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8 Sentences With "kept in view"

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

As the goddess of medicine and herbs, her image was always kept in view of medical practitioners.
Because pilots need instantaneous information during landing, a windsock can also be kept in view of the runway. Aviation windsocks are made with lightweight material, withstand strong winds and some are lit up after dark or in foggy weather. Because visibility of windsocks is limited, often multiple glow-orange windsocks are placed on both sides of the runway.
In addition to this the entire surface is covered with most minute punctations, visible only under a strong magnifier. The anal sinus in the adult is very deep, with its edges raised and directed backward. The outer lip is produced forward and inward so much as to cover the entire aperture when the shell is held so that the bottom of the notch is kept in view. The outer lip is thickened, and with four to eight small denticulations rising from its surface a short distance within its margin.
In 1854 he became a teacher at a Berlin public school, but this did not interrupt his biblical studies. In 1866 he received three years leave of absence to collect fresh materials, and in 1869 succeeded German orientalist and theologian Heinrich Ewald as professor of oriental languages at the University of Göttingen. Like Ewald, Lagarde was an active worker in a variety of subjects and languages; but his chief aim, the elucidation of the Bible, was almost always kept in view. Lagarde was easily the most renowned Septuagint scholar of the nineteenth century, and he devoted himself ardently to Oriental studies.
Evidence of prosperity was never more important than in the High Victorian era of the 1880s. Wealthy landowners sought to outdo one another by including every possible urn, fountain or folly, so that by the end of the 1870s garden layouts were starting to display signs of the eclectic fashion of High Victorian taste, made possible by the horticultural and literary boom. The Treseder Brothers of Ashfield, Sydney and W. Adamson in Melbourne, however, continued the work of Thomas Shepherd and appealed for simplicity: "It is the common fault in designing of gardens to attempt too much, to introduce too many flower beds and walks and ornaments, to plant too largely and of kinds attaining too great a size - simplicity of garden design should always be kept in view, and it should be combined with a sufficient amount of intricacy to avoid plainness".Adamson, 1879 Hillview possessed the simple qualities espoused by the Treseders and Mr Adamson.
The Question of genre in bylini and Beowulf by Shannon Meyerhoff, 2006 . Beowulf has been adapted a number of times in cinema, on the stage, and in books. In 2003, the Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies published Marijane Osborn's annotated list of over 300 translations and adaptations. Poet John Dryden's categories of translation have influenced how scholars discuss variation between translations and adaptations. In the Preface to Ovid’s Epistles (1680) Dryden proposed three different types of translation: > metaphrase [...] or turning an author word for word, and line by line, from > one language into another’; ‘paraphrase [...] or translation with latitude, > where the author is kept in view by the translator so as never to be lost, > but his words are not so strictly followed as his sense, and that, too, is > admitted to be amplified but not altered’; and ‘imitation [...] where the > translator – if he has not lost that name – assumes the liberty not only to > vary from the words and sense, but to forsake them both as he sees occasion; > and taking only some general hints from the original, to run division on the > ground-work, as he pleases.
This year, Blanchard also retired and appointed Charles Collins Teague as his successor.California Historical Society Quarterly, Volume 47, 1968 The Limoneira plantation also had its own fire department, which still exists today and is one of the oldest continuously operating fire departments in Ventura County. In 1901, Limoneira achieved its first net profit and paid its first dividend to stockholders the following year. In 1907, Limoneira purchased the 2,300 acre Olivelands Tract, acquiring 1,000 of agriculture for walnuts, olives, beans, corn and hay and, because it converted 1,300 to livestock grazing, the company also purchased the Santa Paula and Horse and Feed Company the next year. In January 1908, the newspaper Ventura Free Press ran a story for Limoneira called "Greatest Lemon Ranch in the World", saying ""A further increase in the size of the largest lemon plantation in the world...will be the result of planting this season at the Limoneira Ranch. There are now...27,000 bearing lemon trees on the property, and this year trees will be on 300 acres more. The crop last year was the largest since the planting has begun..Bigness is not the chief end kept in view the management of the ranch.
In 1928, Jerzy Neyman (1894–1981) and Egon Pearson (1895–1980), both eminent statisticians, discussed the problems associated with "deciding whether or not a particular sample may be judged as likely to have been randomly drawn from a certain population": and, as Florence Nightingale David remarked, "it is necessary to remember the adjective 'random' [in the term 'random sample'] should apply to the method of drawing the sample and not to the sample itself". They identified "two sources of error", namely: :(a) the error of rejecting a hypothesis that should have not been rejected, and :(b) the error of failing to reject a hypothesis that should have been rejected. In 1930, they elaborated on these two sources of error, remarking that: > ...in testing hypotheses two considerations must be kept in view, we must be > able to reduce the chance of rejecting a true hypothesis to as low a value > as desired; the test must be so devised that it will reject the hypothesis > tested when it is likely to be false. In 1933, they observed that these "problems are rarely presented in such a form that we can discriminate with certainty between the true and false hypothesis" .

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