem.ibid. cf. II. Historiarum quidquid superest;
  • This title was suggested by the author himself; cf. the letter of Brutus (_ad Brut. _ ii. 5, 4), 'iam concedo ut vel The Student's Companion to Latin Authors
  • Cf. the last line of Jonah: “And should not I spare Nineveh, that great city, wherein are more than sixscore thousand persons that cannot discern between their right hand and their left hand; and also much cattle?” Nths of a sending
  • Ramus 'followers often substituted the word doctrina for cognitio, which made it even clearer that the perspective was more pedagogical than ontological (Cf. Ramus, Dialectica, p. 11, where he uses another variant, defining philosophy as a comprehensio praeceptorum, a collection of precepts). Petrus Ramus
  • Cf. "Arcite and Palamon, That foughten _breme_, as it were bores two. Beowulf
  • Why mammals have a common blood structure (Types A,B,O also in chimps) based on cells, in contrast to circulating proteins (cf. hemocyanin, a copper-based porphyrin oxygen-carrier found in e.g. lobsters). The Great Debate - The Panda's Thumb
  • For Henry potentia absoluta always indicates the possibility of acting in a disorderly way, which the pope, who is capable of sinning, possesses, but God does not (see Tractatus super facto praelatorum et fratrum, ratio decima pro fratribus, ed. Hödl/Haverals, pp. 253-259; cf. Porro 2003). Hitler's Angel (A Meta Christmas Carol)
  • Spêight person spây spâceship one word spêak cf. spêech spêcíes Citizendium, the Citizens' Compendium - Recent changes [en]
  • [115] Javelins: the Portuguese word is _azagayas_, with which cf. _assagai_, the name of a like weapon among the Kaffirs of Africa. The Philippine Islands, 1493-1803 — Volume 02 of 55 1521-1569 Explorations by Early Navigators, Descriptions of the Islands and Their Peoples, Their History and Records of the Catholic Missions, as Related in Contemporaneous Books and Manuscripts, Showing
  • Etymologically, the word biretta is Italian in origin and would more correctly be written beretta (cf. however the French barette and the Spanish bireta). The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 2: Assizes-Browne
  • XXXIII, c. xxvii; cf. also Cassian, "Coll,", IX, XV) there may be observed traces of the threefold degree which was afterwards systematically developed by Dionysius the Areopagite. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 14: Simony-Tournon
  • The debate about connectionism is more closely related to the question whether reverse compositionality holds (cf. section 1.5.4.) 1.2 Meaning Compositionality
  • The development of the main senses took place in OF., and is not free from obscurity (cf., however, couth and known). 5 posts from September 2009
  • [2869] The Syrian Beraea, Aleppo, or Haleb.cf. Letter clxxxv.p. 222. NPNF2-08. Basil: Letters and Select Works
  • It has been argued that since normative statuses are explained by means of further normative statuses, pragmatic phenomenalism cannot tell us anything informative about how we make or “institute” the basic norms implicit in our practices (cf. Rosen 2001, Hattiangadi 2003). The Normativity of Meaning and Content
  • [Footnote: Cf. the prefix "for -" in English "forfend," to keep away, to avert, "forbid," to exclude from, to command against, "forbear," to refrain from, etc.] A Complete Grammar of Esperanto
  • [40] Cf. Ulpian, Tit., vi, 6: Divortio facto, si quidem sui juris sit muller, ipsa habet rei uxoriae actionem, id est, dotis repetitionem; quodsi in potestate patris sit, pater adiuncta filiae persona habet actionem. A Short History of Women's Rights From the Days of Augustus to the Present Time. with Special Reference to England and the United States. Second Edition Revised, With Additions.
  • The latter word is properly balled, i.e., marked with a ball, or white streak, a word of Celtic origin; cf. "piebald," i.e., balled like a (mag) pie, and the "bald-faced stag. The Romance of Names
  • Triviality, varied by touches of ill-breeding and sententiousness," it elaborated; "she has nothing in her mind except the wish to tell her sister everything; and so she flits from the cows to the currant bushes, from the currant bushes to Mrs. Hall of Sherborne, gives Mrs. Hall a tap, and flits back again" (362-63; cf. even Austen-Leigh’s Memoir 207). Boxing Emma; or the Reader’s Dilemma at the Box Hill Games
  • If the domain of discourse for ˜exists™ is stipulated to consist only of actual objects, (5) is trivial and compatible with possibilism, the position which says that some object is outside the domain consisting of all actual objects; cf. (ii). Possible Objects
  • There is another verb scutch meaning 'to strike with a stick or whip, to slash, switch,' but although it is "not impossible" that this is "a transferred use of the verb meaning 'to dress by beating',... more probably the present verb is an independent onomatopœic formation: cf. scotch vb. Languagehat.com: SCUTCH.
  • But not all names in - ing are Anglo-Saxon, e.g. Baring is German; cf. Behring, of the Straits; and Jobling is Fr. Jobelin, a double dim. of Job. The Romance of Names
  • _ H. - So. supposes heáfod-weard, _a guard of honor_, such as sovereigns or presumptive rulers had, to be meant by hafalan hýdan; hence, _you need not give me any guard_, etc.Cf. Schmid, _Gesetze der A. _, 370-372. l. Beowulf
  • [384] Cf. Menander apud Stob.p. 437: [Greek: Ta deuter aiei tên gynaika dei legein, Tên d 'êgemonian tôn olôn ton andr' echein]. Plutarch's Morals
  • No doubt the same tree is signified, the double name being due to a mere accidental transposition of the letters; if linguistic analogy may be trusted in, almug is correct (cf. Tamil, valguka). The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 12: Philip II-Reuss
  • Michel has later also crystallized and determined the structure of the terminal enzyme in respiration, and his two structures have allowed detailed studies of electron transfer (cf. Sections 3.3 and 3.4) and its coupling to proton pumping, key features of the chemiosmotic mechanism for which Peter Mitchell had already received the The Nobel Prize in Chemistry: The Development of Modern Chemistry
  • Cf. Chapot, _Les destinées de l'hellénisme au delà l'Euphrate_ (_Mém.soc. antiq. de France_), 1902, pp. 207 ff. The Oriental Religions in Roman Paganism
  • Philosopher says that things connected with prudence "seem to be natural," namely "synesis, gnome" [* _synesis_ and _gnome_, Cf. I-II, Summa Theologica, Part II-II (Secunda Secundae) Translated by Fathers of the English Dominican Province
  • They've developed new tests for detecting and correctly identifying the disease, known as malignant catarrhal fever, or MCF.
  • Cf. ‘no jutty, frieze, buttress, nor coign of vantage, but this bird hath made his pendent bed and procreant cradle.’ Quentin Durward
  • With sense 2 cf. French morion punishment inflicted on soldiers (1605), so called in allusion to the hat suspended at the end of the shaft of the halberd which held the soldier while the punishment was inflicted. Medallion Vulcan | SciFi, Fantasy & Horror Collectibles
  • Jelley (Julian); [Footnote: Lamb is also, of course, a nickname cf. Agnew, Fr. agneau] The Romance of Names
  • VI, 489: "Isiacae sacraria lenae"; cf. Friedländer, The Oriental Religions in Roman Paganism
  • They claim the popular climatologic radiation balance diagrams describing quasi-one-dimensional situations cf. Archive 2008-02-01

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