How To Use Remit In A Sentence

  • I think it's certainly quite a lot of the comedy that I've been involved in is quite extreme, if you like, and the extremity is part of what's funny about it.
  • He did in these extremities, as I conceive, most humbly recommend the direction of his judicial proceedings to the upright judge of judges, God Almighty; did submit himself to the conduct and guideship of the blessed Spirit in the hazard and perplexity of the definitive sentence, and, by this aleatory lot, did as it were implore and explore the divine decree of his goodwill and pleasure, instead of that which we call the final judgment of a court. Five books of the lives, heroic deeds and sayings of Gargantua and his son Pantagruel
  • Payment will be remitted to you in full.
  • The government extended its remit as part of crime prevention across the aviation industry.
  • Here location at the two extremities of the peninsula has involved a striking difference in ethnic infusions in the two districts, different historical careers owing to different vicinal grouping, and dissimilar geographic conditions. Influences of Geographic Environment On the Basis of Ratzel's System of Anthropo-Geography
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  • After prepping and draping the patient's extremity, the surgeon makes a stab incision and inserts the arthroscope into the knee joint through a standard inferolateral portal.
  • In Being and Time, Heidegger carried Emersonian subjectivity and self-reliance to a point of new extremity.
  • This is consistent with patrilocal residency patterns-the remittance goes to the husband's family, from both of them.
  • Until 1999, we remitted no sums by way of hire for the 3 ships.
  • Agencies that have thought their only remit was to address minority issues must reassess the way they work. Times, Sunday Times
  • The purposes of this study were to report our experiences with high-energy wartime extremity wounds, to define the prevalence of heterotopic ossification in these patients, and to determine the factors that might lead to development of the condition," said lead author Lieutenant Commander Jonathan Agner Forsberg, MD. Dr. Forsberg and his team compared data from 243 patients who were treated for orthopaedic injuries between March 1, 2003 and December 31, 2006 at the medical center, including patients who underwent: amputation external or internal fixation of one or more fractures removal of damaged, dead or infected tissue, or 'debridement' EurekAlert! - Breaking News
  • Cold extremities with hot head and back; face purple during congestion, high fever.
  • It is amazing to see a patient who can barely move his or her extremities put forth the effort to wiggle his or her fingers in my dog's soft fur.
  • By this action, the highly elastic axis must be bent at the lower extremity, where it is naturally slightly curved; and I imagine it is by this elasticity alone that the zoophyte is enabled to rise again through the mud. Journal of researches into the geology and natural history of the various countries visited by H.M.S. Beagle
  • The essence of New York is its extremity and diversity.
  • A cenobite is usually a monk in a monastery, as opposed to an anchorite, who is a monk living alone (also called an ‘eremite’ or ‘hermit’).
  • This book is an unremitting account of misery, privation, and pointlessness in a world of dun landscapes, tormenting insects, malnutrition, and cultural stagnancy.
  • Hereafter no remittances shall be made for annates or for any other purpose to the court of Rome, the vice legation at Avignon, or to the nunciature at Lucerne.
  • Accordingly the Divisional Court allowed the appeal, remitted the matter to the arbitrator and stayed the oppression remedy proceeding.
  • His prison sentence was remitted to two years.
  • The singing, so difficult to bear for many listeners, never settles into a particular pitch, remaining agonisedly in motion; Jandek presents us with a voice in extremity, and an endless quarrying of pain and related states, in which infinite gradations of suffering are allowed to differentiate themselves. Archive 2007-10-01
  • The Financial Services Authority has a statutory remit to coax punters into greater awareness about husbanding their dosh.
  • On posttrial motions, the court upheld most of the jury verdict but granted remittitur of damages. ISO damages for false advertising and commercial disparagement
  • The issue for her critics is the extent to which her populist approach has compromised the channel's public-service remit.
  • The medial and lateral portions of the tendon of the Quadriceps pass down on either side of the patella, to be inserted into the upper extremity of the tibia on either side of the tuberosity; these portions merge into the capsule, as stated above, forming the medial and lateral patellar retinacula. III. Syndesmology. 7b. The Knee-joint
  • -- A tree, with leaves bunched at the extremities of the branches, oblong, oval, acuminate, odd-pinnate, 3-4 pairs of opposite leaflets. The Medicinal Plants of the Philippines
  • But they also know their public service remit will probably require them to repeat the exercise they carried out with the Tories. The Sun
  • It's a show-stopping performance combining repulsive extremity with utter conviction. Times, Sunday Times
  • By contrast, at the heart of the third version is the revolutionary turbulence of a "rotatory movement that never comes to a standstill," and which Schelling compares to an "unremitting wheel" and the 'The Abyss of the Past': Psychoanalysis in Schelling's Ages of the World (1815)
  • One by one they closed or merged with a fund that had a broader remit. Times, Sunday Times
  • Such decisions are outside the remit of this committee.
  • Fundamentally, there is little to choose between the extremities of right and left in politics.
  • By medicalising their behavior we give medicine and the state the remit to involuntarily detain and medicate such people to prevent them from behaving in ways society finds intolerable.
  • They commence anteriorly at the sternum, in the interspaces between the cartilages of the true ribs, and at the anterior extremities of the cartilages of the false ribs, and extend backward as far as the angles of the ribs, whence they are continued to the vertebral column by thin aponeuroses, the posterior intercostal membranes. IV. Myology. 6c. The Muscles of the Thorax
  • Gunner Oke at the breach, and advised him to exhibit a dose of black-currant wine before turning in (as a specific against a chill in the extremities), was proceeding leisurably to cut himself a quid of tobacco when he became aware of two workmen -- carpenters they appeared to be in the dim light -- approaching the entry. Merry-Garden and Other Stories
  • A two-year-old girl presented with a generalized seizure with tonic - clonic movements of all extremities.
  • Because man's extremity is God's opportunity!
  • eremitic austerities
  • A Gentleman refers to Cordelia in eremite terms: she "redeems inlet from a ubiquitous curse" of sinfulness so dramatically demonstrated in Lear's elder daughters. Philadelphia Reflections: Shakspere Society of Philadelphia
  • Early wealth in Barbados was built on remittances sent back by emigrants who went to Panamá to build the canal. Think Progress » Mark Krikorian: ‘Haiti’s So Screwed Up Because It Wasn’t Colonized Long Enough’
  • Ashy dermatosis is a chronic condition characterized by asymptomatic, slate-gray or violaceous hyperpigmented macules distributed most commonly over the trunk and proximal extremities, and less frequently over the face and neck.
  • Under the "favored applications clause," a person whose knowledge of any particular subject was unique and authoritative, whether the topic were Esperanto or fistiana, went to the head of the waiting -- list automatically and had his initiation fee remitted. Average Jones
  • With the growth of online banking, companies were remitting salaries online and customers were making payments without having to physically step into a bank.
  • In some instances lameness is mixed as in joint ailments, involvement of the bicipital bursa (bursa intertubercularis), etc. In affections of the extremity there exists supporting leg lameness. Lameness of the Horse Veterinary Practitioners' Series, No. 1
  • Huius ad insul� extremitates non procul � fluuio Pyson, habetur locus mirabilis pariter et terribilis, vltr� omne mundanum, pen� et procul: de euentibus, ac laboribus infinitis, qu� mihi me韘que in tempore itinerationis acciderunt hucusque subticui, c鵰 iam vnum de maioribus ecce narro. The Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques and Discoveries of the English Nation
  • He found that his extremities grew cold.
  • My disappointment with Christian rock has always been its lack of extremity, of the aching sorrow or joy, the celebration or desperation that fuels the best rock and traditional black gospel music.
  • By the basin, under a small portico cut in the solid wall, sat a priest, old, bearded, wrinkled, cowled-never being more perfectly eremitish. Ben-Hur, a tale of the Christ
  • the word for a pedal extremity is `foot'
  • This concern was also used as a justification for focusing the remit of the board on victims of crimes of violence. Victimology - the victim and the criminal justice process
  • This's a fair sketch of idiosyncrasy run amuck, but it's also a compelling portrait of mental and spiritual extremity.
  • His limbs looked flabby, his extremities bloated, his gut rose and fell with the labor of his breathing.
  • Himself of the whole; and the curvative — the steady progression and the productive condition; and the circular the same, and the holding together the middle and extremities, which encompass and are encompassed, — and the turning to Him of the things which proceeded from Him. Dionysius the Areopagite, Works (1897)
  • In Singapore, there are no restrictions on the amount of capital investment, nor on the repatriation of capital or remittance of profits.
  • Such deposits and share contributions will end on August 30, to allow for remittance of money to input suppliers.
  • To forgive is not to forget, nor remit, but let it go; to be lonely is not becoz u have no friends, but no one is living in ur heart.
  • It is a beautiful little town situated on the southern side of the Menai Strait at nearly its western extremity. Wild Wales : Its People, Language and Scenery
  • He had delivered unto them the keys of the kingdom of heaven, promising them that whatsoever they bound on earth should be bound in heaven; whatsoever they loosed upon earth should be loosed in heaven; whosesoever sins they should remit should be remitted, and whosesoever sins they should retain should be retained.
  • Koaara extends from the westernmost point to the northern extremity of the island; the whole coast between them forming an extensive bay, called Toe - yah-yah, which is bounded to the north by two very conspicuous hills. A General History and Collection of Voyages and Travels, Volume 17 Arranged in Systematic Order: Forming a Complete History of the Origin and Progress of Navigation, Discovery, and Commerce, by Sea and Land, from the Earliest Ages to the Present Time
  • I became alienated from everything that was going on around me - because of the violence and extremity of it.
  • In 1981, out-of-nation Pakistanis remitted $2 billion, which equaled thirty percent of the value of the nation's imports.
  • Fall is not a failure, can not stand up to failure; walking is not successful, only unremittingly is victory.
  • Even sending half notes is not always a security, if the remitter does not take the precaution of waiting to hear of the safe arrival of the first half. India and the Indians
  • For a long time MEN Hao-ran has always been regarded as an eremitic poet, but in recent years some scholars deem that MEN Hao-ran had a strong mind of being an official.
  • In situations of extremity one's body can and will come to one's aid. Times, Sunday Times
  • The film is a joy - hilariously funny and unremittingly scabrous.
  • They are caused by a tearing of the inner part of the placenta called the amnion, which produces the fiber-like bands that may trap the baby's extremities such as the arms, legs, fingers or toes. Emaxhealth
  • The tumor is predominantly located subcutaneously or in the deep soft tissue of the extremities and trunk, peritoneum, or retroperitoneum.
  • In the authority that I have referred to it is suggested that the Court should not, by making a remitter, alter the rights of the parties and that is intended to refer to giving one party an advantage over the other in the litigation.
  • Shoulder denervation and subsequent loss of shoulder joint range, strength, and sensory awareness results in markedly decreased ability to freely move the shoulders and upper extremities.
  • Lukov was taken to the St. Ana hospital with a broken upper jaw, broken arm, medium brain injury and injuries in the extremities.
  • The European Medicines Agency's Committee for Medicinal Products for Human Use recommended the orally taken drug be used in Europe at a 0.5-milligram daily dose to treat patients with highly active relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis. Business Watch
  • Yet when it comes to how they should view their adopted country, the message is one of almost unremitting hostility. Times, Sunday Times
  • So, too, does the unremitting spectre of war. The Times Literary Supplement
  • The board will expand its remit to cover public liability and motor accidents later this year.
  • My car is booked for a Warrant of Fitness tomorrow, so let's all keep our extremities crossed that it passes with no big repair jobs.
  • But, as he pressed upon her with a violence, of which the object could not be mistaken, and endeavoured to secure her right hand, she exclaimed, “Take it then, with a wanion to you!” — and struck him an almost stunning blow on the face, with the pebble which she held ready for such an extremity. Woodstock
  • Without any reference to the greater or less force of medical theories as to the efficacy of cinchona bark, I now only take an experienced and practical view, well knowing that the sufferings of many millions of poor and rich natives, especially in the jungle districts, are yearly very great, and the mortality quite enormous from remittent and intermittent fevers, by far the greater part of which would be immensely relieved, or wholly cured, by the free use of cinchona bark. The Commercial Products of the Vegetable Kingdom Considered in Their Various Uses to Man and in Their Relation to the Arts and Manufactures; Forming a Practical Treatise & Handbook of Reference for the Colonist, Manufacturer, Merchant, and Consumer, o
  • Directly opposite the incisura angularis of the lesser curvature the greater curvature presents a dilatation, which is the left extremity of the pyloric part; this dilatation is limited on the right by a slight groove, the sulcus intermedius, which is about 2.5 cm, from the duodenopyloric constriction. XI. Splanchnology. 1F. The Stomach
  • The Home Office inquiry has been given a wide remit. Times, Sunday Times
  • The Nazi stalked off, defeated in his quest for cheese-flavored cracker supremity. Unclebob Diary Entry
  • A year later, the new government, having learnt the lesson the hard way, lifted the freeze on profit remittances.
  • My whole mouth throbs with each heartbeat, a little movement coming to my extremities, allowing me to flex my fingers.
  • They are seeking legal costs and an order remitting the issue of their promotion to the PSC for reconsideration within 14 days.
  • I recommend seven or eight small pieces of iron to be prepared, a fathom in size, in thickness like a thick specillum, and bent at the extremity, and a broad piece should be on the extremity, like a small obolus. On Hemorrhoids
  • Few, even among Dutch painters, led such an unadventurous life, yet in his dedication to his art, and the sacrifice of his well-being to his unremitted meticulous toil, he fell little short of the heroic.
  • Some doctors seek to widen their professional remit to cover the entire range of human experience.
  • —The folium vermis (folium cacuminis; cacuminal lobe) is a short, narrow, concealed band at the posterior extremity of the vermis, consisting apparently of a single folium, but in reality marked on its upper and under surfaces by secondary fissures. IX. Neurology. 4a. The Hind-brain or Rhombencephalon
  • The upper mandible, which is strongly convex, exhibits upon its median line a slight ridge, which is quite wide at its origin, and then continues to decrease and becomes sensibly depressed as far as to the center of its length, and afterward rises on approaching the anterior extremity, where it terminates in a powerful hook, which seems to form Scientific American Supplement, No. 829, November 21, 1891
  • Money orders which, in consequence of misapprehension of the name of the remitter or place of payment have been erroneously made out, can be returned to the postmaster, and a correct order given in exchange; a new commission, however, will be charged on the corrected order. Canadian Postal Guide
  • The termino-terminal anastomosis is effected by bringing the extremities of the vessels into contact, no traction being necessary. Alexis Carrel - Nobel Lecture
  • Such decisions are outside the remit of this committee.
  • I had told my disci - ples: "He who kills you will believe he is performing ser - vice for God," and those words came back to me-a comfort in this extremity. The Gospel according to the Son
  • If the time had dragged this would have been a hard job, unremitting and tedious.
  • Socratico, Cornute, sinu. tune fallere sollers adposita intortos extendit regula mores, et premitur ratione animus vincique laborat artificemque tuo ducit sub pollice vultum. tecum etenim longos memini consumere soles, et tecum primas epulis decerpere noctes. unum opus et requiem pariter disponimus ambo, atque verecunda laxamus seria mensa. non equidem hoc dubites, amborum foedere certo consentire dies et ab uno sidere duci: nostra vel aequali suspendit tempora libra Post-Augustan Poetry From Seneca to Juvenal
  • The ministers of the tyrant, by the orders, and in the presence, of their master, beat him on the neck with leather thongs armed at the extremities with lead; and when he fainted under the violence of the pain, he was removed in a close litter, to conceal his dying agonies from the eyes of the indignant city. The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire
  • Surrounding the pistil are the stamens, few or many, the anther at the extremity containing the powdery pollen. My Studio Neighbors
  • Sin abounded among the Jews; and, to those of them that were converted to the faith of Christ, did not grace much more abound in the remitting of so much guilt and the subduing of so much corruption? Commentary on the Whole Bible Volume VI (Acts to Revelation)
  • The group has been given a remit to examine ways of improving the local transport system.
  • As long as the policing pledge is mentioned to all callers I am sure they will be happy with no actual response (as resonse officerS are dealing with neighbourhood ASB, … NO N/HOOD on duty … for a change. .or commited at meetings …) grrrrrrrrrrrr soz, but it would b nice if EVERYONE actualy pulled their weight (please no more “NOT WITHIN MY REMIT”). Policing Pledge Response Times – The Ugly Truth! « POLICE INSPECTOR BLOG
  • According to a press release from the FDIC, the counterfeit checks display the word "remitter" above the indemnity notice in the lower-left corner while the words "cashier's check" appear near the top center. Orlando Business News - Local Orlando News | The Orlando Business Journal
  • Parapteron - era: small sclerites, articulated to the dorsal extremity of the episternum, just below the wings; absent on prothorax = the tegulae of Hymenoptera, and patagia of Lepidoptera: have been homologized with the elytra of Coleoptera. Explanation of Terms Used in Entomology
  • A particular flavonol, epicatechin, or EC, which is also found in red wine, is said to be responsible for much of dark chocolate's effects of increased blood circulation to the heart, extremities and brain. Michael Stanclift, N.D.: Dark Chocolate's Heart Health Benefits Are Bittersweet
  • I was sent to boarding school, where I spent six years of unremitting misery.
  • These fastidious, and sometimes fantastic ceremonies, originally devised as the very extremities of anti-barbarism, were often themselves but too nearly allied in spirit to the barbaresque in taste. The Caesars
  • Quitting this situation he lived for some years as gardener in several considerable families: after which he established himself in London as a seedsman; and has ever since followed that business with unremitting diligence and success. The Journal of a Mission to the Interior of Africa, in the Year 1805
  • As well, I wholly agree with your assessment of global labor arbitrage, e.g. migrant worker remittances or Richard Florida's 'plug-and-play communities', the impact of which I believe has been underrated, particularly wrt global capital movement. Policy in a Fog, Arnold Kling | EconLog | Library of Economics and Liberty
  • The clear implication was that the minister should steer clear of issues outside that remit. Times, Sunday Times
  • Ms L was alert and oriented and able to move both lower extremities at the time of transfer.
  • The Antipodes were the body's extremities, its feet or its finger nails.
  • Neurapraxia of the brachial plexus or cervical nerve roots, often called a stinger or burner, causes pain and paresthesia in a single upper extremity, usually radiating from the neck into the shoulder, arm, or hand.
  • The other path for failed attempts at behavioral control through physical punishment was outright cruelty and sometimes descent into unremitting family warfare. On the Edge: A History of Poor Black Children and Their American Dreams
  • This unremitting focus on just one race participant is understandable, but the hint of Schadenfreude in the tone was unmistakable.
  • Electricity boards have no commitment to supply quality power without interruption, but users face disconnection if charges are not remitted periodically.
  • When such cases are found, it remains to be shown that the child so reared is proportionately benefited by this unremittent devotion of its mother. Women and Economics: A Study of the Economic Relation Between Men and Women as a Factor in Social Evolution
  • Scilicet hic illi meditantur pondera mores; hic premitur fecunda quies uirtusque serena fronte grauis sanusque nitor luxuque carentes deliciae, quas ipse suis digressus Athenis mallet deserto senior Gargettius horto; 95 haec per et Aegaeas hiemes Hyadumque niuosum sidus et Oleniis dignum petiisse sub astris, si Maleae credenda ratis Siculosque per aestus sit uia: cur oculis sordet uicina uoluptas? hic tua Tiburtes Faunos chelys et iuuat ipsum100 A Villa at Tibur
  • That issue is not within the remit of the working group.
  • M. Carnot was of opinion, that it was necessary, to declare the country in danger, call the federates and national guards to arms, place Paris in a state of siege, defend it, at the last extremity retire behind the Loire, form intrenchments there, recall the army of Memoirs of the Private Life, Return, and Reign of Napoleon in 1815, Vol. II
  • After remitting the sale proceeds - minus 40 per cent commission - to the bookstall owner, he winds up the show.
  • The illness was characterised by gait disturbance, a relapsing and remitting course, nystagmus, and status epilepticus.
  • While both groups showed brain differences compared with non-criminals in the study, Pardini and his colleagues uncovered few brain differences between chronic offenders and so-called remitting offenders. Msnbc.com: Top msnbc.com headlines
  • This last feature also had the unintended consequence of reducing the inflow of remittances form foreign workers, which has been an important source of sustenance of Pakistan's balance of payments.
  • However, other factors point to the Federal Court as being the appropriate forum to remit the matter.
  • The eastern extremity of the peninsula is called Ackers Point.
  • But the head should be rubbed by the sponge until it is quite dry; the extremities should be protected from cold, as also the head and the rest of the body; and a man should not be washed immediately after he has taken a draught of ptisan or a drink; neither should he take ptisan as a drink immediately after the bath. On Regimen In Acute Diseases
  • A mediocrity, not disagreeable, always rules; supremity has been, is, and always will be the stick in the riffle around which the little whirlpool will always centre. The Common Law
  • The bothering and begging are exhaustive and unremitting, and the beggars world-beating in their decrepitude and infirmity.
  • Again, as Mr. Darwin says, "In the embryos of all air-breathing vertebrates, certain glands, called the corpora Wolffiana, correspond with and act like the kidneys of mature fishes;" and during the sixth month the whole body is covered very thickly with wool-like hair -- even the forehead and ears being closely coated; but it is, as Mr. Darwin observes, "a significant fact that the palms of the hands and the soles of the feet are quite naked, like the inferior surfaces of all four extremities in most of the lower animals," including monkeys. The Scientific Evidences of Organic Evolution
  • The mouth of the crucible is closed with a luting of clay, or otherwise, and the opening, _d_, made in the upper side of the crucible, near its extremity, comes entirely within the retort, and forms a passage for the zinc fumes from the retort chamber into the condensing chamber. Scientific American Supplement, No. 508, September 26, 1885
  • To regulate intra - abdominal viscera and channels and collaterals of lower extremities upon personal situations.
  • Those people who smoke may have lower extremity temperatures, because they may have poor circulation. Times, Sunday Times
  • And shortly, in her armies' unremitting retreat, the great fortress of Przemysl was abandoned to siege.
  • Originally developed as a means to ensure compliance with regulations, environmental auditing now has a much wider remit for many companies.
  • The passage eloquently describes the process: "Cumque volumus ut fascietur, nutrix eius membra suaviter tangere debet et quod dilatandum fuerit dilatare, et quod subtiliandum subtiliare, et omne membrum secundum convenientiorem figuram figurare, et hoc totum subtilit compressione cum extremitatibus digitorum, quod quidem multis faciendum erit vicibus." back A Tender Age: Cultural Anxieties over the Child in the Twelfth and Thirteenth Centuries
  • On and off the pitch, he is unremittingly, unstintingly himself. Times, Sunday Times
  • Oculogyric crisis, blepharospasm, respiratory stridor with cyanosis, torticollis, and opisthotonos can occur, as well as slow, writhing movements of the extremities. The Neuropsychiatric Guide to Modern Everyday Psychiatry
  • She sends a small remittance home to her parents each month.
  • Last summer the culture secretary announced swingeing cuts and closures among the 55 public bodies that fall under the remit of the DCMS – which include the Arts Council, Sport England and the British Library – as part of a so-called "bonfire of the quangos". Jeremy Hunt's UK Film Council plan criticised by audit office
  • Dishonorably as kfc does no flashily external hard chockful despised in the apatosaur of the orthodoxy of attalea, mtv no riskily nonremittal cycad that is in the zinkenite of nightdress. Rational Review
  • Courcelles succeeded in robbing the prisoners who were in his charge in a more cautious manner than his predecessor; he, in short, contrived to subtract something for himself from any remittances which reached them, and paid them francs for livres. The Letter-Bag of Lady Elizabeth Spencer-Stanhope — Volume 1
  • The chance to live a quieter life in the hopes it might spontaneously remit was the final factor. Times, Sunday Times
  • She was young and beautiful, with dark, oriental features, and a bearing which aimed at supremity of arrogance. Veranilda
  • The forex transferred into the enterprises may be used to repay capital with interest, buy equipment and raw materials, remit profits out of the country and pay the legitimate income of foreign staff.
  • The North-East should be seen as a bridge to lands and opportunities beyond rather than as a cul-de-sac in a troublesome extremity of the country.
  • It was surprising to find, however, that the earliest migrants were both more likely to send remittances and to send higher amounts of remittances.
  • Obscurata diu populo bonus eruet, atque Proferet in lucem speciosa vocabula rerum, Quae priscis memorala Calonibus alque Cethegis, Nunc situs informis premit et deserta velustas: Adsciscet nova, quae genitor produxerit usus: Vehemens, et liquidus, puroque simillimus amni, Fundet opes Latiumque beabit divile lingua. [ Life Of Johnson
  • The rudimentary type was a simple chamber or cella, with a loggia open to the air except for two columns standing between the two extremities of the side walls, which terminated in pilasters known as 'antae'. [ The Legacy of Greece Essays By: Gilbert Murray, W. R. Inge, J. Burnet, Sir T. L. Heath, D'arcy W. Thompson, Charles Singer, R. W. Livingston, A. Toynbee, A. E. Zimmern, Percy Gardner, Sir Reginald Blomfield
  • In 116 patients undergoing both CT venography and lower extremity ultrasound, Cham and colleagues found concordant results in 93% of cases.
  • You may have heard of "irresistible" letters -- sales letters that would sell electric fans to Esquimaux or ice skates to Hawaiians, collection letters that make the thickest skinned debtor remit by return mail, and other kinds of resultful, masterful letters that pierce to the very soul. How to Write Letters (Formerly The Book of Letters) A Complete Guide to Correct Business and Personal Correspondence
  • As this margin inclines dorsally, it sweeps around in a distally concave arc to produce a rounded, distally pointing extremity adjacent to the dorsal margin.
  • My main remit was to coordinate the central development of advanced accounting courses and units.
  • Among the most brilliant of these is 'Berns', created for Lars Siltberg's 'Candleflames Modulated' (2007), exploring frequency extremities with visceral sheets of blackened noise, near infrasonic subbass and vastly unsettling use of psychoacoustic space. Boomkat: Just arrived
  • Its remit is to progress the matter to see what level of medical cover was needed.
  • At the right extremity of the transact was the organ-loft, The Dodge Club or, Italy in MDCCCLIX
  • The entire film is suffused with almost unremitting brutality.
  • The combat raged without intermission until nightfall: three cannon shots, discharged at the extremity of either line, then marked as if preconcertedly, the pause of battle; and both armies bivouacked exactly where the morning light had found them. The History of Napoleon Buonaparte
  • On 30 June the Solicitors remitted the full purchase price of £102,000 to the Vendor's solicitors.
  • Rrefirendo algunas Cosas delo q asubcedido despues q sCriui y di Razon enlos Vltimos nauios q llegaron aese rreyno el ano pasado de 1570. y tocarelo mas Notable dexandolo que no loes para otros autores mas desoCupados rremitiendome a los capitanes pasajeros y otras personas The Philippine Islands, 1493-1803 — Volume 03 of 55 1569-1576 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
  • Asclera (TM) (polidocanol) Injection is indicated to sclerose uncomplicated spider veins (varicose veins, less than or equal to 1 mm in diameter) and uncomplicated reticular veins (varicose veins 1 to 3 mm in diameter) in the lower extremity. RedOrbit News - Technology
  • Despite its noble remit, and the broad range of material which must have been available, this is not a definitive anthology in terms of calibre.
  • In future, staff recruitment will fall within the remit of the division manager.
  • These clauses or conditions are signed in order to remit agency problem of the liability and restrictions including accounting number.
  • Hyperthermic therapy and limb perfusion may be used on extremities.
  • Because the complex series of articulations of the shoulder allows a wide range of motion, the affected extremity should be compared with the unaffected side to determine the patient's normal range.
  • There are obvious issues to raise about the second part of this remit. Times, Sunday Times
  • Of course, that is a matter totally outside the ambit of my remit tonight.
  • Even had we, however, a perfect and trustworthy transcript of Shakespeare's original sketch for this play, there can be little doubt that the rough draught would still prove almost as different from the final masterpiece as is the soiled and ragged canvas now before us, on which we trace the outline of figures so strangely disfigured, made subject to such rude extremities of defacement and defeature. A Study of Shakespeare
  • The pope cannot remit any guilt, except by declaring that it has been remitted by God and by assenting to God's remission.
  • The gunpowder without the mephitis being fired, the combustion was soon communicated to the other extremity of the train, and to the phosphorus, which took fire with decrepitation, burnt rapidly, with a bright flame, slightly coloured with veilow and green, and left on the wood a black mark, as of charcoal. A General collection of the best and most interesting voyages and travels in all parts of the world [microform] : many of which are now first translated into English : digested on a new plan
  • Together with the others, it succeeded to a period of eremitism of solitary anchorites whose dwellings honeycombed the warm slopes that confront the Old Calabria
  • The person often describes previous episodes of low back pain with or without lower extremity radiation.
  • Of the three cases before the court, one was remitted for redetermination.
  • thy slanders I forgive; and therewithal remit thy other forfeits
  • This is how coenobitism grew out of eremitism not only in Calabria, but in every part of the world which has been afflicted with these eccentrics. Old Calabria
  • The lake is situated at the eastern extremity of the mountain range.
  • Rigby worked with ardour to suppress trafficking in slaves and his efforts to enforce the 1845 treaty were unremitting.
  • So we see the heathen poets, when they fall upon a libertine passion, do still expostulate with laws and moralities, as if they were opposite and malignant to nature: Et quod natura remittit, invida jura negant. The Advancement of Learning
  • At no successive instants, during a bright day, after the earth has once been warmed to the temperature of the night air of the previous night, do the same particles touch the surface; an unremitting renewal of the surface air-stratum is in continual progress as long as the heat of the soil or terrestrial surface is greater than that of the air in contact with it. Census of the City of Charleston, South Carolina, For the Year 1861. Illustrated by Statistical Tables. Prepared under the Authority of the City Council by Frederick A. Ford
  • 'If I find it necessary to carry you away, pick-a-back, o' course I shall leave it the least bit o 'time possible afore you; but allow me to express a hope as you won't reduce me to extremities; in saying wich, I merely quote wot the nobleman said to the fractious pennywinkle, ven he vouldn't come out of his shell by means of a pin, and he conseqvently began to be afeered that he should be obliged to crack him in the parlour door.' The Pickwick papers
  • Those are both good signs in terms of actually being able to make noise, verbalize a little bit maybe, also moving his extremities is a good sign as well. CNN Transcript Jan 4, 2006
  • Bull's Head stringy fowls, with lower extremities like wooden legs, sticking up out of the dish; of its cannibalic boiled mutton, gushing horribly among its capers when carved; of its little dishes of pastry --- roofs of spermaceti ointment, erected over half an apple or four gooseberries. The Uncommercial Traveller
  • I think therefore, with great submission to the court, that the right for which I contended, that is, that in common wars between independent nations, either of the contending parties has a right to confiscate or remit debts due by its people to the enemy, is not shaken by the customary law of nations, as far as it regards us, because the custom could not affect us. Sketches of the Life and Character of Patrick Henry
  • Nor the cause rendered, that “the firmness of hides is for the armour of the body against extremities of heat or cold,” doth not impugn the cause rendered, that “contraction of pores is incident to the outwardest parts, in regard of their adjacence to foreign or unlike bodies;” and so of the rest, both causes being true and compatible, the one declaring an intention, the other a consequence only. The Advancement of Learning
  • Egypt another paradise, now barbarous and desert, and almost waste, by the despotical government of an imperious Turk, intolerabili servitutis jugo premitur ([483] one saith) not only fire and water, goods or lands, sed ipse spiritus ab insolentissimi victoris pendet nutu, such is their slavery, their lives and souls depend upon his insolent will and command. Anatomy of Melancholy
  • remit $25
  • The fleshy appendage at the lower extremity of the sea-pen (described at Bahia Blanca) also forms part of the zoophyte, as a whole, in the same manner as the roots of a tree form part of the whole tree, and not of the individual leaf or flower-buds. Journal of researches into the geology and natural history of the various countries visited by H.M.S. Beagle
  • The organ of hearing is injured _at its peripheral extremity_, or else the acusticus in its course; then occurs _difficulty of hearing_ or The Mind of the Child, Part II The Development of the Intellect, International Education Series Edited By William T. Harris, Volume IX.
  • There are obvious issues to raise about the second part of this remit. Times, Sunday Times
  • The Court also declared that only a member of the judiciary could pass a sentence and that this was out of the remit of the Home Secretary.
  • I have found, when I experience Reynauds, that the only way to bring circulation back to the extremities is to bring up my core temperature. Workers Compensation: A Fallacy « Colleen Anderson
  • The gut-appendages or caeca in birds, as has been observed, are few in number, and are not situated high up, as in fishes, but low down towards the extremity of the gut. The History of Animals
  • In cases of hospital gangrene of the extremities, and in cases of gangrene of the intestines, heart clots and fibrous coagula were universally present. Andersonville
  • This occurs when the ambient air and wind cause convective heat loss, which the body combats by shunting blood from extremities toward the core.
  • She had passed through the Empire, she had lived through a siege, had rubbed shoulders with the Commune, had seen everything, no doubt, of what men are capable in the pursuit of their desires or in the extremity of their distress, for love, for money, and even for honour; and in her precarious connection with the very highest spheres she had kept her own honourability unscathed while she had lost all her prejudices. The Arrow of Gold : A Story Between Two Notes
  • I will order my future unremitting struggle!
  • It remits that appeal for ‘determination by him’.
  • A remittance must accompany all orders.
  • In addition to the tentacles, these extremities include the hypostome, the lower peduncle, which is committed to foot formation, and the foot.
  • Kevin Blanco, meanwhile, having taken his rec pen hostage, is perched on top of that basketball hoop with an air of eremitic remoteness. Prison Porn
  • To forgive is not to forget.nor remit.but let it go.

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