How To Use Derived In A Sentence
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He laces his narrative with a great deal of information and conclusions derived from other sources.
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Thereafter thought, weighing the truth or falseness of the notion, determines what is true: and this explains the Greek word for thought, dianoia, which is derived from dianoein, meaning to think and discriminate.
NPNF2-09. Hilary of Poitiers, John of Damascus
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Many students derived enormous satisfaction from the course.
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The dangers for girls were especially acute: “It is estimated that two-thirds of the girls who appear before the Court charged with immorality owe their misfortune to influences derived directly from the movies, either from the pictures themselves or in the ‘picking up’ of male acquaintances at the theatre!”
A Renegade History of the United States
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This is derived from my recipe for “Almonzano” from my book "Nonna's Italian Kitchen", but Dori from the bakehouse blog suggested using okara in it instead of almonds.
A PRACTICAL WAY TO USE OKARA
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[12] The original reference to experience from which the meaning of the term astronavigation should be derived is not essentially "space-travel," but forms of transoceanic navigation which take into account the effects specific to changes in specific astronomical experiences, from fixed to variable, which are relevant to transoceanic navigation within what had appeared, initially, as a permanently fixed set of changes within the ordering of the planets or specifically stellar phenomena.
LaRouche's Latest
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Ajmal Aqtash, writes that, "The exhibition traces the evolution of Lalvani's genomic art as filtered through two major series, AlgoRhythms ™ and XURF ™, each exploring Lalvani's principal concern with the relationship between genetic codes and sculptural creation, and more specifically, between" genomics "- sculpture derived from formal rules, and" epigenomics "- works created through external agents like forces, respectively.
Steven Mesler: Form Follows Force: Haresh Lalvani
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The payroll figures are derived from a poll of employers.
Times, Sunday Times
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The stube, or stove, of a German inn, derived its name from the great hypocaust, which is always strongly heated to secure the warmth of the apartment in which it is placed.
Anne of Geierstein
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By the use of the eigenfunctions, the formulas of the propagation of the transient wave along rod, beam and beam-rod structures are derived in the present paper.
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Shamefacedness is derived from _aidos_ in the Greek, and has
The Gospel Day Or, the Light of Christianity
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They found that N-cyclopentyl-tazopsine, a less-toxic compound derived from the molecule, was effective against early, liver-stage malaria parasites in animal tests.
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This place was afterwards enlarged, and converted into stables for horses; but the old name remained, and now most stables in London are called mews, although the word is derived from falconry, and the hawks have long since flown away.
Old English Sports
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In hemichordates, the three adult coelomic cavities are derived from coelomic sacs that form around the gut of the larva (an unpaired protocoel and two pairs of sacs for the mesocoel and metacoel).
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Various hypotheses have been advanced for their formation, from geomorphological phenomena to plants having allelopathic exclusion effects to being animal-derived features.
Kaokoveld desert
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A Spanish word, caudillo is derived from the Latin capitellum or small head, and refers to a military or political leader.
The Cult of the Caudillo
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From these data, the total score and two component scores were derived for each student.
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The term autopsy, derived from Greek, essentially means to see for oneself.
Eureka Times Standard Most Viewed
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Derived from the Old French word franc, meaning “free,” it later came to be associated with the most fundamental political freedom of all: to exercise your franchise meant to exercise your right to vote.
The Sack of Washington
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According to the company, the name comes from "The English word" gelid "[which] is derived from the Latin word" gelidus "(extremely cold, icy).
Overclockers Club news Feed
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However the quantities derived from these parameters, which relate to biologically meaningful quantities, are very consistent.
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It is remarkable that the principle fluorophore is derived from a triplet of adjacent amino acids: the serine, tyrosine, and glycine residues at locations 65, 66, and 67 (referred to as Ser65, Tyr66, and Gly67; see Figure 2).
Archive 2005-10-01
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Curiously, while sperm whales unquestionably have teeth, recent molecular data and a reanalysis of their anatomy has suggested that they may be highly derived mysticetes.
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[FN#134] A fair specimen of the Arab logogriph derived from the
Arabian nights. English
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Schiff's forms depend (like Marianne Moore's) on interlocking enjambments, on syllabics, and on baroque grammar, or else (unlike Moore's) on dense repetitions derived from Provençal forms.
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In the historical development of cartography, when a new type or style of map appears on the scene, it is normally derived from earlier forms in some evolutionary process.
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We calculate medians and quartiles of the age at leaving home by sex and race, using a fitted curve derived from a logit regression model.
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Gross value added at factor cost (formerly GDP at factor cost) is derived as the sum of the value added in the agriculture, industry and services sectors.
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My position on euthanasia is actually derived from the ancient Greek one; that is, I am generally in favour of allowing it, as long as the person being euthanized is in perfectly sound mental condition, not non compos mentis, and has positively re-affirmed his decision at least three times over the period of at least a suspended period of time to allow for reconsideration (say 15 or 30 days).
Matthew Yglesias » Bishops and Abortion
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A pig-farmer in Lethbridge has invented a pill, derived from pigfeed, that is fantastically effective in fighting clinical depression without nasty side-effects.
Boing Boing: December 16, 2001 - December 22, 2001 Archives
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In the third chapter, using the second-order momentum of beam radius, the Rayleigh range and beam propagation factor of three different polarized beam arrays are derived.
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Objective To explore the role of mouse dermis - derived mesenchymal stem cells ( md MSC ) on skin repair.
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The term agrarianism derived partly from the ancient Roman agrarian law to redistribute property and Thomas Paine's 1797 work, Agrarian Justice Opposed to Agrarian Law, and to Agrarian Monopoly: Being a Plan for Meliorating the Condition of Man, By Creating in Every
Advocating The Man: Masculinity, Organized Labor, and the Household in New York, 1800-1840
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Agrobacteria gene movements have produced second chromosomes derived from plasmids, while in the biovar II strain K84 the plasmid-based replicon has yet to reach second chromosome status.
Health News from Medical News Today
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A ban was enacted Tuesday on international trade in caviar and other ichthyological products derived from the wild, endangered sturgeon.
Will Whitman's EBay Savor Caviar Ban?
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An approximate expression for calculation the conversion at reactor outlet X_A is also derived.
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It is thus unlikely that the bulk of the Carboniferous detritus could have been derived by recycling of preexisting Silurian sandstones.
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The physical model of cantilever board in bench blasting is firstly presented and based on the hypothesis, a formula for calculating the charge weight in the MS delay bench blasting is also derived.
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The term ephebophilia, derived from the Greek word for “youth,” is sometimes used to describe sexual interest in young people in the first stages of puberty.”
Think Progress » Gingrich: House Leadership Would Have Been Accused Of ‘Gay Bashing’ If They Investigated Foley ‘Overly Aggressively’
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The two elements of crime in English-derived law are “mens rea” (guilty mind, or intent) and “actus reus” (the act itself).
Evening Buzz: U.S. Terror Stings
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The name of Monaghan comes from the Irish language, derived from Muine Cheain meaning the Land of the Little Hills.
American Chronicle
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The Wikipedia entry on the subject's fascinating in the extreme: * Decorative stone features of Greek temples such as mutules, guttae, and modillions that are derived from true structural/functional features of the early wooden temples
Boing Boing
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Saccheri then studied the hypothesis of the acute angle and derived many theorems of non-Euclidean geometry without realising what he was doing.
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Not yet, however, was the power of the keys instituted, which is derived from Christ's Passion, and consequently it was not yet ordained that a man should grieve for his sin, with the purpose of submitting himself by confession and satisfaction to the keys of the Church, in the hope of receiving forgiveness through the power of Christ's Passion.
Summa Theologica, Part III (Tertia Pars) From the Complete American Edition
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These songs gradually developed a concomitant form of dialogue styled saturæ, a term denoting "miscellany", and derived perhaps from the _Satura lanx_, a charger filled with the first-fruits of the year's produce, which was offered to Bacchus and Ceres. [
English Satires
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Hydroxycitric acid is derived from the Malabar tamarind tropical fruit native to India.
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The harpy, whose name was derived from the Greek word arpazo, ‘to seize’, was a monstrous female demon of insatiable hunger, known as temptress, seductress and tormenter of victims.
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We searched other major valleys sporting outcrops of the same volcanically derived sedimentary rocks, which are exposed across thousands of square kilometers of mountainous terrain.
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Earlier this year, a small study by U.S. and Chinese researchers in the British Journal of Nutrition suggested that flax seed-derived lignan (a natural plant-based compound) might modulate C-reactive protein levels in type 2 diabetics, especially among women.
Flax Seed: A Natural Alternative to Statins?
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It’s not completely true that mtDNA is derived strictly from the ovum.
Zorse – The Zebra Horse Hybrid
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This is a dry but nourishing oil derived from hazelnut and corn oils.
Times, Sunday Times
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Objective. To compare proliferation and expression of osteoblastic phenotype of cells derived from vertebral lamina and iliac grafting.
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The quarry was the coralroot orchid and the name is derived from the underground stem that is said to be coral like.
Country diary: Ardersier
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Our data cofirm previous evidences, that long-term neuronal consequences of high-dose cholinergic activation are not necessarily derived from prolonged seizure activation (as seen in SE)
PLoS ONE Alerts: New Articles
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All religions believe that human ethics should be derived from a supernatural, non-human source.
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Structures derived from ectoderm, mesoderm, and endoderm are commonly represented.
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On the basis of above theoretical model, the spectrum formula of propeller cavitation noise has been derived.
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Adjectives derived from them are usually lowercased, as are the generic names for such bodies when used alone.
October « 2009 « Fantasy Author's Handbook
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In light of Hittite militu- 'honeysweet'2, a characteristically Indo-European u-stem adjective derived from milit- 'honey', there should be no doubt where the first element comes from.
Archive 2009-12-01
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The engine also has a sportbike-derived chain-and-gear camshaft drive system that allows for a short/narrow cylinder head design and reduced overall engine height.
Quad 2009 ATV Buyers Guide
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A vegetable is technically derived from any other part of the plant - the vegetative parts, including the roots, stem, and leaves.
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Herbal teas, some made from steeped leaves or flowers and some derived from boiling bark or roots, used to be called simples, notes the herbal expert.
Undefined
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The criticisms of his testimony and the points derived from the documentation are not, in my view, of sufficient force to cause me to reject that evidence.
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The local name (endonym) for Munich is München, derived from Mönch (monk) as the city was founded by Benedictine monks in 1158.
Answers.com: Today's Highlights
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This paper presents a method to treat the various changes of lines with mutual conductance for analysis of faulted power systems. The modified formula of node equation of networks have been derived.
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In one of the earliest steps in the evolution of eukaryotic cells, the mitochondrion was derived from an endosymbiosed bacterium.
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The origin of vertebrates has always been a core question in evolutionary biology. It is well accepted that vertebrates and invertebrate chordate derived from a common ancestor.
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The statement said the loan would be serviced from surplus cash derived principally from hotel operations.
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The Panamanian–any Panamanian, regardless of position or social status–was a “Spiggotty” or “Spig,” terms supposedly derived in earlier years from the erroneous claim of Panama City hackmen that they could “speaks-da-English.”
The Path Between the Seas
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The vast majority of what is known about alcohol-induced blackouts is derived from research with hospitalized alcoholics.
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The word for ` food 'may appear as dagadaga, derived from Australian ` tucker' and reduplicated in the pattern of an earlier general pidgin kaikai.
VERBATIM: The Language Quarterly Vol VIII No 4
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The word " pattern " is derived from the same root as the word patron.
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Fish oil supplements are derived from a variety of sources, including mackerel, herring, tuna, salmon, cod liver, halibut, whale blubber and seal blubber.
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Diva is the term derived from the Latin word “divus”, “a divine one”, and in its original use described a woman of exceptional talent, more specifically a great female opera singer.
Archive 2007-07-01
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Májur": hence possibly our "mazer," which is popularly derived from Masarn, a maple.
Arabian nights. English
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Unlike tequila, another agave-derived drink, pulque is not distilled.
Lloyd Mexico Economic Report - August 1999
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The extras were derived from the local population and Jones remembers: ‘They were all very knowing because they'd all worked for Franco Zeffirelli on Jesus of Nazareth.’
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Hence meaningful concepts of "intuitionistic truth" and "linear-logic truth" can be derived from the semantics of computability logic.
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This period is known as the saros, a Greek word meaning ‘repetition’ that is itself derived from the Babylonian sharu.
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The strength and the weakness were thus two sides of the same coin minted by Comte's sheer energy and persistence (or obstinacy, according to taste) which derived, in turn, from the strength of his motivation: the urgency of the social problem as he saw it; the need for a complete intellectual system as the means of solving it; and his conception of his own messianic mission.
Dictionary of the History of Ideas
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The problem is that because virtual worlds are almost entirely built on the same basic rule-structure derived from DikuMUD, and because their representations of physical and graphical environments are ultimately so similar, this deep game becomes more and more known to larger and larger numbers of players over time, all the more so since World of Warcraft has evolved into the new template for all subsequence virtual-world games.
The Lifetime to Master
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It's a key producer of lysine, a feed additive derived from amino acids that is mixed with corn and soybean meal to fatten up livestock.
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In part it derived from the constituency he represented.
THE GUARDSMEN
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The term arrowroot is said to be derived from the fact that the natives of the West Indies use the roots of the plant as an application to wounds made by poison arrows.
Catalogue of Economic Plants in the Collection of the U. S. Department of Agriculture
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Thus, for instance, all the cells in a multicellular organism represent one clone derived from the fertilized egg.
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The company derived substantial benefit from the deal.
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When colonies are formed, the resulting cells tend to have euploid genomes derived from the aneuploid state by chromosome loss.
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The original equations that Ed Lorenz derived were an extremely simplified version of the interaction of several spectral modes of the inviscid equations of motion and could hardly be called an accurate approximation of the full system of equations.
Exponential Growth in Physical Systems #2 « Climate Audit
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The arrogation of such power to the judges would usurp those functions of government, which are controlled and distributed by powers whose authority is derived from the ballot box.
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It is unlikely that the great bulk of the Australian public will be receptive to diktats derived from either politician's belief structure.
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Furthermore, because of the cost savings derived from cutting out the middleman, Dell believes it can sell computers at lower prices than its competitors, and thus steal market share.
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These larger totals are derived from notional projections based on evidence from particular cases.
The Times Literary Supplement
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In fact, the name dianthus, coined by Greek botanist Theophrastus, is derived from the Greek words dios (divine) and anthos (flower).
What in Carnation?
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Although there are no data showing the connection between the two magmatic systems at shallow crustal levels during the eruption, the petrochemical data point to a common parent magma derived from a unique deep source.
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From the calculated eigenfrequencies and eigenvectors, statistical measures of motion can be derived.
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The word "nuthatch" is derived from the fondness of the Eurasian species for hazel nuts.
The Annotated "Eyes of the World"
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Some progress has been made in this direction, but so far the main results are certain degradation-products such as aniline dyes derived from coal tar; salicylic acid; essences of fruits; etc. Still these and many other discoveries of the same nature do not prove that the laboratory of man can compete with the laboratory of the living plant cell.
Popular Science Monthly Oct, Nov, Dec, 1915 — Volume 86
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One can show that a stream of gas becomes unstable against such a fragmentation when the length of the stream exceeds a certain num - ber whose value can be derived from hydrodynamical theory.
COSMOLOGY SINCE 1850
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A substance, derived from the wood called creosote, is used to help human and animal medicinal causes.
CreationWiki - Recent changes [en]
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The Licence Committee considered other available evidence, including that derived from the four publications referred to in the attached annex.
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Savagery, etymologically derived from the Latin word for "forest", was associated with wildness and stood in opposition to civilization.
Citizendium, the Citizens' Compendium - Recent changes [en]
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The word is either a corruption of "bandore" or "pandura" (_q. v._), an instrument of the guitar type, or is derived from "bania," the name of a similar primitive Senegambian instrument.
Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 3, Part 1, Slice 2 "Baconthorpe" to "Bankruptcy"
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Lilly's treatment approach involves a modified form of a protein called glial cell derived neurotrophic factor, or GDNF, which is designed to protect these neurons.
Potential Parkinson's Treatment Explored
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Several workers have suggested that the entire alveolate clade is derived from a photosynthetic ancestor.
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Latin verb gustare, "to taste;" but Medlar pleaded custom in behalf of C, observing, that, by the Doctor's rule, we ought to change pudding into budding, because it is derived from the French word boudin; and in that case why not retain the original orthography and pronunciation of all the foreign words we have adopted, by which means our language would become a dissonant jargon without standard or propriety?
The Adventures of Roderick Random
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The results were derived from a 3.5 year observational study of median encroachments.
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The term excimer is derived from excited dimer, a term coined by physical chemists in the 1960s to describe short-lived energized molecules with two identical components.
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This rarity may simply be a function of the taphonomy and collection history of the localities where Ansomys has been found, it may also be that it indicates low abundance in the communities from which the fossil assemblages were derived.
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In the future, you could tell a friend you need to drop by a yínháng, rather than a bank.iii In this imagined future, a yínháng whose capital is derived from carbon emissions credits, rather than property mortgages, would be substantively different from a bank, and a better place to stow your hard-earned savings.
The English Is Coming!
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The name Ephraim is derived from fruitfulness, Gen. xli.
Commentary on the Whole Bible Volume IV (Isaiah to Malachi)
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The integument is composed of the skin, which covers the entire body, in addition to accessory organs derived from skin.
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Before correctly spelling "hierarchy," for example, 12-year-old Abigail Spitzer of El Paso, Texas, asked the judges whether the word derived from the Greek root "hieros," meaning sacred.
Spellers challenged in national bee's early rounds
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Flot, derived from the French _flottant_, floating; and jet, from the verb _jeter_, to _throw up_; both used in seignoral rights, granted by kings to favourites, empowering them to take possession of the property of any man who might happen to be unfortunate, which was in those times tantamount to being guilty.
Newton Forster The Merchant Service
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The term monsoon, or "monsun," I may explain, is derived from an Arabic word, _mausim_, meaning "a set time, or season of the year;" and is generally applied to a system of regular wind currents, like the Trades, blowing in different hemispheres beyond the range of those old customers with which ordinary voyagers are familiar.
On Board the Esmeralda Martin Leigh's Log - A Sea Story
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An allegation arose at some point that Carroll used the fungus ergot, which is what LSD was eventually derived from.
Think Progress » After Telling Women, Gays How To Live, Oklahoma GOP Outraged At ‘Government Intervention’ In Divorces
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The external mapping file enables developers to customize the data mapping and thereby gaining more control over the way mapping can be derived.
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The inner layer is made from a natural absorbent fiber called Tencel that is derived from Eucalyptus wood pulp.
Backpacking Light Magazine
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Even more important, the legal conclusions derived from the facts as presented by the plaintiff's lawyer will have to be rigorously scrutinized, even when the facts are uncontroverted.
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Bill Gates and Paul Allen derived the name Microsoft from 'microcomputer' and which other word?
June Quiz
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The facts concerning cryptorchidism, that is to say, failure of the descent of the testes in Mammals, seem to show that the hormone of the testis is not derived from semen or spermatogenesis, for in the testes which have remained in the abdomen there is no spermatogenesis, while the interstitial cells are present, and the animals in some cases exhibit normal or even excessive sexual instinct, and all the male characteristics are well marked.
Hormones and Heredity
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The 1980s neo-expressionist David Salle practically made a career out of aping them and the "kitsch" pictures, which Mr. Picabia had derived from hack photographs in such magazines as Paris—Sex Appeal.
The Good, the Bad and the Inspiring
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From this elementary iconography may be derived the whole metaphysic of sexual differences - man aspires; woman has no other function but to exist, waiting.
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Professor Heer has not ventured to identify any of this vast assemblage of Miocene plants and insects with living species, so far at least as to assign to them the same specific names, but he presents us with a list of what he terms homologous forms, which are so like the living ones that he supposes the one to have been derived genealogically from the others.
The Antiquity of Man
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Zero and fractions were interesting to examine for different reasons: zero because it is an abstract notion meaning absence, and fractions because they are technical computations derived from wholes.
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superior wisdom derived from experience
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The name is derived from Praltos Camp, which forms the hinterland of the coastal section.
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The first toast at every festival here was drunk in his honour, and, besides the first of May, one day in every week was held sacred to him, and, from his Saxon name, Woden, was called Woden's day, whence the English word "Wednesday" has been derived.
Myths of the Norsemen From the Eddas and Sagas
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Herbal medicines are derived from natural sources.
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For the above three maintenance policies, the unique optimal policy which minimizes the expected cost rate per cycle under certain conditions is derived respectively.
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An overall score was derived by adding scores in key targets and the balanced scorecard.
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Most of the glucosamine on the market at the moment is derived from shellfish.
Times, Sunday Times
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The nectarivorous hummingbirds evolved a derived mode of hovering flight that allows them to remain virtually motionless in front of flowers.
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Lithological variations within the Delb Khairkhan melange suggest that the melange is derived from different tectonic environments.
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By calculating the viewshed, the area visible from each of the sites is derived, as well as their intervisibility.
Survey of the Kales « Interactive Dig Sagalassos – City in the Clouds
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Some homeopathic remedies derived from substances that would be poisonous in large amounts, such as arsenic or strychnine, could be banned.
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Encouragement and support do they derive from James, in maintaining the "peculiar institution" whence they derived their wealth, which they call patriarchal, and boast of as the "corner-stone" of the republic?
The Anti-Slavery Examiner, Omnibus
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Aberdeen and Lochaber, and there is good reason for supposing that the word harbour is derived from it.
Wild Wales : Its People, Language and Scenery
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In its early embryonic condition it consists of three hollow vesicles, termed the hind-brain or rhombencephalon, the mid-brain or mesencephalon, and the fore-brain or prosencephalon; and the parts derived from each of these can be recognized in the adult (Fig. 677).
IX. Neurology. 4. The Brain or Encephalon
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The names themselves - diatoms, rotifers, ciliates, desmids - are both delicately Latinate or Greek-derived and appealingly concise.
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They have small ganglia developed upon them, and are derived from the renal plexus, which is formed by branches from the celiac plexus, the lower and outer part of the celiac ganglion and aortic plexus, and from the lesser and lowest splanchnic nerves.
XI. Splanchnology. 3b. The Urinary Organs
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Much of what Elgar as composer put into practice went well beyond what was available to him in the textbooks or what could have been derived from an institutional academic course on music.
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Railway Minister Nitish Kumar said that the Indian Railways is planning to use a blend of five percent bio-diesel in the diesel derived from crude oil and gradually increase the share of bio-fuel to 20 percent as its supply increases.
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Obviously, the word "league" did exist, derived from the Latin ligare ( "to bind"), but it was the creation of football leagues that made the expression emotive and understood by all.
New Statesman
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All follow a similar pattern, juxtaposing ‘free’ sections - in rhythms derived from operatic recitative that recurrently explode into whirligig scales and arpeggios - with fugato sections of varying degrees of formal rigidity.
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The word massage is derived from the Greek word “massier” which means to knead.
Benefits of Massage for Human Health
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The Romans derived a considerable portion of their star lore and uranography from the Greeks.
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Questions designed to evaluate the educational objectives of the projects were derived from other studies assessing self esteem and locus of control.
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To avoid the effect of unidirectional layered compression summation method without considering side swell, the approximate calculation formula for estimating sluice(dam) foundation sinking is derived.
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A counterargument would stress that the greatest learning is derived from the inimitable, silence betrays cowardice, disaffiliation and indie culture give the lie to the unavoidability of affiliation, the literary field exists in many sites other than the academy, self-victimization is the reigning philosophy, program writers are more self-commodifying than the disaffiliated, the system purges internal feedback from dissenters, and the end of excellence is well in sight.
Anis Shivani: Can Writing Be Taught? The Systems-Theory Rationalizations Of An Insider
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INT-747 is a potent, first-in-class farnesoid X receptor (FXR) agonist derived from the primary human bile acid chenodeoxycholic acid (CDCA), the natural endogenous FXR agonist.
Medindia Health News
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The fortunate owner of this derived quite a little income of meal by shrewdly loaning it to his knifeless comrades.
Andersonville
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One example is the antihypertensive effect of dietary peptides derived from milk protein, mediated by angiotensin converting enzyme inhibition.
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Nouns derived from a place name in German, used in this kind of sentence, don't normally take the indefinite article ein.
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The English word 'olive' is derived from the Latin word 'oliva'.
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Sound is conducted through the middle ear via the stapes or columella (both are ear ossicles derived from the hyomandibular).
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Ketonen's idea was to define a system of proof search: one starts from a given sequent to be derived, chooses a formula in it, and writes the premisses of a rule that can conclude the given sequent.
Chores
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Thus, relative to the primitive therian condition, marsupials have a distinctive, derived pattern of reduced dental replacement.
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Of these parts one is termed the hystera or delphys, whence is derived the word adelphos, and the other part, the tube or orifice, is termed metra.
The History of Animals
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The berries in the most derived clade (Olmstead et al.'s subfamily ‘Solanoideae’) are all morphologically similar, with two carpels, axile placentation and mostly lenticular seeds.
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According to what we understand about the effects of priming, the opposite would be predicted - lower thresholds derived from the descending than the ascending order.
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He was conducting research on possible medical applications of various lysergic acid compounds derived from ergot, a fungus that develops on rye grass.
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Walrus ivory is derived from the male animal and usually has a much smaller cross-section.
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Orthodoxy, symbolized by domestic markers of status and respectability derived from European customs, came a generation after initial colonial land claims. 73 Significantly, evidence of this cultural orthodoxy appears in archival sources after a period of contested frontier life.
Belongings: Property, Family, and Identity in Colonial South Africa
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Equisetum are known as horsetails, foxtails, or scouring rushes - this last name is derived from the fact that Equisetum stores granules of silica within its cells, making it an effective tool for scrubbing pots and polishing wood.
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In this century these compounds have provided the basis of many common drugs including aspirin which comes from willow bark, and taxol, an ovarian cancer treatment, derived from the pacific yew.
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Doubleness, it is clear, is the cause of a thing being double, and from it is derived halfness.
The Six Enneads.
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The second bipolar waveform allows a measurement of the battery capacitance to be obtained and an evaluation of the charge of the battery to be derived.
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Chert fragments are likely to be polycyclic but originally derived from obducted deep-sea strata.
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Of course she derived from alien stock, and could assume any living form she chose, with sufficient ap - plication and practice, so could be just as pretty as she was able to imagine.
Here There Are Monsters
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It seems that between Italy and Sicily there is a strait called Faro of Messina, where the tide ebbs and flows every six hours, and the fickleness of lucks tides in Faro where it ebbs and flows every six minutes, furnishes a felicitous illustration of the whimsicalness of the tides of Faro de Messina, and the game may have derived its name from that fact.
A Controversy Between "Erskine" and "W. M." on the Practicability of Suppressing Gambling.
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The material may have come from a pig-derived enzyme called trypsin used early in development,
Arab Times Kuwait English Daily
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I don't know that I'm particularly afraid of you, after all," declared the exponent of The Searchlight, and Banneker felt a twinge of dismay lest he might have derived, somewhence, an access of courage.
Success A Novel
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Pritchard's most interesting chapter, in which the best authorities are quoted at length, is convincing that the word 'hoveller' is derived from _hobelier_ (_hobbe_, [Greek] _hippos_, Gaelic _coppal_) and signifies 'a coast watchman, 'or' look-out man, 'who, by horse
Heroes of the Goodwin Sands
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A progressed trigram for each year of age is derived from a certain arrangement of the trigrams.
Tibetan Astro Sciences ��� 1 Basic Principles
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It's a text, it has to be said, that is not so much translated — Pound's Chinese "translations" are notoriously inaccurate, though accuracy as such was hardly the point — as derived, paraphrased, transmuted from the eighth-century source (by way of professors Fenollosa, Mori, and Ariga) into a new and startlingly powerful, startlingly alive, English poem.
Ezra Pound, “Lament of the Frontier Guard”
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BRICK (derived according to some etymologists from the Teutonic _bricke_, a disk or plate; but more authoritatively, through the French _brique_, originally a "broken piece," applied especially to bread, and so to clay, from the Teutonic _brikan_, to break), a kind of artificial stone generally made of burnt clay, and largely used as a building material.
Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 4, Part 3 "Brescia" to "Bulgaria"
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By the way, unlike the French, con's American equivalent would be the masculine organ, prick, and schmock is, I think, probably derived from German schmuck (jewel); that is to say, "the family jewel.
VERBATIM: The Language Quarterly Vol XII No 1
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The word alone, derived from a diminutive form of the Dutch name for cucumber, is enough to endear this crunchy pickle to anyone.
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Accounts of imagined events are derived from an internal source and are therefore likely to contain cognitive operations, such as thoughts and reasonings.
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These, however, were sufficient to show me that the gneiss of Depilto was overlain conformably by the contorted schists; that the latter were followed by soft trappean beds, and these by thick beds of quartz-conglomerate, apparently derived from the degradation of the schistose rocks, with their numerous quartz veins.
The Naturalist in Nicaragua
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The philologists claimed that Arabic, Hebrew, Aramaic, Amharic, etc., were ‘Semitic’ languages, even though philologists could never find a parent Semitic language from which they all derived."
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It contains four oxazole and four thiazole rings and is representative of a broad class of pharmaceutically important natural products with five-membered heterocycles derived from peptide precursors.
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They are derived loosely from the Christian just war tradition and more recently adapted in the Responsibility to Protect Doctrine R2P, which abridges state sovereignty and the inviolability of borders in favor of protecting populations from barbarous governments.
Monica Duffy Toft: Does The U.S. Have A Responsibility To Protect The Libyan People?
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In October 1956 he announced a plan for national development that had at its core a special incentive to encourage exports by a 50 per cent remission of tax on profits derived from increased exports.
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Amplified fragments were cloned, sequenced and confirmed as being derived from the relevant cDNA.
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Each suprarenal gland consists of a cortical portion derived from the celomic epithelium and a medullary portion originally composed of sympatho-chromaffin tissue.
XI. Splanchnology. 1F. The Chromaphil and Cortical Systems
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Of far less importance are occurrences in gneisses and amphibolites, in small plutons derived from syenitic and gabbroic magmas, and in certain contact-metamorphic rocks.
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This mental domicile was furnished with a potpourri of notions derived directly or indirectly from a long succession of philosophers, sages, and seers East and West.
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To learn a classifier, a semisupervised Bayesian approach is adopted. An EM algorithm is derived to compute maximum likelihood estimate. Experimental results demonstrate appropriate accuracy.
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Furthermore, it bore coincidental resonance with the nineteenth-century Euro-American pejorative digger, which referred to the supposed cultural inferiority of California's Native Americans, some of whom derived subsistence from the gathering of wild roots.
Manhood in the Age of Aquarius: Masculinity in Two Countercultural Communities, 196583
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Rapid ascent of hydrothermal fluids derived from shallow-metamorphic and deep-burial diagenetic settings is well known from many sedimentary basins.
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For anticausativization, I review recent arguments suggesting that derived inchoatives have causative semantics as part of their lexical representation, consistent with the MH.
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The original version seems to have included some poems, which may explain why Sappho, an ancient Greek poet from whom the term sapphic is derived, is mentioned on the cover although none of her work appears inside.
Paperback Cover Cavalcade 5
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You can find agar flakes, a seaweed-derived thickener, in natural food stores.
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The Spirit speaks in the canon of Scripture (the word canon is derived from Hebrew, "kaneh," "a reed," the word here used; and John it was who completed the canon).
Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
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Yes, caterpillar shit is called frass, and yes, it's derived from fressen.
Languagehat.com: Q.PHEEVR ON 'BUTTERFLY.'
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Dec 04, 2008 | not rated yet | no comments yet Stem cells derived from bone marrow may serve as a novel therapeutic option to treat a disease called epidermolysis bullosa
PhysOrg.com - latest science and technology news stories
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Univesity autonomy, as one of the senior education system, derived from academic freedom, can be looked on as institutional safeguard to academic freedom.
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The minister may have derived further comfort from the fact that things are looking a little brighter than they have in previous years.
Times, Sunday Times
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The recent report that presynaptic mGlu receptors employ phosphoinositide-derived signals as a positive feedback mechanism to enhance glutamate release is particularly interesting.