It gives an abbreviated form of the story of Shu Yu of Tang's enfeoffment, and he is designated the shrine's subject of worship. |
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Around this time she met the famous photographer Henri Cartier-Bresson and abbreviated her name to Dora Maar. |
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Hodges had his stay abbreviated but will return in March for a couple of months. |
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Testing can also be abbreviated if early success is obvious in a serious disease with no other good treatment. |
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A workday abbreviated by siestas is a Spanish cliche, yet it is not necessarily rooted in reality. |
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His third pro season, 2010-11, also saw him gravely injured, and 2012-13 was abbreviated by the lockout. |
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The laparotomy was abbreviated because the patient was quite unstable intraoperatively. |
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With only two challenging teams, the race schedule would be abbreviated, likely removing many of the planned sailing days scheduled for July. |
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The name was coined in the twentieth century from the Greek mol, which is an abbreviated form of the word molecule. |
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To view the acronym simply put your mouse over the abbreviated word or acronym to get the full meaning of the word. |
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His answers, progressively more abbreviated, were reduced at times to up or down nods. |
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This is a greatly abbreviated summary of particular aspects of organ meridian function. |
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The young officers, who carry handguns, must complete an abbreviated stint at the Cape May County Police Academy. |
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The paper reproduces an abbreviated version of the speech with which he is currently touring Germany. |
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Miller returned to battalion headquarters to conduct an abbreviated military decisionmaking process. |
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Does the boss who scheduled your sadly abbreviated lunch break deserve to be called a weasel or a stoat? |
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A whole language of abbreviated words and acronyms has developed with the huge popularity of the text message. |
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The nucleotide elements of DNA are adenosine, guanine, cytosine, and thymine, abbreviated A, G, C, and T, respectively. |
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If the adnominal genitive in the abbreviated sentence corresponds to the object in the full sentence, it is referred to as an objective genitive. |
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The candidate concluded his recitation with an abbreviated recapitulation of the subdivisions of the five principal topics. |
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This work-diary is composed of medical recipes written in a technical and highly abbreviated Latin. |
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The same trend applies, albeit to a less impressive extent, in the abbreviated format. |
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She suggests the goggles' straps with abbreviated wisps of graphite that twist and whip about the page. |
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One occasionally sees an abbreviated form of amice that fastens with snaps. |
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This abbreviated variation of the looping rib vault was also an innovation of Benedikt Ried in Bohemia and his followers in Germany. |
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The temple is rendered in the abbreviated form, usual in vase paintings, consisting of a Doric column and architrave. |
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Diagnostic tests may include renal ultrasonography or an abbreviated intravenous pyelogram. |
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Inevitably in dealing with such large topics some of the discussions are far too abbreviated. |
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Now, that is, at best, an abbreviated and truncated version of what had occurred, is it not? |
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The latter three species are referred to collectively as siblings, abbreviated as sib. |
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It is not uncommon for an estate owner to be known by a nickname or abbreviated name. |
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He spoke in similar vein to a meeting of generals on 30 March 1941, when, according to the abbreviated record of General Halder, Hitler said. |
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A servant in voluminous green robes ducked her head in an abbreviated bow and gestured them into the house. |
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The suffix for numerically abbreviated ordinal numerals isn't always th in English, Becky. |
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References hereafter are included in the main text, abbreviated to A and page number. |
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The certificate was, in substance, an abbreviated mechanism for exercising such supervision. |
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I'll present excerpts from our discussion in abbreviated, summary format below. |
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The abbreviated text could be in Latin or Anglo-Norman French and was usually accompanied by a commentary. |
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Although debate on the measure was fairly abbreviated, the resulting measure was comprehensive in both its scope and design. |
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It is a sign that uses an abbreviated code for a specific instant of duration or registration of a sociological temporal moment. |
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Unfortunately, like all spring getaways, this trip of laughs and fun in the sun is ultimately a short and abbreviated one. |
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There are too many earnest, young, untalented performers who mount abbreviated versions of classic plays and who have minimal directing and acting abilities. |
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Today, SMS text messaging is language at its most abbreviated. |
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This morning's FP3 session was abbreviated by 30 minutes due to the requirement for barrier repairs at Turn 11 following a support race incident earlier on. |
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Each piece of software is described in an abbreviated prose paragraph. |
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She gives attention to the working conditions of miners over time and across regions, yet the shortness of the book dictates a very abbreviated labour history. |
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An abbreviated curriculum vitae for the nominee is required. |
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Injuries are scored with the 1990 revision of the abbreviated injury scale, and all scoring is checked centrally to ensure accuracy and consistency. |
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Also for reasons I don't even want to think about, the newsletter usually carries an abbreviated article about some aspect of gemological testing. |
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To nominate someone, send an abbreviated curriculum vitae, a nomination letter and three letters of support on why the candidate should be considered. |
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Not that the government was admitting any of this during its abbreviated and often delayed press briefings. |
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Pallone found this unconscionable, particularly in an abbreviated two-month campaign. |
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They spent much of the 2002 season ranked among the best in the province, only to stumble in an abbreviated playoff format due to a labour dispute. |
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The name is usually abbreviated to poliomyelitis, or more commonly, polio. |
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Introductions to some plays of Aeschylus, Sophocles, and Euripides, based on the Didascaliae of Aristotle and on Peripatetic research, are extant in an abbreviated form. |
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Wood grain and parquetry are abbreviated using forceful umber lines. |
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The quality spec includes lined rings, graphite reel seat fittings, overslide joints and an abbreviated Hyperlon handle. |
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Personally, I will be comfortable using biosimilars that have been approved according the FDA's abbreviated licensure pathway. |
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Currently the CLAC offers full tests in 18 languages plus abbreviated tests in 5 other languages. |
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It was written in Medieval Latin, was highly abbreviated, and included some vernacular native terms without Latin equivalents. |
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Frequencies are often abbreviated from Latin, such as every 8 hours reading Q8H from Quaque VIII Hora. |
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In World Cup years, an abbreviated tournament is held in which each team plays the others only once. |
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These references are cited above with multiple abbreviated cites with varying locations. |
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The latter, usually abbreviated as The Wealth of Nations, is considered his magnum opus and the first modern work of economics. |
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Dutch also has a range of fixed expressions that make use of the genitive articles, which can be abbreviated using apostrophes. |
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Such syllables may be abbreviated CV, V, and CVC, where C stands for consonant and V stands for vowel. |
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Usually, a diagram called a compass rose shows the directions north, south, east, and west on the compass face as abbreviated initials. |
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A peculiarity of the name is that the word The is a formal part of the abbreviated name and is, therefore, capitalised. |
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Although the Calendar Round is still in use today, the Maya started using an abbreviated Short Count during the Late Classic period. |
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The Solar Hijri calendar, also called the Shamsi Hijri calendar, and abbreviated as SH, is the official calendar of Iran and Afghanistan. |
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This section provides a very abbreviated snapshot of the drift mining information generally available. |
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Stem abbreviated, terete-cylindric, to 1 cm long, monophyllous, completely concealed by papyraceous, subancipitous, acute sheaths to 1 cm long. |
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Emotional intelligence is also sometimes abbreviated as EQ, a reference to emotional quotient, a measurement of emotional intelligence. |
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The terms prothoracic, mesothoracic, and metathoracic are abbreviated 'pro', 'mes', and 'met', respectively. |
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We describe a patient with multiple injuries who had an abbreviated celiotomy with repair of vascular injuries and packing of other injuries. |
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The abbreviated lesson only took fifteen minutes as opposed to an hour and a half. |
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Biograph is the abbreviated name commonly used for the American Mutoscope and Biograph Company. |
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Perhaps the blogs have taken poetic license too far, the neighborhood isn't 'trendy' enough to be abbreviated, or we're all too burnt out to learn more shorthand. |
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The original charters were written on parchment sheets using quill pens, in heavily abbreviated medieval Latin, which was the convention for legal documents at that time. |
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This abbreviated and somewhat cryptic message from my house sitter was not really the one I was hoping to receive while making my slow way around the Aegean coast last month. |
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Long after stenographers started writing shorthand, an abbreviated language has been resurrected for a silent form of communication called text messaging. |
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Its name is abbreviated as EWHC for legal citation purposes. |
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The British Olympic Association's director of marketing, Marzena Bogdanowicz, felt that the official and abbreviated names of the Great Britain Olympic team were a mouthful. |
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The sequel includes an abbreviated reprise of the first three films, but focuses on the plot of Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull. |
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Members of the Legislative Council, abbreviated MLC, were appointed. |
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The words are not to be sung when the song is played as a military royal salute and is abbreviated to the first three lines while arms are being presented. |
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In 1926 the name of the company was abbreviated to Gloster Aircraft Company because customers outside of the United Kingdom found the original name too difficult to pronounce. |
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