P esters and phosphonates are present in unchanging proportions throughout the ocean. |
|
History was endlessly revised to make the present look like a confirmation of eternal, unchanging truths. |
|
A generic peasantry living in symbiosis with the land, trapped in unchanging landscapes, helped to convey this message. |
|
Thank you again for reminding us that God's word is eternal and unchanging. |
|
Emphasizing the unchanging aspects of the topography, he made the case for the unbroken continuity of scriptural history with the living present. |
|
She has remained still, unchanging, as change has swept through the world around her. |
|
On the contrary, both of them operate according to eternal, unchanging laws. |
|
Barbie's body and face has remained relatively unchanging, symbolizing growing up to the little girl. |
|
Britain is an island, homogenous and unchanging, pluckily defending its heritage from the barbarian hordes who batter its shores. |
|
One important point frequently stressed about the objects of this kind of pure thinking is that they are stable and unchanging. |
|
Throughout all dispensations, these have been the unchanging requirements for living in a covenant relationship with God. |
|
Such patriotism was remarkably sustained, though not unchanging, continuing through to the end of the war. |
|
A constant, unchanging image like this, it seems, will cause the screen to burn out. |
|
The parish, as another level of community in Italian towns and cities, was not a constant, unchanging factor. |
|
Just as the beauty of movie stars cannot last very long, the standards of outward beauty have never remained unchanging. |
|
Like all myths the ancient idea of Oxford is both unchanging and perpetually re-inventing itself. |
|
To do so is to buy into the antiquated notion that a creature's nature is immutable or unchanging. |
|
They are engraved on the political landscape, unchanging, perhaps unchangeable, and the current round of violence and mayhem is no exception. |
|
Byzantine art is often criticized as flat, two-dimensional, hieratic, and unchanging. |
|
Each atom has an unchanging shape and size and a changeable degree of motion or rest. |
|
|
Those guys were ruthless, tooled up and had that horribly simple, unchanging mask for a face. |
|
The unchanging set, a disarray of metal, lights, tables, fold-out chairs and a five-piece band, is simple and grungy. |
|
A timeless and unworldly quality, unaffected by the flux of material life, was sought, for which unchanging models served successfully. |
|
North-western Europeans were the most modern, southerners and easterners more firmly rooted in the unchanging patterns of the past. |
|
The proposition being advanced to members of this House is an assumption that the law is unchanging. |
|
Perhaps, also, she felt, as many have, that ancient Egyptian culture had an unchanging idea of truth to a degree beyond any other society. |
|
Since his character is perfect and unchanging, we can put our hope in him and not be disappointed. |
|
But we believe the message is unchanging, it's as powerful today as it was 2,000 years ago. |
|
For example, I think stable means unchanging or changing slowly, and decent means not a cad or a bounder. |
|
Plato, for example, held that the subject-matter of mathematics is an eternal, unchanging, ideal realm. |
|
In short, for laws to be deemed sound, they must be traced to some higher principle that is unchanging. |
|
The unadulterated ecstasy of before is hardly a memory, and the extremeness of his mood swings is now a dullness that consumes him in unchanging monotony. |
|
Crucially, Capildeo's descriptions of arid, dormant inwardness reveal a preoccupation with the static or unchanging, which relates to her book's encounter with myth. |
|
The sunset or the Beethoven string quartet can be so ravishing that we find ourselves lost in the unchanging essentiality they present to us. |
|
Once seen as unchanging, or unsalvageable, India is now widely recognised as a dynamic, innovative, soon-to-be economic powerhouse. |
|
The central theme of the Upanishads is that the atman, the unchanging core of a human being, is a part of brahman. |
|
I have the right to maintain a sense of hopefulness, however unchanging its focus may be. |
|
In her work she seeks to develop a critical politics that does not presuppose a stable, unchanging identity. |
|
An unchanging grating yields a static hologram, such as is found on a bank card. |
|
Observe the unchanging, immutable and constant one amidst the ever-changing, mutable world. |
|
|
Balinese dancers use darting eye movements, but the court dancer's face is composed into an almost unchanging expression of aloof gentility. |
|
It gives us a glimpse into that aspect of us which is unchanging, or undying. |
|
In fact, can there be such a thing as an unchanging model for the armed forces for the defence of our country? |
|
It was a cataclysmic event for scholars, who believed at the time that the universe was unchanging. |
|
In so far as strategy implies unchanging commitment, it is the antithesis of flexibility. |
|
It is surprisingly revealing and ought to make lovers of an unchanged and unchanging Venice reconsider their enthusiasms and prejudices. |
|
Since the basket contains commodities of unchanging or equivalent quantity and quality, the index reflects only pure price movement. |
|
Typically they are used by weavers catering to a predictable and unchanging demand for a particular fabric. |
|
Clearly, public services in general should be founded on certain unchanging principles that responsible authorities can use as a guide. |
|
It's very much a response to the idea that marriage is an unchanging institution, that it has been the same. |
|
This makes it ideal for use as an unchanging reference in such devices as attitude and heading indicators. |
|
They mistakenly regarded the cultures of the relevant minority communities as something unchanging and homogeneous. |
|
For a moment in the book we get a glimpse of the Laura Bush beneath her pleasant, unchanging smile. |
|
Some can seem as clear as a mug shot, each element identifiable and unchanging. |
|
However, all the contemporary examples she quotes show folk beliefs as an active element of people's lives, not as unchanging fossilised remnants. |
|
This union is neither a revocable contract between independent and equal parties nor mandated by an unchanging divine law which legitimates the subordination of women. |
|
You, and I myself, grew up in a rigid society, unchanging except for War. |
|
You who refuse to bow before images also refuse to bow before the Son of God who is the living image of the invisible God, and his unchanging likeness. |
|
The way we are taught Shakespeare is too often loaded towards the idea that his plays are about supposedly unchanging things, like love or ambition or treachery. |
|
She was ruffled by the King's unchanging expression and tone of voice. |
|
|
At the moment the boys exist on an unchanging and meagre diet of bread and milk for breakfast, potato and rice for lunch and thin vegetable soup for dinner. |
|
There is nothing lasting, nothing eternal, nothing unchanging in life. |
|
The target is changeable, the constant unchanging factor is indignation. |
|
We have always looked on the sun as very permanent and unchanging. |
|
On the human timescale, rocks seem to be permanent, unchanging features. |
|
The sea itself seemed to resist clarity as much as complete stillness, as though its heart were restless, unquiet, pitted by its very nature against all that was unchanging. |
|
The theme of her remarks as she opened the new synod concerned the challenges of staying true to unchanging verities in a world of constant change and new challenges. |
|
They are caught in the conflict between their fear of a liquidity: of disorganizing, unbounding, being overaroused, leaking out, and their fear of congealing and compressing into one unchanging despairing lump. |
|
This large model of castle constructed solely from cardboard and pushpins was immerged in a sound field constituted of one lone unchanging chord, which was broadcasted in the space from the two main towers. |
|
For example, if someone were to hate vegetables because they are allergic, this state of hate is unchanging and thus, a state inherent aspect. |
|
It is often the unchanging form of certain arts that leads to their perception as traditional. |
|
The principal uses of basic intelligence are to set the scene at the outset of operations and explain relatively unchanging facts such as battlespace terrain and weather. |
|
Though Texas increasingly looked like a broad, bragging California, full of high-tech clusters and with the white Anglo culture besieged by Latinos and Asians, Mrs Richards was well aware of the unchanging lower layers. |
|
Video games are notorious for having relatively unchanging areas on the screen, which can quickly be burned into the screen. |
|
Historians have debated whether Hume posited a universal unchanging human nature, or allowed for evolution and development. |
|
Physicists began changing the assumption that the Universe was static and unchanging. |
|
Whereby the dew point temperature is not an unchanging variable: it is calculated by taking into account the two variables room temperature and air humidity. |
|
Borders of sovereign land, for settlers, would be cadastrally and jurisdictionally fixed and unchanging except by acts of will or accession. |
|
The environmental targets are unchanging, and they are challenging. |
|
The unchanging culture in Turkey, with regard to the political role of the military is of the Stockholm Syndrome writ large. |
|
|
These years of trench warfare in the West saw no major exchanges of territory and, as a result, are often thought of as static and unchanging. |
|
Although quality care is an established component of everyday policy and is based on fixed, unchanging principles, the Group is very enthusiastic about the methodology which it introduced in 2003 as extra support. |
|
Despite this nearly unchanging situation for the past 15 years, many observers agree in predicting an upset in favour of the FMLN in 2009, the year in which Salvadorians are invited to elect all of their officials. |
|
Son of a musician and a grandson of a painter, Etienne Audfray found in the artistic dimension a kind of permanence almost biological coming to stabilize the unchanging values which the time wants to erase. |
|
My Law is unchanging, it is men who with their cultures, civilizations, and laws, pass, leaving only what the spirit has built with its works of love and charity. |
|
Yes, it is still the same unchanging God but with new ways of acting. |
|
In terms of the social political environment, we use the media to convey the message that truth is unchanging, and a lay Dominican has a radio programme that promotes Dominican values. |
|
We should like to point out that religious doctrines and philosophies have been developed over centuries and millennia and are generally unchanging. |
|
Sogyal Rinpoche's teachings, from the heart of the Tibetan Buddhist tradition, show how meditation introduces us to who we really are, our unchanging pure awareness, which underlies the whole of life and death. |
|
Accordingly, the base period of a time-limited experimental or pilot programme may not be taken as the fixed and unchanging base period for the purposes of this paragraph. |
|
As such some early scholars felt that the legal system was essentially unchanging and archaic. |
|
Tradition was sacred to ancient cultures and was unchanging and the social order of ceremony and morals in a culture could be strictly enforced. |
|
Some argue that it conveys a negative connotation of a timeless unchanging past. |
|
Plato appears to be proposing the Forms as a solution to the Heraclitan thesis that everything is in continual flux and there are no unchanging truths. |
|
We make clear once again that the denuclearisation of the Korean Peninsula is an unchanging will and determination of our armed forces and people. |
|
Aristotle believed all kinds and forms to be distinct and unchanging. |
|
As a result, because the major salts have a residence time that is longer than 1,600 years, the ratio of major salts is thought to be unchanging across the ocean. |
|
There rise authors now and then, who seem proof against the mutability of language, because they have rooted themselves in the unchanging principles of human nature. |
|
Signposts would be resolute and unchanging in the face of criticism or challenge Weathervanes spin on their axis, responding swiftly and unthinkingly to changes in the wind. |
|
Sails in different sail plans have unchanging names, however. |
|
|
Eventually they reach a state of mutual thermal equilibrium, in which heat transfer has ceased, and the bodies' respective state variables have settled to become unchanging. |
|