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101 Sentences With "admits of"

How to use admits of in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "admits of" and check conjugation/comparative form for "admits of". Mastering all the usages of "admits of" from sentence examples published by news publications.

"It's been intense" she admits of balancing work and motherhood.
"I was nervous," Keough admits of undergoing the seven-hour operation.
"They're all really cute," she admits of her nieces and nephews.
" Alexa admits of the nursery, "There wasn't anything I wanted specifically.
"I was feeling so alone and defeated," Heidi admits of the time.
"I was becoming chauvinistic and fascist, too," he admits of his behavior.
"But that's clearly not always the case," he admits of his profession.
"It was a dump," Rodgers admits of his first impression of the house.
"Let's put it this way: It takes a village," McDonald admits of her brood.
"I was intimidated at first," Ennis admits of the prospect of stripping down for ESPN.
"I'm really loving being president," Young admits of her position of power on the ABC drama.
"I absolutely love it at this point," he admits of being the cast member viewers love to hate.
Using a bulletproof persona that admits of no vulnerability, she has produced an odd sort of period piece.
"This is a career – I want this to last for a long time," Jenner admits of her chosen profession.
"He wears different ones so it's hard — it's definitely musky," she admits of her fiancé, Jose Antonio Baston's scent.
"I'm a little bit more cautious these days on what I do share," she admits of her own habits.
"I tried to put it in words that make sense," Saget admits of his speech getting jumbled during the emotional proposal.
"I would not rely on Kirk to make a good decision for who to vote for," Gunn admits of his beloved character.
This is a question that admits of no answer, a kind of Zen koan that brings the reflecting mind to a standstill.
"The three week process was kind of just self-imposed and all my fault for doing that," she admits of the time.
"The tree is probably my favorite piece in the entire room," Wiedmann admits of the spruce tree bookcase ($179) next to the recliner.
"It's an interesting thing to work with somebody who you go home with," she admits of her "long days" on set with Heaton.
"We still love each other greatly and we still have lots of respect for each other," Wellens admits of where things stand with Smith, 31.
"First, I was like super excited and honored and then I quickly became scared," Chestnut admits of learning about the documentary from director Nicole Lucas Haimes.
On opener "When I'm With Him", too, she admits of a relationship: "I can't help but repress all of the signs telling me that I'm not fine".
"It's been stressful for me because I never knew if she had that thick of a skin," Metcalf admits of her daughter's entrance into the world of acting.
"To keep it family appropriate, let's say we're just a lot more active than other couples," she admits of the couple's sex life after four years of marriage.
"The chocolate cake that [Laurel] makes that she's known for – caramel chocolate with the flowers on top – that's what I crave," Sims admits of one of the shower treats.
"Naming a baby — who will one day be an adult out in the world — is hard," Murgatroyd admits of her son, who made his television debut on Good Morning America Friday.
"I had this feeling instantly of somehow it was my fault," Fishel, 38, admits of her baby boy's health condition: chylothorax, a "leak in the lymphatic system" that breast milk worsened.
What should concern us, however, is whether our confidence in that determination would be high enough to make us comfortable with a penalty — death — that admits of no doubt at all.
The office-sleeping piece of this admits of an obvious solution: The government should construct a large building to serve as a kind of cross between apartments, a dorm, and a hotel.
"In the end, it was probably too complicated for a lot of folks to understand very well, and the truth is, it was barking up the wrong tree," Burr admits of his advice.
"I was ready to quit about five days in because it was a searing pain and I couldn't get a good latch," Seyfried admits of breastfeeding, noting that she was also overproducing milk.
"Oh my gosh, going from one to two, it has definitely been the hardest thing I've ever done in my entire life," she admits of her son and 5-month-old baby girl.
"There have been days where my emotions have gotten the better of me and rehearsals have been rough," he admits of practicing with Smirnoff, who blogs about working with Flutie on DWTS exclusively for PEOPLE.
" Though this system is looser than in the past, and admits of greater associative interpretation, it still plays the same practical role for Mack: "Often in the studio I think, 'I don't know what to do today.
" The expectant star and husband James Rothschild have no preference on a boy or a girl — in fact, the nursery is "all neutral" — but as Hilton Rothschild admits of her own childhood, "I did love having a sister.
Though the social media star is frequently traveling for work, when she is home, you can find her in one spot: "I definitely lay in bed for so long and I watch HGTV," she admits of her crash time.
"It wasn't so cold that, like when I watch Game of Thrones that looks like the end of the world," the Avengers: Age of Ultron actress, 28, admits of the chilly conditions on the Utah set, which doubled for Wyoming.
"I didn't quite see it as a musical, at first blush, at all," the Grammy and Tony-winning musician and composer Duncan Sheik admits of Bret Easton Ellis's 1991 novel "American Psycho" — a stage adaptation of which, with music and lyrics by Sheik, has just begun previews on Broadway.
"I think the shopping was probably the hardest thing for me because, like I never even thought of buying one apple at the store," Jinger, 23, admits of the transition from regularly eating and entertaining with 18 siblings, several nieces and nephews and more friends and family in her hometown of Tontitown, Arkansas.
"   She says she does everything she can to always be there for Matilda's big moments, but admits of her career: "I worry about the next job and when it's coming and will I be able to get it, but when you're looking at something, there's also the criteria of timing, the school calendar, the location, the duration, and just where we're at as a family.
In the example above, if the ratifiers' understanding of cruel and unusual applied only to physical suffering, not purely psychological suffering, then the question of whether 90 days of solitary confinement for simple battery is cruel and unusual admits of two possible answers: (a) a backward-looking originalist interpretation with an unjust result and (b) a forward-looking pragmatic interpretation with a just result.
"It was intense," Rose, 37, admits of filming and traveling all around the country (Los Angeles, Dallas, Austin and New York City, to name a few) in order to meet and romance women to whom he was been introduced by his cast mates In addition to good friend (and mom-to-be!) Cameran Eubanks, 33, Rose tells PEOPLE another one of the Charm-ers who helped him keep his mojo up on the journey to love was Ravenel, 54.
The first and most obvious subdivision which the early British fictile ware admits of, is into hand-made and wheel-made pottery.
Some stump speakers come on in a ragged suit > and damaged "plug" hat, carrying an old-fashioned valise and huge umbrella. > A negro stump speech, being only a burlesque, admits of any peculiarities > you may choose to introduce.Townsend 122–3.
Dodger encourages Oliver to escape if he gets the chance. The next day, Nancy goes to the Brownlows unknowingly followed by Dodger. She tells them of Oliver's abduction and agrees to return him at London Bridge at midnight. Dodger, threatened by Sikes, admits of overhearing the agreement.
2, pp 195–6). Blavatsky also asserts that "the occult doctrine admits of no such divisions as the Aryan and the Semite, accepting even the Turanian with ample reservations. Semites, especially the Arabs, are later Aryans – degenerate in spirituality and perfected in materiality" (The Secret Doctrine, Vol. 2, p 200).
Capdeville admits of being unable to explain the collocation of Juno Caelestis among the underworld gods, which looks to be determined mainly by her condition as spouse of Saturn.M. Leglay Saturne Africain. Histoire Paris 1966 p. 215-222.G. Capdeville "Les dieux de Martianus Capella" in Revue de l' Histoire des Religions 213 3 1996 p.
Timothy says to Jude she was correct about Mary Eunice being possessed. She tells him to kill Mary Eunice, who later admits of knowing his plan to cast out the Devil. He is able to draw out the human part of Mary Eunice, who wishes she could die. He throws her from the top of the stairs.
According to Author Fisher's article, "Montana: Land of the Copper Collar," "Six months is the longest one may live in Montana without making the decision whether one is 'for the Company' or 'against the Company.' The all-pervading and unrelenting nature of the struggle admits of no neutrals. Since the territory's admission to statehood in 1889 the struggle has continued."Fisher, Author.
In Becker's version of Stoicism, several dogmas of Ancients Stoicism are questioned or challenged. For example, the traditional Stoic all-or-nothing understanding of virtue is questioned (to some extent). In Orthodox Ancient Stoicism one was either a perfect sage or no sage at all, there was no middle ground, or in between. The Ancient Stoic virtue admits of no degrees.
"The Age of Reason." The Life and Major Writings of Thomas Paine, edited by P. S. Foner. New York: Citadel Press. p. 601. > The study of theology, as it stands in Christian churches, is the study of > nothing; it is founded on nothing; it rests on no principles; it proceeds by > no authorities; it has no data; it can demonstrate nothing; and it admits of > no conclusion.
Also, it was also known that Hunt and Brigitte have been having an affair for three years before Alice came into the picture. Upon receiving the pictures, she was deeply hurt and confronts him about it at home. Hunt admits of the relationship and tells her that he is about to marry Alice. When she asked him to leave the other woman, he rejects the idea and leaves the house instead.
In British English, the words "full stop" at the end of an utterance strengthen it, it admits of no discussion: "I'm not going with you, full stop." In American English the word "period" serves this function. Another common use in African-American Vernacular English is found in the phrase "And that's on period" which is used to express the strength of the speaker's previous statement, usually to emphasise an opinion.
Would we could forget it! Never did we see such a dull, heavy, tasteless affair. Much do we suspect that if it was on sale in any town in England at a penny a-piece, hardly a dozen would be sold in a twelve-month. There is a cross, and a lion, and a scroll or two worked up into the most shapeless mass that the size admits of.
It treats "youngsters with various forms of cancer and rare blood disorders." Overlook Hospital in 1906. In 1989, tennis star Tracy Austin was brought to the emergency department following a car accident, and was treated and released. In 1991, Overlook was estimated to have 30,000 emergency department visits annually, with 600 staff physicians and admits of 20,000 patients annually, and 170,000 to 200,000 outpatient visits annually, according to one source.
An important contribution of hermeneutics consists in that it precludes any rash problem-solving, independent of whether it concerns itself with a liberal synthesis of two different discourses or a post-liberal burial of antagonism between them. This perpetual dialogue admits of no ultimate conclusion. Indeed, it would bad hermeneutician who would think that he has the last word, must have the last word, or even could have the last word.
At the Khundilani gorge of the Bolān route conglomerate cliffs, which rise to a height of 800 ft., enclose the valley. At Siri Bolān the passage between the limestone rocks hardly admits of three persons riding abreast. The temperature of the pass in summer is very high, whereas in winter, near its head, the cold is extreme, and the ice-cold wind rushing down the narrow outlet becomes destructive to life.
It is on this chain that > Tusculum is situated, a city with no mean equipment of buildings; and it is > adorned by the plantings and villas encircling it, and particularly by those > that extend below the city in the general direction of the city of Rome; for > here Tusculum is a fertile and well-watered hill, which in many places rises > gently into crests and admits of magnificently devised royal palaces.
More fearsome was the British punishment of Boston after the Boston Tea Party. Georgians knew their remote coastal location made them vulnerable. In August 1774 at a general meeting in Savannah, the people proclaimed, "Protection and allegiance are reciprocal, and under the British Constitution correlative terms; ... the Constitution admits of no taxation without representation." Georgia had few grievances of its own but ideologically supported the patriot cause and expelled the British.
Boole (1847) p. 16 The theory of elective functions and their "development" is essentially the modern idea of truth-functions and their expression in disjunctive normal form. Boole's system admits of two interpretations, in class logic, and propositional logic. Boole distinguished between "primary propositions" which are the subject of syllogistic theory, and "secondary propositions", which are the subject of propositional logic, and showed how under different "interpretations" the same algebraic system could represent both.
Shahîd, Rome and the Arabs, 97 n. 15; citing J. Karst, Die Chronik, Die griechischen christlichen Schriftsteller der ersten {drei} Jahrhunderte 20 (1911), 225–26. Jerome's Chronicon is, therefore, the nearest we can get to Eusebius' early statements on Philip's Christianity. That Jerome calls Philip primus in the Chronicon thus admits of two interpretations: either he found it in Eusebius, or he added it independently, based on other sources available to him.
There, under 8 July, is written: "Brocan, the scribe, gained a noble triumph without any fall"; and under 17 September: "Brocan of Ross Tuirc thou shouldst declare". John Colgan (Trias Thaumaturga, p. 518) speaks as if he were inclined to identify both these persons with the author of an early Irish hymn upon Saint Brigid. The glosses upon Aengus and the Martyrology of Gorman, while seemingly treating them as distinct, prove that the matter admits of no certainty.
Sandro Botticelli - Madonna del Magnificat The writing-riddle is an international riddle type, attested across Europe and Asia. Its most basic form was defined by Antti Aarne as 'white field, black seeds', where the field is a page and the seeds are letters.Antti Aarne, Vergleichende Rätselforschungen, 3 vols, Folklore Fellows Communications, 26–28 (Helsinki/Hamina: Suomalainen Tiedeakatemia, 1918–20), I 35–73 (p. 35). However, this form admits of variations very diverse in length and degree of detail.
"The occult doctrine admits of no such divisions as the Aryan and the Semite, ... The Semites, especially the Arabs, are later Aryans — degenerate in spirituality and perfected in materiality. To these belong all the Jews and the Arabs." The Jews, according to Blavatsky, were a "tribe descended from the Tchandalas of India," as they were born of Abraham, which she believed to be a corruption of a word meaning "No Brahmin". Other sources suggest the origin Avram or Aavram.
To you I appeal for forgiveness and pardon for all the > unhappiness I have ever caused you. I dare not ask for mercy of God. I am > doing that which admits of no pardon, but if He will hear my prayer. I pray > to Him to grant you consolation in your hour of affliction, for I know that, > notwithstanding all my faults, that love which you always manifested towards > me is not withheld yet, and therefore the news of my unfortunate fate will > make time sorrowful.
Most translations make the translators' best attempt at a single rendering of the original, relying on footnotes where there might be alternative translations or textual variants. An alternative is taken by the Amplified Bible. In cases where a word or phrase admits of more than one meaning the Amplified Bible presents all the possible interpretations, allowing the reader to choose one. For example, the first two verses of the Amplified Bible read: > In the beginning God (Elohim) created [by forming from nothing] the heavens > and the earth.
It appears that this river originally took an easterly course and flowing to the west of Purnea fell into the Ganges at Rajmahal or nearly forty miles below its present confluence with the Ganges. It appears from the Nidhanpur inscription that the river had already abandoned its old channel by the time Bhaskaravarman confirmed his ancestor's grant. That the Kausika, mentioned in the inscription, is the Kosi River in modern Bihar admits of no doubt, but certain writers have attempted to identity Kausika with the Kusiara river in Sylhet.IHQ - vol VII, no.
Like the imposition of military detention, the use of lethal force against such enemy forces is an "important incident of war." Hamdi, 542 U.S. at 518 (plurality opinion) (quotation omitted). See, e.g., General Orders No. 100: Instructions for the Government of Armies of the United States in the Field ¶ 15 (Apr. 24, 1863) ("[military necessity admits of all direct destruction of life or limb of armed enemies") (emphasis omitted); International Committee of the Red Cross, Commentary on the Additional Protocols of 8 June 1977 to the Geneva Conventions of 12 Aug.
Shepard and Cooper also collaborated on a 1982 book (revised 1986) summarizing past work on mental rotation and other transformations of mental images. Reviewing that work in 1983, Michael Kubovy assessed its importance: > Up to that day in 1968 [Shepard's dream about rotating objects], mental > transformations were no more accessible to psychological experimentation > than were any other so-called private experiences. Shepard transformed a > compelling and familiar experience into an experimentally tractable problem > by injecting it into a problem-task that admits of a correct and incorrect > answer.
Another proposal to introduce the FA's 3-player offside law was "negatived by a large majority", with opponents citing the rough nature of the grounds played on by the Sheffield teams, and claiming that "the strong defence it [the FA's offside rule] admits of would in many instances prevent any likelihood of a score being made". The FA's rejection of Sheffield's kick-in law at its own annual meeting (held one week earlier) was said to have influenced the feeling of the Sheffield meeting. Only one change to the laws was made, with the FA's law on handling the ball being adopted.
An introduction to the history of medicine. Saunders, Philadelphia. p. 269. To orthopaedic surgeons he is famous for his studies on bone and cartilage. In 1743 he published the paper On the structure and diseases of articulating cartilages – which is often cited – especially the following sentence: "If we consult the standard Chirurgical Writers from Hippocrates down to the present Age, we shall find, that an ulcerated Cartilage is universally allowed to be a very troublesome Disease; that it admits of a Cure with more Difficulty than carious Bone; and that, when destroyed, it is not recovered".
They are > very numerous, and have a vast number of horses, as their country is open > and admits of breeding them in great abundance.Journals of Alexander Henry > and David Thompson, edited by Elliott Coues, Vol. II, p. 711 Ross Cox, a clerk with the Pacific Fur Company and then the North West Company, spent considerable time at the trading post of Spokane House between 1812 and 1817: > The Pointed Hearts, or as the [French] Canadians call them, les Coeurs d' > Alênes (Hearts of Awls), are a small tribe inhabiting the shores of a lake > about fifty miles to the eastward of Spokan House.
Abbott first began to grow ill in May 1832, when he wrote to Sir Egerton Brydges that "My spirit is so depressed, that when I am not strongly excited by some present object that admits of no delay, I sink into something very nearly approaching torpidity". Although he got somewhat better, giving his annual dinner to the King's Counsel, it was noticed that he was unable to drink his wine properly.Campbell (2006) p. 305. He went to the Midland Circuit in June, as it was the easiest one, but he suffered from "a violent cough" and other symptoms, returning to his home in Hendon.
In addition, Harris suggested that his 'Prismatic' colour wheel reflected the colours "shown in the prism" while the colours depicted in the 'Compound' colour wheel "admits of all colours in nature, not found in the prismatic part". The Natural System of Colours was published again in 1811, this time edited by Thomas Martyn and dedicated to the second President of the Royal Academy, Benjamin West. In 1963, a reproduction of "The Natural System of Colours" was privately printed and distributed by the Whitney Library of Design, New York. The reproduction came about when Faber Birren acquired a copy of Harris' original book and arranged to have it faithfully reproduced.
The brown honeyeater was originally described by Nicholas Aylward Vigors and Thomas Horsfield in 1827 as Meliphaga indistincta. The species name indistincta is from the Latin word meaning 'indistinct, obscure'. Vigors and Horsfield were working from the bird collection of the Linnean Society in London, and they said of the brown honeyeater specimen, "It is however in very bad condition, and scarcely admits of a description." Later included in the "catch-all" genus Gliciphila, the brown honeyeater is now classified as a member of the genus Lichmera, from the Greek word meaning 'to lick' or 'to dart the tongue', following Schodde (1975), Sibley and Monroe (1990) and Christidis and Boles (1994).
Max Planck wrote that the phrase "entropy of the universe" has no meaning because it admits of no accurate definition. More recently, Walter Grandy writes: "It is rather presumptuous to speak of the entropy of a universe about which we still understand so little, and we wonder how one might define thermodynamic entropy for a universe and its major constituents that have never been in equilibrium in their entire existence." According to Tisza: "If an isolated system is not in equilibrium, we cannot associate an entropy with it." Buchdahl writes of "the entirely unjustifiable assumption that the universe can be treated as a closed thermodynamic system".
In all cases, we must balance the > opposite experiments…and deduct the smaller number from the greater, in > order to know the exact force of the superior evidence. Hume discusses the testimony of those who report miracles. He wrote that testimony might be doubted even from some great authority in case the facts themselves are not credible: "[T]he evidence, resulting from the testimony, admits of a diminution, greater or less, in proportion as the fact is more or less unusual." Although Hume leaves open the possibility for miracles to occur and be reported, he offers various arguments against this ever having happened in history.
The fragmentary nature of the text admits of more than one sequential ordering of the contents, giving rise to more than one useful translation, and some public discussion (see § References). The manuscript appears to date from the 6th century; Hellenisms in the vocabulary and grammar suggest that it was translated from a lost Greek original. The hypothetic original Greek text on which it is based is thought to have been composed somewhere in the late second or early third century, judging from the theology and style. The Gospel is not a narrative but a dialogue, a form often chosen in Antiquity for didactic material.
One night, she shares a taxi with a Malayali stranger, who initially lies about him being a poorly educated villager trying for a job in Bangalore, and later admits of being the stalker. He introduces himself as Raghupathi, a commercial advertising photographer, who got interested in Nanda's features in an artistic perspective. Later, Nanda decides to get the film negatives from him, and visits the ad agency he mentioned, only to find that he had lied; the real Raghupathi is also a Malayali, but not the stalker. Soon she receives a phone call from the stalker, who apologizes and give a new introduction as Mohan Tharakan, owner of a leading architecture firm.
At the time Rachel is hiding from Sean at Janet's; she brings Kevin there and they are soon discovered. Janet's outrage and Rachel's unapologetic attitude leads to a short but deep rift in their friendship. Rachel soon admits of the affair to Sean, who corners Kevin - the best man at the wedding - and punches him in the face before the rest of the office, exposing the relationship to all their colleagues. In the same episode, the unit is informed by Gill that Kevin has been fired and arrested for leaking information on a big murder case to the press (though earlier series imply this is not the first time he has done so).
Rhodes wrote a letter to Mississippi Governor John J. Pettus on March 12, 1863 on behalf of Mr. Fisher. “My Dear Sir,” he began, “As an old friend I venture to invoke your services on behalf of my father-in-law Mr. Sam’l C. Fisher who is a fugitive from New Orleans where he resided and who is by the chance of war cut off from all of his resources. He has no funds or resources that he can now command and the necessity of procuring employment presses upon him with a sternness that admits of neither delay or escape. I ask you to find some employment for him as a favor I can never forget.
Harry thus arranges for Helen to participate in a staged spy mission, where she is to plant a covert listening device in the hotel suite of a mysterious figure (who is actually Harry himself). Aziz's men suddenly burst in, abduct the couple, and take them to an island in the Florida Keys, where Harry admits of being a spy to Helen. Aziz reveals he has smuggled stolen MIRV nuclear warheads into the country via antique statues shipped by Juno and threatens to detonate them in major U.S. cities unless the U.S. military leaves the Persian Gulf. He also plants one of the warheads on the island, intending to have it detonate after they leave to demonstrate that he means business.
Rear lateral view of temple Viewed from architectural point, the temple of Varahi in Chaurasi is the most beautiful monument in the Prachi Valley. This temple marks a significant deviation from the usual tradition of Rekha and the Bhadra type and exhibits a novel style which according to Orissan nomenclature is of Khakhara or Gaurichara variety. The ground plan of it somewhat resembles that of the Baitala Deula in Bhubaneswar, but while the plan of the latter admits of no regular ratha protection, this temple presents a pancharatha type both in plan and construction.4 The Vimana is rectangular in cross section and with its elongated vaulted roof and other architectural features it resembles more with the Gauri temple of Bhubaneswar than with the Vaital temple.
Basic to his investigation is the recognition that "human happiness is conditioned by knowledge and conduct." But "human intellect can not attain unto perfect knowledge and ethical conduct, since its power is limited and soon exhausted in the contemplation of the things the truth of which it would find; therefore, of necessity, there must be something above human intellect through which knowledge and conduct can attain to a degree of excellence that admits of no doubt." The insufficiency of human intellect postulates the necessity of divine guidance; and thus it is the duty of every person to know the God-given law. But to know it is possible only if one has established the true principles, without which there can be no divine law.
It has been suggested that whereas virtual reality would enable a participant to experience only three senses (sight, sound and optionally smell), simulated reality would enable all five (including taste and touch). Some theoristsBruno MarchalRussel Standish have argued that if the "consciousness-is-computation" version of computationalism and mathematical realism (or radical mathematical Platonism) are true then consciousnesses is computation, which in principle is platform independent and thus admits of simulation. This argument states that a "Platonic realm" or ultimate ensemble would contain every algorithm, including those that implement consciousness. Hans Moravec has explored the simulation hypothesis and has argued for a kind of mathematical Platonism according to which every object (including, for example, a stone) can be regarded as implementing every possible computation.
Food historians and cultural anthropologists have noted that chow mein and other dishes served in Chinese American restaurants located away from areas without any significant Asian American population tend to be very different from what is served in China and are heavily modified to fit the taste preference of the local dominant population. As an example, the chow mein gravy favored in the Fall River area more closely resembles that used in local New England cooking than that used in traditional Chinese cooking. The founder of the food manufacturer Chun King and the creator of canned chow mein admits of using Italian spices to make his product more acceptable to Americans whose ancestors came from Europe. Chow mein is mentioned as early as 1920, in the novel Main Street by Sinclair Lewis.
We objected to the plan of the original bridge, built in that locality, as we have ever done to any plan of the bridge in which the attempt was made to unite the independent systems of arch and truss, and make toe stability of the bridge dependent upon their uniformity of action. In this plan of Mr. McCallum, the two principles are not independent as heretofore; but the action of the arch in the upper chord is made an integral part of the truss itself; and instead of two systems acting unequally, and to the ultimate injury of the structure, we have the best features of both united in a manner which admits of entire uniformity of action. In the construction of bridges for railroad purposes, two prominent difficulties have long been discovered, viz.
For the coefficients of powers m + 1 to m + n, the right hand side is 0 and the resulting system of linear equations contains a homogeneous system of n equations in the n + 1 unknowns bi, and so admits of infinitely many solutions each of which determines a possible Qn. Pm is then easily found by equating the first m coefficients of the equation above. However, it can be shown that, due to cancellation, the generated rational functions Rm, n are all the same, so that the (m, n)th entry in the Padé table is unique. Alternatively, we may require that b0 = 1, thus putting the table in a standard form. Although the entries in the Padé table can always be generated by solving this system of equations, that approach is computationally expensive.
The reversal test: when a proposal to change a certain parameter is thought to have bad overall consequences, consider a change to the same parameter in the opposite direction. If this is also thought to have bad overall consequences, then the onus is on those who reach these conclusions to explain why our position cannot be improved through changes to this parameter. If they are unable to do so, then we have reason to suspect that they suffer from status quo bias. The rationale of the reversal test is: if a continuous parameter admits of a wide range of possible values, only a tiny subset of which can be local optima, then it is prima facie implausible that the actual value of that parameter should just happen to be at one of these rare local optima.
Otto describes das Heilige with the expression mysterium tremendum et fascinans—a numinous power revealed in a moment of "awe" that admits of both the horrible shuddering of "religious dread" (tremendum) and fascinating wonder (fascinans) with the overpowering majesty (majestas) of the ineffable, "wholly other" mystery (mysterium).Kristensen: 15-18; Otto: 5-32 Like Chantepie, Kristensen argues that phenomenology seeks the “meaning” of religious phenomena. Kristensen clarifies this supposition by defining the meaning that his phenomenology is seeking as “the meaning that the religious phenomena have for the believers themselves”.James: 144 Furthermore, Kristensen argues that phenomenology is not complete in grouping or classifying the phenomena according to their meaning, but in the act of understanding. “Phenomenology has as its objects to come as far as possible into contact with and to understand the extremely varied and divergent religious data”.
The Court of Appeal held that her earlier prolonged incitement to murder revealed in her letters, combined with her lies about what happened on the night of the murder told to several witnesses, up until her second witness statement, which was open to being found untrustworthy, her meetings with Bywaters on the day of the murder, and the content of her last letter, was sufficient to convict her of arranging the murder.Notable British Trials, pp.255-261 The Court of Appeal seemed to take a narrower approach to "principal in the second degree" than the Court, but it is unclear, because "preconcerted arrangement" admits of different shades of meaning. The Court of Appeal seemed determined to forestall any argument based on the mere method or timing of the murder being unagreed to, if there was other plausible evidence of a preconcerted object of murder.
Throughout Islamic history, intellectuals, theologians, and mystics have extensively discussed the nature and characteristics of romantic love ('ishq). In its most common intellectual interpretation of the Islamic Golden Age, ishq refers to an irresistible desire to obtain possession of the beloved, expressing a deficiency that the lover must remedy in order to reach perfection. Like the perfections of the soul and the body, love thus admits of hierarchical degrees, but its underlying reality is the aspiration to the beauty which God manifested in the world when he created Adam in his own image. The Arab love story of Lāyla and Majnūn was arguably more widely known amongst Muslims than that of Romeo and Juliet in (Northern) Europe, while Jāmī's retelling of the story of Yusuf (Joseph) and Zulaykhā — based upon the narrative of Surat Yusuf in the Quran — is a seminal text in the Persian, Urdu, and Bengali literary canons.
In the five centuries before European conquest, the Mississippian culture built numerous regional chiefdoms and major earthwork mounds in the Ohio Valley, such as Angel Mounds near Evansville, Indiana, as well as in the Mississippi Valley and the Southeast. The Osage, Omaha, Ponca and Kaw lived in the Ohio Valley, but under pressure from the Iroquois to the northeast, migrated west of the Mississippi River in the 17th century to territory now defined as Missouri, Arkansas and Oklahoma. The discovery and traversal of the Ohio River by Europeans admits of several possibilities, all in the latter half of the 17th century. Virginian Englishman Abraham Wood's trans-Appalachian expeditions between 1654 and 1664; Frenchman Robert de La Salle's putative Ohio expedition of 1669; and two expeditions of Virginians sponsored by Colonel Wood: the Batts and Fallam expedition of 1671, and the Needham and Arthur expedition of 1673-74.
Wiercinski has generated research accomplishments in his subject areas that demonstrate his scholarly expertise both in the range of his works as well as in their broad, contentful composition. He understands hermeneutics as a specific mind-set of openness that admits of neither a priori nor apodictic demarcations between domains of knowledge, but instead sits decidedly between them in order to overcome the compartmentalization of knowledge forms from each other. Despite the postmodern format of this hermeneutic in-between — which of course will not be raised to a trans- regional, conceptually achievable absolutism — Wiercinski positions hermeneutics within the horizon of man’s unmistakable ability to attain truth, which actualizes itself in the history of knowledge and its forms. He understands philosophy of religion as the hermeneutic mediation between the incommensurable knowledge forms of religion/theology and philosophy, which are not separated off from one another but rather allude to one another both genealogically and constitutively.
290 Burton foresaw a special role for the professional accountant in the process of bookkeeping and formation of cost accounts: :The best method of financial bookkeeping, one that admits of perfect balancing, should always be adopted ; but this does not debar such variations as will fit it for the business to which it relates, or the special requirements of the proprietor or manager. There is no insuperable difficulty in making these variations if the staff be properly trained. The great difference between the professional accountant and his clerks, and ordinary commercial bookkeepers is that the former are trained to think, whereas the latter are taught, and often only permitted, to slavishly follow example. Yet alike in methods of bookkeeping, in formation of cost accounts, in details of office arrangements, in management of men, and in distribution of profits, there must be such variations as will fit those methods to the peculiar circumstances of the individual firm.
For Berlin, values are creations of mankind, rather than products of nature waiting to be discovered. He argued, on the basis of the epistemic and empathetic access we have to other cultures across history, that the nature of mankind is such that certain values – the importance of individual liberty, for instance – will hold true across cultures, and this is what he meant by objective pluralism. Berlin's argument was partly grounded in Wittgenstein's later theory of language, which argued that inter-translatability was supervenient on a similarity in forms of life, with the inverse implication that our epistemic access to other cultures entails an ontologically contiguous value-structure. With his account of value pluralism, he proposed the view that moral values may be equally, or rather incommensurably, valid and yet incompatible, and may, therefore, come into conflict with one another in a way that admits of no resolution without reference to particular contexts of a decision.
At least one elephantine skeleton with flint weapons that has been found in England was initially misidentified as these elephants, but later dating proved it to be a mammoth skeleton from the Stone Age.Mammoths: Giants of the Ice Age, by Adrian Lister, Paul G. Bahn, p. 116 In the African campaign of the Roman civil war of 49–45 BC, the army of Metellus Scipio used elephants against Caesar's army at the battle of Thapsus. Scipio trained his elephants before the battle by aligning the elephants in front of slingers that would throw rocks at them, and another line of slingers at the elephants' rear to perform the same, in order to propel the elephants only in one direction, preventing them turning their backs because of frontal attack and charging against his own lines, but the author of De Bello Africano admits of the enormous effort and time required to accomplish this.
59) # ACTUAL COST SYSTEM : The > importance of this subject, while being generally conceded, is nevertheless > sadly neglected, and the only explanation that can be given is that either > the business man and his assistants are not able to inaugurate such a > system, or the expense that might be involved prevents him from taking any > action in this direction. This is the only logical explanation that can be > offered where the importance of the matter is conceded and admits of no > argument or difference of opinion...Nicholson (1909, p. 60-61) # STOCK > SYSTEM : Although it is not necessary to inaugurate a perpetual inventory in > order to obtain costs, yet it is advisable to do so whenever possible, as a > safeguard to prevent waste of material, theft, or losses from any other > causes; and also to guard against over-buying or failure to carry in stock > such materials as are neces sary for the operation of the plant...Nicholson > (1909, p. 62) The whole series of forms presented in the work is summarized in a single sheet (see image).

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