Dembski justifies his Scriptura sub scientia approach by raising the tired old canard about geocentrism. |
|
Brief, chatty and digestible, the book should refute the old canard that economics is dismal. |
|
Foie gras du canard and little spicy sweet peppers filled with herby cheese and drenched in olive oil were her choice of appetizers. |
|
Telling the New Zealand public that Maori have unlimited tangi leave is a canard. |
|
If anything proves the old canard that most psychiatrists are crazier than their patients, it is the egregious Finch. |
|
The conservative talk jocks have been purveying this canard to explain their monopoly of the spectrum. |
|
Tan seems not to realize that this old canard about the Inuit having 32 different words for snow, or whatever the number, is pure myth. |
|
At high angles of attack, first the canard came into stall, which caused the aircraft to pitch down its nose and decrease the angle before the main wing came into stall. |
|
But he scoffed at the occasional canard that he favoured players of his own religion. |
|
I want my profession to be seen as role models who lead by example rather than canard, fear or false promises. |
|
As for the old canard that Europe's bloodiest wars were the wars of religion, no serious student of the carnage of the twentieth century can credit that. |
|
Where he ventures to substantiate his canard, he falls flat on his face. |
|
It is a classic anti-semitic canard to punish any Jew for the perceived crimes of all of them. |
|
The briefest glance at David's productivity and output during his tenure there ought to put the quietus on that canard. |
|
The only surprise was that it was Gimpel who resorted to this ancient Likud canard. |
|
As I mentioned before, I could not get the model to turn in a reasonable circle with the canard jibs alone, either in a glide or under electric power. |
|
The oldest canard in the book is the one about how getting the first big win is the hardest bit, and after that they just fall into your lap like autumn leaves. |
|
North American built the Hound Dog with a canard, a delta wing configuration, an underslung J52 engine, and a self-contained inertial autonavigational guidance system. |
|
The resulting missile benefits from the latest infrared guidance technologies, an innovative aerodynamic form with a lifting body design, without wings or canard surfaces. |
|
The Valkyrie is a canard aircraft, equipped with a forewing to prevent the plane from stalling in the air. |
|
|
Part of that canard is about US hostility. |
|
On Paris breaks you could tuck into duck dishes like confit de canard or beef-based stews such as pot au feu. |
|
Feast on confit de canard and indulge in local Bergerac and Cahors wines. |
|
The first is this canard that we have to balance the budget. |
|
Indeed, some argue that the Irish will say yes only if they believe that a second no would lead to their country's ejection from the EU and that is itself a canard. |
|
I would hope as well that the government will not resurrect again its false and ugly canard that those who support the abolition of the death penalty do not care about victims of crime. |
|
The wartime learning boom disposed of the traditional canard that you can't teach an old dog new tricks: adults proved themselves far more capable of learning than had been expected. |
|
Many important potential radar targets, such as the wing, canard and fin leading edges, are highly swept, so will reflect radar energy well away from the front sector. |
|
Lesser rivers include the Canard River, Diligent River, Farrell River, and Debert River. |
|
French newspaper Le Canard Enchain said Bruni had them scrapped because they fell within six days of an Aids charity concert. |
|