She has a lot of practical experience in dealing with these kinds of problems. |
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Traditional Judaism was fluid and diverse and accommodated itself to the practical requirements of the day. |
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All of this is an abomination not merely as a matter of principle, but even in purely practical terms. |
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We can speculate about the future, but on a more practical level, we have to admit that we simply don't know what will happen. |
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Peter, instead of adjuring Miss Limpenny to fear no more the heat o' the sun, accinged himself to the practical difficulty. |
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An auxlanger is creating something practical that's designed to be used by humans for communicating. |
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Was Williams enjoying a philistine practical joke at the expense of an intrusive antiquary and transparently naive bardolator? |
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The serving area is a glass, chrome and white tile combination, practical but bathroomy. |
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Would not children come kindly to such out-of-door lessons, and to such practical knowledge as would always bestand them well? |
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Our simple-pattern stainless flatware is the bottom of the line, but very practical. |
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However, due to the presence of permafrost, use of asphalt is not practical, and therefore the roads are made of clay. |
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Often, if the skill is being used in a common or practical way, people will consider it a craft instead of art. |
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The machine is too big to be practical for most private homes. |
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There are practical as well as aesthetic reasons for planting trees. |
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As a documentary of Raiders pointed out, the hat served a practical purpose. |
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Submarines can work at greater depths than are survivable or practical for human divers. |
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A more practical method of increasing combat endurance was the external torpedo tube, loaded only in port. |
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This has resulted in a practical nuclear research reactor called Myrrha in which transmutation is possible. |
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However, the first known practical wind power plants were built in Sistan, an Eastern province of Iran, from the 7th century. |
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Benoit Fourneyron, a former student of Claude Burdin, built the first practical water turbine. |
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Passenger services are operated by Eurostar, who has a practical monopoly on tunnel passenger services. |
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A given wind speed has a matching practical limit over which time or distance will not produce larger waves. |
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The prime minister in turn disliked the old nobles, whom he considered corrupt and incapable of practical action. |
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The easiest practical way to separate true shrimp from dendrobranchiates is to examine the second abdominal segment. |
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It was the first practical testing of the new steel battleships, cruisers, destroyers, submarines, and torpedo boats. |
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Although this system does not sit well with the judicial nature of the body, it is usually of little practical consequence. |
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After the four years, cadets were posted to special training ships for final practical experience before being posted to real command positions. |
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He left the company after developing the world's first practical headlamp for automobiles, using a compact integral acetylene generator. |
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The most practical place to achieve this would be in the region of Sedan, which lay in the sector of Rundstedt's Army Group. |
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Removal is practical only given large groups of individuals due to the economic cost. |
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This has generated strong interest in practical applications that use these fungi in the biological control of these agricultural pests. |
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Paragnosis, for example, seems like a practical place to start. We already know for sure that there is such a faculty. |
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The gods represented distinctly the practical needs of daily life, and they were scrupulously accorded the rites and offerings considered proper. |
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For practical purposes though, a metallic reference standard was required, one thousand times more massive, the kilogram. |
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Satellite sensors now in practical use for precipitation fall into two categories. |
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Helicopters are also used when patients need to be transported between medical facilities and air transportation is the most practical method. |
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Robert Dunkin, a Penzance sadler and maker of scientific instruments taught Davy the basis of practical science. |
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He concluded the Bourbon Family Compact with France, offering them practical support. |
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For practical purposes, Canada has adopted the American hardiness zone classification system. |
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Battery technology is gradually improving making this form of transportation more practical. |
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Scooters were also a practical and accessible form of transportation for 1960s teens. |
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As sail size grew linen was too heavy to be practical so cotton became more popular. |
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This technique is more experimental than practical, but may yield results in time. |
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Standards have since relaxed and New Zealand fashion has received a reputation for being casual, practical and lacklustre. |
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Cylinder seals were both artistic and practical, and very widely used by what can be loosely called the middle class in the Ancient Near East. |
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In this case, some tools can substitute for other tools, either as a makeshift solution or as a matter of practical efficiency. |
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The female figures, as part of Upper Palaeolithic portable art, appear to have no practical use in the context of subsistence. |
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Applied Anthropology refers to the application of the method and theory of anthropology to the analysis and solution of practical problems. |
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In spite of these restrictions, most generally used practical thermometers are of the empirically based kind. |
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Theoretically based temperature scales are used to provide calibrating standards for practical empirically based thermometers. |
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Aside from the EU membership difficulty, even before its settling the dispute has caused no major practical problems. |
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There were also practical reasons to fall back from the limits of Augustus' expansionism in this region. |
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Modern scholars have pointed out that the Rhine was a more practical boundary for the Roman Empire than any other river in Germania. |
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For all practical social purposes 'race' is not so much a biological phenomenon as a social myth. |
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Colonizer's awareness of the Earth's surface and abundance of practical skills provided colonizers with a knowledge that, in turn, created power. |
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Thus, rather than megalomania, his behaviour may simply have been a practical attempt at strengthening his rule and keeping his empire together. |
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A practical effect was government seizure of traditional communal grazing lands. |
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Another faction, republican in nature, believed in continuing along a course towards practical independence. |
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Education became mandatory between the ages of 6 to 13 and focused primarily on French language and practical skills. |
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Many early medieval manuscripts have been noted for containing practical descriptions for the use of herbal remedies. |
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This period contained progress in surgery, medical chemistry, dissection, and practical medicine. |
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Some men carry the assa, a stick, which can have practical uses or is simply used as an accessory during formal events. |
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Modern cartography constitutes many theoretical and practical foundations of geographic information systems. |
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His first care was practical, to reinforce the city's fortifications, cleaning and even paving some main streets and restoring the water supply. |
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The expedition reached the mouth of the Amazon on 24 August 1542, demonstrating the practical navigability of the Great River. |
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Jack didn't get an engineering degree, but has practical knowledge of metalworking. |
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Jack's knowledge has the practical benefit of giving us useful prototype parts. |
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The class put a whoopee cushion on the teacher's chair as a practical joke. |
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In practice, people use different definitions of world circumnavigation to accommodate practical constraints, depending on the method of travel. |
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The prizes were to be awarded for the discovery and demonstration of a practical method for determining the longitude of a ship at sea. |
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These towers were adorned with deity masks, and were built to impress the viewer, rather than serve any practical function. |
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Several practical orthographies were developed to transcribe the language, many using the Americanist transcription system. |
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In addition to this practical purpose, plazas serve as principal green spaces and contain monuments, statues and water fountains. |
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The practical lessons in warfare were overseen by the Duke of Alba during the Italian Wars. |
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Literature championing the cause of citrus juice, therefore, had no practical impact. |
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He thinks wind can be a practical source of renewable energy. |
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Dezhnyov left reports at Yakutsk and Moscow but these were ignored, probably because his sea route was of no practical use. |
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Other sports, such as rodeo, developed from practical skills such as those needed on working ranches and stations. |
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Sport hunting from horseback evolved from earlier practical hunting techniques. |
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Idioms are also not to be confused with proverbs, which are simple sayings that express a truth based on common sense or practical experience. |
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Other philosophical questions are more theoretical, although they often arise through thinking about practical issues. |
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At times, Luther's practical reforms fell short of his earlier radical pronouncements. |
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There was a change in patterns of piety, affecting devotional and practical life in all its departments. |
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As an offshoot of Anglicanism, Methodist churches often use episcopal polity for historical as well as practical reasons, albeit to limited use. |
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However, for practical management lines are drawn into President of Conference, Chair of District, Superintendent Minister, Minister. |
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Judges were chosen according to their commercial background and practical knowledge. |
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Their skills and reputation would however still rely upon practical knowledge of merchant practice. |
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Living trusts also, in practical terms, tend to be driven to large extent by tax considerations. |
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Whereas justification for tradition is ideological, the justification for other similar concepts is more practical or technical. |
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Although attempts to abolish slavery failed by narrow margins in the legislature, in practical terms, the state had mostly ended the practice. |
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Previous intervention strategies may have been largely ineffective due to not being culturally sensitive or practical. |
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Thus, as a practical matter, most of the real work was done by the Legislative Counsel's assistants and then approved by the Code Commissioners. |
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The cattle byre has ritual as well as practical significance as a store of wealth and symbol of prestige. |
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Later one side of the barter started to involve precious metals, which gained symbolic as well as practical importance. |
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The emphasis on heavy industry diverted investment from the more practical production of chemicals and plastics. |
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The terminology of juristic literature was conservative and tended to preserve notions which had lost their practical relevance. |
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Clinics were intended to give practical experience in law practice while providing pro bono representation to the poor. |
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This gives perfectly objective results, but their practical relevance is still arguable. |
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The following sections deal with practical matters such as procedures, staff, and resources of the new Court and the fees of the judges. |
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Under the British system, the government is required by convention and for practical reasons to maintain the confidence of the House of Commons. |
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Suffrage describes not only the legal right to vote, but also the practical question of whether a question will be put to a vote. |
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Thus, for practical purposes, the Australia Act has eliminated the remaining methods of appeal to the Privy Council. |
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James Watt patented his parallel motion linkage in 1782, which made the double acting steam engine practical. |
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Water wheels in China found practical uses such as this, as well as extraordinary use. |
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It is also possible that advances make an obsolete form of capital practical again. |
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She argued that capitalism should be supported on moral grounds, not just on the basis of practical benefits. |
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The theoretical and practical basis for the harnessing of electric power was laid by the scientist and experimentalist Michael Faraday. |
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His inventions of electromagnetic rotary devices were the foundation of the practical use of electricity in technology. |
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John Boyd Dunlop developed the first practical pneumatic tyre in 1887 in South Belfast. |
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While Newcomen engines brought practical benefits, they were inefficient in terms of the use of energy to power them. |
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At last Watt had access to facilities and the practical experience of craftsmen who were soon able to get the first engine working. |
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In 1768, John Wilkinson built a more practical oven for converting coal into coke. |
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However, turret mills are only practical as long as the machine remains relatively small. |
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Roebuck started medical practice at Birmingham, but devoted much of his time to chemistry, especially its practical applications. |
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Oyster shells have enjoyed recent recognition as a source of dietary calcium, but are also a practical industrial source. |
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Processes are operated continuously for practical as well as economic reasons. |
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It was neither sufficiently bright nor long lasting enough to be of practical use, but demonstrated the principle. |
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This technique is practical where the detour to avoid the toll is large or the toll differences are small. |
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He explored the section of countryside alone and worked out the most practical route. |
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Pin shackles are practical in many rigging applications where the anchor bolt is expected to experience some rotation. |
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This part, at any rate, of Robert Owen's social philosophy has commended itself to the practical judgment of the civilised world. |
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This century of experiment in Factory Legislation affords a typical example of English practical empiricism. |
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Eli Whitney is generally credited with the idea and the practical application, but both are incorrect attributions. |
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However, it was not used to any great extent until a practical means of generating electricity was developed. |
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This constituted the basic conception of Mohist's practical reasoning and knowledge. |
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For all practical purposes, 'fjell' can be translated as 'mountain' and the Norwegian language has no other commonly used word for mountain. |
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The capacity dried mosses have to absorb fluids, has made their use practical in both medical and culinary uses. |
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The committee agreed that the project had merit, but was too researchy and should have lower priority than more practical projects. |
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Modest as these practical schemes were, they represented a symbolic challenge to the existing state of society. |
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The sun's right ascension in time is useful to the practical astronomer in regular observatories, who adjusts his clock by sideral time. |
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As a consequence, for most practical purposes, the difference between the total and seawater scales is very small. |
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Strong acids and bases are compounds that, for practical purposes, are completely dissociated in water. |
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In two dimensions, when significant care is taken, they are competitive practical rootfinders. |
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Tom was a thoroughly practical kind of a young fellow, and now he shook his head consideringly. |
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However, many times it is more practical to decimate existing high-res models because of time, money or manpower issues. |
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This problem was selected because it is a practical example of the types of system that are excellent candidates for demanufacture. |
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In practical terms, the sensei needs to teach some stretching in order to protect eir students from injury and eirself from liability. |
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The modern cognates of original words have been used whenever practical to give a close approximation of the feel of the original poem. |
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The literary and practical achievements of the jurists of this period gave Roman law its unique shape. |
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Therefore, the practical advantages of Roman law were less obvious to English practitioners than to continental lawyers. |
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The practical application of Roman law and the era of the European Ius Commune came to an end, when national codifications were made. |
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In practical terms, a judgment in Guyenne might be subject to an appeal to the French royal court. |
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For public health purposes, the most practical is iodization of salt, and this continues to be the mainstay of national prophylactic programs. |
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Much of this scientific and technological progress related to the practical skill of navigation. |
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Jaseys may be cheaper and more practical, but a real hair wig has more class. |
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In Germany, practical reference works intended for the uneducated majority became popular in the 18th century. |
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Nevertheless, they declined in popularity owing to competition from the more practical academies. |
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The self-emancipation of our age would be emancipation from bargaining and from money, that is from practical, real Jewdom. |
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The feeling of nostalgia for jewelrylike watches extends beyond the practical. |
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Independence is often difficult to achieve without the encouragement and practical support from one or more external parties. |
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He was taught the theory of aircraft engines and gained practical experience in the engineering workshops. |
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His academic and practical abilities as an Aircraft Apprentice earned him a place on the officer training course at Cranwell. |
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So far as is known, it did not supply mechanical power and the potential practical applications of this invention did not receive recognition. |
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The key to a practical jet engine was the gas turbine, used to extract energy from the engine itself to drive the compressor. |
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Limitations in design and practical engineering and metallurgy prevented such engines reaching manufacture. |
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Whittle would later concentrate on the simpler centrifugal compressor only, for a variety of practical reasons. |
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Before action could be taken, certain practical considerations had to be addressed. |
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Like the Central Tower, these have been added for practical reasons, and mask ventilation shafts. |
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He did not dismiss the possibility, but carefully went over the many theoretical and practical difficulties involved. |
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From a practical point of view it is not always possible to achieve an absolute lighttight home darkroom. |
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He is particularly sceptical about the practical possibility or importance of group selection as a basis for understanding altruism. |
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It was the first practical device to harness steam to produce mechanical work. |
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Like Sturgeon's motor, there was no practical commercial market for these motors. |
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The use of boiling water to produce mechanical motion goes back over 2000 years, but early devices were not highly practical. |
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Since the early 18th century, steam power has been applied to a variety of practical uses. |
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The Rankine cycle and most practical steam engines have a water pump to recycle or top up the boiler water, so that they may be run continuously. |
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However, the thermal expansion gradient uniflow engines produce along the cylinder wall gives practical difficulties. |
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Newton's description of gravity is sufficiently accurate for many practical purposes and is therefore widely used. |
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Invented by Humphry Davy around 1805, the carbon arc was the first practical electric light. |
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It was one of the first practical electric tramways in the world, just six years after Werner von Siemens first demonstrated electric traction. |
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After 1945, for both practical and ideological reasons, the government decided to bring the rail service into the public sector. |
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These were no longer members of the Roman elite but men who came up through the ranks and had seen much practical soldiering. |
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The development of transportation has influenced global relations to be more practical where people need to interact and share common interests. |
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This state licensing requires substantial practical experience as well as course work. |
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The university's emphasis is on emerging technology and its practical application. |
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The dispute also concerned the question of the economist's role, and whether this should be as a detached expert or a practical adviser. |
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Ritually deposited stone axes have been found all over Britain, suggesting that their uses went far beyond their practical capabilities. |
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Horses are trained and ridden for practical working purposes such as in police work or for controlling herd animals on a ranch. |
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In some parts of the world, they are still used for practical purposes such as farming. |
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At long intervals some master-minds appeared, looking upon each advance in practical science as a retro-gradation in the true utility. |
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Instead, he used his criticism for the practical purpose of helping others to better read and understand literature. |
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However, Austen had known him since both were young and the marriage offered many practical advantages to Austen and her family. |
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The rate of release is too slow to have practical utility, but the total amount released is huge. |
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In the days when human muscles were the only power source available aboard ship, shanties served practical functions. |
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The practical function of shanties as work songs was given priority over their lyrics or the musicality of a performance. |
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He acquired a practical knowledge of the capabilities of these different instruments. |
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Sellers portrayed Sir Guy Grand, an eccentric billionaire who plays elaborate practical jokes on people. |
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Which of the two reports is of more immediate practical value, the chemist's or the metallographist's? Surely, that of the metallographist. |
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Part of AMC's overall strategy was to save manufacturing cost by using Renault parts and engineering expertise when practical. |
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The issue was for practical purposes resolved on 17 June 1523, as Swedish King Gustav Vasa conquered the city of Stockholm. |
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Market forces and the private sector were allowed to determine practical development. |
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Under the British system the government is required by convention and for practical reasons to maintain the confidence of the House of Commons. |
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Over the next century, partly as a result of land surveys, court rulings, and property sales, the change was given practical dimension. |
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And presently he grew conscious that the gods had played a very good practical joke on him, and he laughed at himself mirthlessly. |
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The NPT Review Conference held in 2000 agreed, by consensus, 13 practical steps towards nuclear disarmament. |
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Seafarers' welfare organisation, Apostleship of the Sea has a port chaplain in Aberdeen to offer practical and pastoral support to them. |
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His approach removed the mysticism associated with the subject, creating the practical base upon which others could build. |
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The Puffing Devil was unable to maintain sufficient steam pressure for long periods, and would have been of little practical use. |
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Gregory's writings had the practical effect of promoting this highly organized devotion. |
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This made the telephone practical for longer distances, and it was no longer necessary to shout to be heard at the receiving telephone. |
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This led him and Bell to the development of practical hydrofoil watercraft. |
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One of the AEA's inventions, a practical wingtip form of the aileron, was to become a standard component on all aircraft. |
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On 16 August 1944, he gave the world's first demonstration of a practical fully electronic colour television display. |
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However, sometimes it is admitted that episcopacy was a form of government that was used very early in the church for practical reasons. |
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In some churches, deacons exercise responsibility for practical matters of finance and fabric, either separately or together with the elders. |
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The exact role of the board in the process has been a subject of debate, but the practical effect has always been small. |
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During that time, he studied practical botany at the Royal Botanic Garden in Edinburgh. |
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As a practical matter, by the time Conrad set about writing fiction, he had little choice but to write in English. |
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Manual labor often included singing by the workers, which served several practical purposes. |
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The Hermits were a straightforward pop band and enjoyed drugs and practical jokes. |
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During the heights of the band's popularity, Williams was known as the extrovert and cheeky practical joker of the band. |
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Morris took up the practical art of dyeing as a necessary adjunct of his manufacturing business. |
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Although it is metaphysical, it sheds much light upon very concrete and very practical researches. |
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For family service, the 4-inch nappie is more practical than the sherbet glass. |
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Thus in many practical classifications it would not be considered democratic. |
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In Slovenia the ID cards importance is equaled only by the Slovenian passport, but a due to size a lot more practical. |
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Hence, they are exclaves for practical purposes, without meeting the strict definition. |
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It has allowed cities to grow to sizes that were previously not practical, and it has led to the proliferation of suburbs. |
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The term became part of the title of the King of Sweden but had little practical meaning. |
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There are philosophical, moral, and practical reasons that some people cite for not voting in electoral politics. |
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He loved practical jokes, and allegedly kept a halfpenny in his pocket to trick pickpockets. |
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On a more practical level, the central government took an active interest in supporting agriculture. |
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In these cases, however, the most practical form to learn first would be the neuter. |
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James IV was a true Renaissance prince with an interest in practical and scientific matters. |
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Before any practical work can begin, however, a clear objective as to what the archaeologists are looking to achieve must be agreed upon. |
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Printing was expensive, and most publications focused on purely practical matters, such as major news, advertisements, and business reports. |
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However, he thought Whitehouse no fool and suspected that he might have the practical skill to make the existing design work. |
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Murdoch also learned the principles of mechanics, practical experimentation and working in metal and wood by assisting in his father's work. |
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To use gas for practical purposes it was first necessary to develop a working method for the production and capture of the gas. |
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Watt led the development of a practical version of this device, which entered service in 1938 under the code name Chain Home. |
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The marshals are still to be found on the RAF's active list even though they have for all practical purposes retired. |
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For practical purposes, liberal education is not actually differentiated from liberal arts education today, except by scholars. |
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Still, they are often used, because they are a practical way of distinguishing between different historical monarchs who had the same name. |
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Many of the officers became hereditary and thus removed from practical operation of either the state or the household. |
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The majority of courses were examined by written papers with practical work present in subjects such as Art and Design. |
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It also remains unclear whether this is practical in fields outside the sciences, where there is much less availability of outside funding. |
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While services were diverted elsewhere where practical, the station remained operational throughout the works. |
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Mining would continue until the process was no longer practical or profitable, at which time the mine would be abandoned. |
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In such circumstances a person may be, in a practical sense, the heir apparent but still, legally speaking, heir presumptive. |
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Several European monarchies that have adopted such systems in the last few decades furnish practical examples. |
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Without this unity between employees, workers were subjugated to harsh working environments and low pay due to no practical regulations. |
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To achieve these aims, AONBs rely on planning controls and practical countryside management. |
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Because Manx has never had a large number of speakers, it has never been practical to produce large amounts of written literature. |
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A culture's collective mythology helps convey belonging, shared and religious experiences, behavioral models, and moral and practical lessons. |
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The development of ceramic glaze which makes it impermeable makes it a popular and practical form of pottery making. |
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She soon discovered that bralessness was not practical when running. |
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Men really ought to leave off talking a kind of nonsense on this subject, which they would neither talk nor listen to on other matters of practical concernment. |
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Arts and Crafts practitioners in Britain were critical of the government system of art education based on design in the abstract with little teaching of practical craft. |
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The practical problems were severe and the method was never used at sea. |
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Funded by the Arts Council, this series investigated the conceptual and practical issues of producing art for the internet through a series of artists presentations. |
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Although fetal dystocias are sometimes relieved by manipulation and instrumentation, cesarean sections are often the only practical methods of treatment. |
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Its chief practical corollary is the denial of philosophy as a method of attaining absolute knowledge and its relegation to the academic sphere of mental training. |
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If you suffer from goalodicy then you will find yourself so obsessed by the future goal that you ignore the practical realities of your situation. |
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Shattuck, all unaccustomed to the practical phenomena of digging, apprehended only cause of gratulation that the investigation was to be the less hindered. |
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Most people learn English for practical rather than ideological reasons. |
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It was the first practical spinning frame with multiple spindles. |
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A practical application of the Coriolis effect is the mass flow meter, an instrument that measures the mass flow rate and density of a fluid flowing through a tube. |
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It was highly decentralized at first, with the territorial dukes having practical sovereignty in their duchies, especially in the southern duchies of Spoleto and Benevento. |
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In the Late Medieval and Early Modern periods, local people destroyed many of the standing stones around the henge, both for religious and practical reasons. |
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Although Tacitus, like many historians of his day, was given to invent stirring speeches for such occasions, Suetonius's speech here is unusually blunt and practical. |
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Yet his greatest practical experiments would come in his later years. |
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From his short passes to the hip-length tan winter coat he slipped on after the game, Pennington proved in myriad ways that he was all about being practical, not peacocky. |
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As the punishment of every conceivable offence was provided, any articles made under the act could be no more than an empty formality having no practical effect. |
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Warren notes, this Treaty began the practical dominance of the French king over France, and the ruler of the Angevin Empire was no longer the dominating noble in France. |
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Like exclaves, practical exclaves are not contiguous with the land of the home country and have land access only through another country or countries. |
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The practical work of the LGB was carried out by its salaried officers. |
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The valley sides act as natural walls, with the dam located at the narrowest practical point to provide strength and the lowest cost of construction. |
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Shakespeare combined poetic genius with a practical sense of the theatre. |
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As such Heads of Departments must be satisfied that each student has attended all necessary tutorials, seminars and practical work throughout the term and vacation period. |
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Liverpool wanted a more practical relationship with the United States. |
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Because the objectives here are not to save the vessel, the wrecks are usually refloated or removed by the cheapest and most practical method possible. |
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For the first time, the project was faced with the practical difficulties of actually raising, conserving and preparing the hull for public display. |
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The practical source of an emperor's power and authority was the military. |
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Though the government deployed soldiers to suppress violence, it was the practical problems in sustaining an indefinite stoppage that ultimately defeated the strikers. |
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Having been bypassed by easier and more practical routes, particularly the Great St Bernard Tunnel which opened in 1964, its value today is mainly historical and recreational. |
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This reactivity is the basis of many practical processes such, as the extraction of some metals from their ores in the process called hydrometallurgy. |
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Symington went on to become the builder of the first practical steamboat. |
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Her supporters, such as the theologian Jean Gerson, defended her hairstyle for practical reasons, as did Inquisitor Brehal later during the appellate trial. |
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The origins of this distinctive and practical craft are unclear. |
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The practical sciences were of great interest to colonial Americans, who were engaged in the process of taming and settling a wild frontier country. |
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Members of the Sick and Hurt Board, recently augmented by two practical naval surgeons, supported the request, and the Admiralty ordered that it be done. |
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The end of the samurai era in the 1860s, along with the 1876 ban on wearing swords in public, marked the end of any practical use for mail and other armour in Japan. |
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By the time he was twenty, he had became a skilled practical miner. |
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Values attached to Latin scholarship and education mostly disappeared, and while literacy remained important, it became a practical skill rather than a sign of elite status. |
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It is thought that this design of engine could permit sufficient performance for antipodal flight at Mach 5, or even permit a single stage to orbit vehicle to be practical. |
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Faraday invented an early form of what was to become the Bunsen burner, which is in practical use in science laboratories around the world as a convenient source of heat. |
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Furthermore, he did not include any of the practical sections that had made his History of Electricity so useful to practising natural philosophers. |
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Many historical reenactment groups, especially those whose focus is Antiquity or the Middle Ages, commonly use mail both as practical armour and for costuming. |
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For practical reasons related to his disability, Hawking increasingly travelled by private jet, and by 2011 that had become his only mode of international travel. |
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From the earliest days it has been a favorite in computer labs, both for its theoretical interest and as a practical exercise in programming and data display. |
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Critics cite the financial involvement of the Ford Foundation as the turning point when such clinics began to change from giving practical experience to engaging in advocacy. |
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The purpose of the award is to encourage practical scholarly work and to publicize the work of the honorees by sponsoring conferences on issues related to their work. |
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The war contributed to the evolution of the wristwatch from women's jewelry to a practical everyday item, replacing the pocketwatch, which requires a free hand to operate. |
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The machine was not intended to be a practical computer but was instead designed as a testbed for the Williams tube, an early form of computer memory. |
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Poyarkov's route up the Aldan River was too difficult to be practical. |
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Once they meet a structured quota of experience and pass the necessary modules, apprentices have two months to prepare for their practical Trade Test. |
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Prior to the introduction of plastics, ivory had many ornamental and practical uses, mainly because of the white color it presents when processed. |
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The study of poetry required practical skill in writing both Latin and Polish poems, and radically increased the numbers of poets and versifiers countrywide. |
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The abstract side of philosophy did not greatly attract Asquith, whose outlook was always practical, but Green's progressive liberal political views appealed to him. |
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The Rankine cycle is sometimes referred to as a practical Carnot cycle because, when an efficient turbine is used, the TS diagram begins to resemble the Carnot cycle. |
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