Then he established that demotic was a still more abridged cursive form of the hieroglyphics and was generally governed by the same rules. |
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They claimed the constitutional right abridged was the right to due process of law. |
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Osborne's 1956 kitchen-sink drama, heavily abridged, receives a hyperrealist production in the real kitchen of a real house. |
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We could transmit it by a set of abridged accounts, with a full set of accounts available on the website. |
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When personal rights are abridged in the name of the public good, conflict usually ensues, and gin-soaked London was no exception. |
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The right to seek redress of wrongs in court is precious and should not be restricted or abridged, based on myths. |
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Because some of these emails are so long I have abridged several but provided a link to the full email. |
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If Polanski's Twist can be faulted for anything, it's perhaps in presenting a version of the novel that feels ever so slightly abridged. |
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They are edited, abridged, and slightly simplified and represent a fraction of their original length. |
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The original six hour series had been abridged into two hours and you could feel that the pacing was rushed. |
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To begin with, the new publishers were content to reprint and to produce abridged volumes. |
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To make things worse, commercially available audio books are usually abridged and twice as expensive as the print version. |
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So I think we have an obligation to make sure that her rights are not in any way abridged. |
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I tend not to be a fan of abridged work, unless the abridgment was done by the author. |
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For from the plan of the dipteral temple he removed the interior rows of the thirty-four columns, and in that manner abridged the expense and the work. |
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Edward E. Ericson, Jr., is a professor of English at Calvin College, and a Solzhenitsyn scholar who abridged The Gulag Archipelago in cooperation with the author. |
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You have, I understand, an abridged version of that, which was the lecture I actually presented last week. |
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A General Meeting was held on July 31 2007 to approve the accounts of this abridged financial year. |
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You were doing what you could in a strange, intense, abridged amount of time. |
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After that, Hawking became closer with Jane and their two children, and then the abridged memoir was released. |
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The Company is authorised to publish an abridged version of the financial reports. |
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Species, indicated at least under its botanical name, which may be given in abridged form and without the authors' names, in roman characters. |
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Does it matter to you if the book you read is abridged or unabridged? |
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The magic of the original isn't dulled in this carefully abridged volume of the Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, which was nominated for the prestigious Kate Greenaway award. |
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Being an abridged version of a shareware software, this small game is exploitable in the good sense. |
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This very abridged story from a Turkish newspaper could be of interest. |
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The full publication is now available in French, and an abridged version in Spanish. |
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Speedy, abridged communication and the influence of a younger generation has created a pandemic of text speak, acronyms and lazy grammar. |
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Seven of the thirteen case studies are included in the abridged version. |
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Dharma has plans for a 300-page abridged version of the book. |
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Thus, while paragraphs 4 through 8 could be abridged, he agreed with Mr. Amor that they could not be deleted entirely. |
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Unlike the Pappenheim version, the 1913 printing had a fine introduction, notes and index, albeit abridged and reworked under the editorship of Alfred Feilchenfeld. |
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Wonderfully constructed narratives, such as the patriarchal stories of Genesis, are reduced and abridged as to make many of them incomprehensible. |
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Some scholars contend that the Folio text was abridged and rearranged from an earlier manuscript or prompt book. |
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Look here, my body-snatchers, you have unlawfully abridged the liberty of one of the sons of the sovereign State of New York! |
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If any of these entitlements is abridged, a court can, at the request of the patentee, compel the infringer to pay damages and to refrain from infringement in the future. |
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Doc experienced a resurgence of popularity in 1964, when Bantam Books began reprinting all the original stories as paperbacks, though a number of these were abridged. |
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The nuclear test is a signal to the international community that North Korea refuses to be disrespected, have its sovereignty abridged, or suffer a full-frontal military assault. |
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I think he knows this, and is revising his campaign accordingly. Here is an abridged extract from the column The danger for the president lies among wavering voters who think of 2008 with a pang of disappointment. |
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The 2008 Canadian Vehicle Survey Update Report offers an abridged review and analysis of selected annual data from 2000 to 2008, describing Canada's vehicle fleet, patterns in vehicle use and fuel consumption. |
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This brochure is an abridged guide for project managers who are responsible for works that could have an impact on archaeological resources located on NCC lands. |
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However, persons who undergo training for one of the two categories and passed the test need only undergo abridged training to pass the test for the other category. |
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I spoke to that in 1985 when I appeared before the Fraser committee, and the details are pretty much outlined in the abridged version that was published. |
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Prior approval must be obtained from the author for any abridged versions, alterations or corrections to the texts or the photographs made through the editorial office. |
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An abridged version of these itineraries had been sent to the Deputy Minister to assist in administering the department, but had been destroyed before the access request had come in. |
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The Member States may choose this modulation from an abridged menu, rather than from one imposed on them, which serves up 'direct aid' as a main course and 'rural development' as a dessert. |
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It would ideally refer to line extension rather than abridged application, but the principle allows for the sale of generics in more than one country without repeating application procedures. |
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It benefits from simplified procedures for customs declarations concerning goods, as well as abridged, priority checks when customs inspections are required. |
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This is an abridged version of the foreword to Amnesty International Report 2010: The state of the world's human rights, by interim Secretary General Claudio Cordone. |
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She retired herself to Sebaste, and abridged her train from state to necessity. |
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The novel was abridged by the author to make the audio recording a more manageable length. |
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An abridged, free translation, often wrongly attributed to King Alfred is still extant. |
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In 2016, to mark the centenary of Dahl's birth, his letters to his mother were abridged and broadcast as BBC Radio 4's Book of the Week. |
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The first three novels were later released, abridged, as audiobooks, along with other audiobook that have not been novels. |
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Three copies of another abridged manuscript were acquired by the Swiss traveller Johann Burckhardt and bequeathed to the University of Cambridge. |
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The abridged version did not feature the literary quotes, just the author quoted. |
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The reteller of these stories needs in addition to plead guilty of having abridged the tales with a free hand. |
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Most Middle English rewritings of French romances have been undervalued as abridged versions adapted to less cultured audiences. |
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That right is preserved sacred and incommunicable in all instances, where it has not been taken away or abridged by some public law for the good of the whole. |
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David Powel published an abridged version of Itinerarium Cambriae and Descriptio Cambriae in 1585 omitting Gerald's negative comments about the Welsh. |
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I abridged with domfine norsemanship till I had done abate her maidan race, my baresark bride and knew her fleshly when with all my bawdy did I her whorship. |
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The Maronite's Gabriel Sionita and Joannes Hesronita translated an abridged version of the text which was published in Paris in 1619 with the title of Geographia nubiensis. |
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However, a number of print editions are produced, targeting different groups of readers with selections of content, some of it abridged, and different advertising. |
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Many societies in the past have denied or abridged political representation on the basis of race or ethnicity, related to discriminatory ideas about citizenship. |
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An abridged dictionary can be further condensed to pocket size. |
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Peters, in which former reporter Henry Wheaton sued then current reporter Richard Peters for reprinting cases from Wheaton's Reports in abridged form. |
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