| These stories are the immovable objects of Star Wars history, the characters and events to which all other tales must align. |
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| Before NYC Prep, reality TV stars were sources of entertainment, but never objects of envy or adulation. |
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| Nouns are adjectives, subjects disagree with objects, modifiers dangle, malapropisms abound. |
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| Many of the objects in the show are personal notes, annotated scripts, and letters. |
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| He required others to open doors for him because he so abhorred touching the knobs or other metal objects. |
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| The bricoleur is a specialist in combinatorial logic, a craftsman who creates objects by rearranging other objects. |
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| All outward signs suggest that catatonics have ceased being subjects by virtue of having transformed themselves into veritable objects. |
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| He said that objects first become cherishable, after which they get nostalgic value. Finally they end up being antiques. |
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| By selecting, scaling, and clothifying these various objects, you can create an assortment of towels, blankets, scarves, shawls, and flags. |
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| Among the objects of knowledge, two especially commend themselves to our contemplation. |
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| Tensor products of copies of the natural and the conatural representations are injective objects in this category. |
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| It has pleased our wise Creator to annex to several objects, as also to several of our thoughts, a concomitant pleasure. |
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| Programming languages with lazy evaluation support corecursion so that the programmer can refer to infinite objects. |
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| Co-recursive algorithms allow infinite large objects to be used without necessarily running out of memory. |
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| This familial relic may be rich with meaning, but when it comes to objects, Mr. Demand is not an investor but a divester. |
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| In the workplace, e-tagging will be used for tracking and identifying nonhuman physical objects and also for humans. |
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| Danish design is typically applied to industrial design, furniture and household objects, which have won many international awards. |
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| It is not only to makeup which this argument objects but also to any improper exposure, including that of the head. |
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| Even objects that lie about haphazardly were fit for mantic purposes. The prcatice was called apantomancy. |
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| The following sections describe how each of these transforms can be used to make changes to objects on the artboard. |
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| If small baglike objects are hanging on your evergreens or trees, each bag covered with bits of leaves or stems, you have bagworms. |
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| This list represents just a small sampling of objects and skills which are included in studies of material culture. |
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| Without transmission, these items are not folklore, they are just individual quirky tales and objects. |
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| Human heads alone, without bodies, are far more common, frequently appearing in relief on all sorts of objects. |
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| Women are often made to represent higher values and transformed into objects of desire and of mystery. |
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| In the Solar System, ice is abundant and occurs naturally from as close to the Sun as Mercury to as far away as the Oort cloud objects. |
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| Rime is a type of ice formed on cold objects when drops of water crystallize on them. |
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| For example, eagles, hawks and their feathers have great cultural and spiritual value to Native Americans as religious objects. |
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| They are less spasmodic, but can coil their arms around objects, holding even after death. |
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| Other species of scallops can be found on the ocean floor attached to objects by byssal threads. |
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| Female Branchiura do not carry eggs in external ovisacs but attach them in rows to rocks and other objects. |
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| The first lamps were made of naturally occurring objects, coconuts, sea shells, egg shells and hollow stones. |
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| Each eye can pivot and focus independently, allowing the chameleon to observe two different objects simultaneously. |
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| However, they do not use this display in response to males, inanimate objects or prey. |
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| This can help with camouflage when the cuttlefish becomes visually similar to objects in its environment such as kelp or rocks. |
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| This is in marked contrast to complex objects which do show aging, such as automobiles and humans. |
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| It is because of this politicized recording of their history that it is difficult to retrace the exact origins of these objects. |
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| The site also has a museum that displays objects found by archaeologists during their excavations. |
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| Conditions outside of the camera can cause objects in an image to appear displaced from their true ground position. |
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| Windowpane oysters are harvested for their translucent shells, which are used to make various kinds of decorative objects. |
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| Position 6 is the position of direct and indirect objects, and position 7 is for heavy adverbial constituents. |
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| The oldest are carved on loose objects, while later ones are chiseled in runestones. |
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| Much valued from antiquity to the present as a gemstone, amber is made into a variety of decorative objects. |
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| Many sounds we hear, such as when hard objects of metal, glass, or wood are struck, are caused by brief resonant vibrations in the object. |
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| This is a rather problematic solution, as magnetic compasses need recalibration and all metal objects must be kept in exactly the same place. |
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| As early as 1886, German physicist Heinrich Hertz showed that radio waves could be reflected from solid objects. |
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| In his report, Popov wrote that this phenomenon might be used for detecting objects, but he did nothing more with this observation. |
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| This also allows small objects to be detected in an environment containing much larger nearby slow moving objects. |
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| Clans held a sacred bundle, which consisted of a few gathered objects believed to hold sacred powers. |
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| His weightlifting included a creative array of objects and machinery designed to challenge his strength and ability. |
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| He provides a thorough discussion of the properties of fluorspar, noting that it is carved into vases and other decorative objects. |
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| It explained geometrical models of the planets based on combinations of circles, which could be used to predict the motions of celestial objects. |
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| Once weaned, they may become destructive to leather objects, furniture and electric cables. |
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| However, owls are farsighted and cannot focus on objects within a few centimeters of their eyes. |
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| The males are very enthusiastic, will try to grasp fish or inanimate objects and often mount the backs of other males. |
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| Earth's gravity interacts with other objects in space, especially the Sun and the Moon, Earth's only natural satellite. |
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| The gravity of Earth is the acceleration that is imparted to objects due to the distribution of mass within the Earth. |
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| Corals from seamounts are also vulnerable, as they are highly valued for making jewellery and decorative objects. |
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| In physics, the Coriolis force is an inertial force that acts on objects that are in motion relative to a rotating reference frame. |
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| In essence, it is a river within an ocean, and, like a river, it can and does carry floating objects. |
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| Traditionally, needles have been kept in needle books or needlecases which have become objects of adornment. |
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| The shear force of winds can blow off shingles, and air borne objects can cause damage to power lines, roofing and siding. |
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| They aggregate in considerable numbers around objects such as drifting flotsam, rafts, jellyfish and floating seaweed. |
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| Floating objects can offer some protection for juvenile fish from predators. |
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| A simpler alternative is to leverage off the fascination fish have with floating objects. |
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| Most turtles that spend most of their lives on land have their eyes looking down at objects in front of them. |
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| Hacksilber objects in these Phoenician hoards have lead isotope ratios that match ores in Sardinia and Spain. |
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| Etchings made of the Tapestry in the 1730s show the standing figure with differing objects. |
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| The finds include weapons, sailing equipment, naval supplies and a wide array of objects used by the crew. |
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| Sunken ships, once being moving objects, were legally treated as chattel and were awarded to those who could first raise them. |
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| Many objects from the Mary Rose had been well preserved in form and shape, but many were quite delicate, requiring careful handling. |
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| As a miniature society at sea, the wreck of the Mary Rose held personal objects belonging to individual crew members. |
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| More objects were found around the cabin, such as earscoops, shaving bowls and combs. |
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| Smaller objects from the most common material, wood, were sealed in polyethylene bags to preserve moisture. |
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| Timbers and other objects that were too large to be wrapped were stored in unsealed water tanks. |
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| These perplexingly dissimilar objects found their way into her work at different stages in her artistic development. |
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| Bricks, cooking pots, art objects, dishware, and even musical instruments such as the ocarina can all be shaped from clay before being fired. |
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| Edmund objects, believing Sir Thomas would disapprove and feeling that the subject matter of the play is inappropriate for his sisters. |
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| The workers who recovered the objects originally thought them to be the remains of a cave bear. |
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| Natural objects that humans have moved but not changed are called manuports. |
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| Works of art can be explicitly made for this purpose or interpreted on the basis of images or objects. |
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| The actual production in many conceptual and contemporary works of art is a matter of assembly of found objects. |
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| South African art includes the oldest art objects in the world, which were discovered in a South African cave, and dated from 75,000 years ago. |
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| Tooth and tusk ivory can be carved into a vast variety of shapes and objects. |
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| Examples of modern carved ivory objects are okimono, netsukes, jewelry, flatware handles, furniture inlays, and piano keys. |
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| They also became venerated objects, and were frequently buried in long barrows or round barrows with their former owners. |
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| European symbols and scenes coexisted with Chinese scenes for these objects. |
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| Maritime archaeology studies prehistorical objects and sites that are, because of changes in climate and geology, now underwater. |
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| The Nemi ships and other shipwreck sites occasionally yield objects of unique artistic value. |
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| Many of the objects deposited, especially the weapons, have been made useless by breaking, bending, etc. |
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| According to Kahneman, people evaluate objects they own with higher value than the same object if they do not own it. |
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| This relationship is controversial, as many believe that the heritage industry corrupts the meaning and importance of cultural objects. |
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| They developed a polychrome style of gold work, using wrought cells or setting to encrust gemstones into their gold objects. |
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| Another large group are medieval runes, most commonly found on small objects, often wooden sticks. |
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| Other hoards contain either broken or miscast objects that were probably intended for reuse by bronze smiths. |
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| Modern excavation techniques require that the precise locations of objects and features, known as their provenance or provenience, be recorded. |
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| Likewise, their association, or relationship with nearby objects and features, needs to be recorded for later analysis. |
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| Archaeology stimulates interest in ancient objects, and people in search of artifacts or treasure cause damage to archaeological sites. |
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| In metaphysics, material objects are limited by matter and therefore are delimited from each other. |
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| Among the greatest discoveries of lost objects was the 1653 accidental uncovering of Childeric I's tomb in the church of Saint Brice in Tournai. |
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| The earliest written records from Scandinavia are runic inscriptions on memorial stones and other objects. |
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| Due to the context of its placement on some objects, some scholars have interpreted this symbol as referring to Odin. |
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| Two objects with runic inscriptions invoking Thor date from the 11th century, one from England and one from Sweden. |
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| He sits on his fallen shield while a sword and other objects lie beside him. |
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| During the 2nd century the Goths of southern Russia discovered a newfound taste for gold figurines and objects inlaid with precious stones. |
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| Also brought back from India were dyes like lac, indigo and dyewood and precious ornamental objects and materials like ivory, ebony and pearls. |
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| Many priceless icons, relics, and other objects later turned up in Western Europe, a large number in Venice. |
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| Cumbrous compounds are formed as the names of objects and a character of tedious and time-wasting polysyllabism is given to the language. |
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| Their calcareous waters deposit a sintery incrustation on surrounding objects. |
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| It applies mathematics, physics, and chemistry, in an effort to explain the origin of those objects and phenomena and their evolution. |
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| Theoretical astronomy is oriented toward the development of computer or analytical models to describe astronomical objects and phenomena. |
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| In early times, astronomy only comprised the observation and predictions of the motions of objects visible to the naked eye. |
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| Our main source of information about celestial bodies and other objects is visible light more generally electromagnetic radiation. |
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| A wide variety of objects are observable at radio wavelengths, including supernovae, interstellar gas, pulsars, and active galactic nuclei. |
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| Other objects commonly observed in ultraviolet light include planetary nebulae, supernova remnants, and active galactic nuclei. |
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| Gamma ray astronomy observes astronomical objects at the shortest wavelengths of the electromagnetic spectrum. |
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| One of the oldest fields in astronomy, and in all of science, is the measurement of the positions of celestial objects. |
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| It is a rotating mass of gas, dust, stars and other objects, held together by mutual gravitational attraction. |
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| Quasars are believed to be the most consistently luminous objects in the known universe. |
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| Many amateurs like to specialize in the observation of particular objects, types of objects, or types of events which interest them. |
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| Large frame quadrants were used for astronomical measurements, notably determining the altitude of celestial objects. |
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| When set on a pedestal or other mount, they could be used to measure the angular distance between any two celestial objects. |
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| They also imported obsidian from Ethiopia to shape blades and other objects. |
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| Modern ephemerides are often computed electronically from mathematical models of the motion of astronomical objects and the Earth. |
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| There, they came across a large number of inscriptions, drawings and archaeological objects. |
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| The Spanish colonization of the country did not hinder Filipinos creating sculptures for objects of adoration. |
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| In addition to bearings, navigators also often measure distances to objects. |
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| The Maya generally hammered sheet metal into objects such as beads, bells, and discs. |
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| All of these objects eventually ended up in the Rijksmuseum Amsterdam, after some had initially been held in The Hague. |
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| He returned with a number of objects, which went to the Russian Arkangel's Regional Museum. |
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| Roman objects, dating from the period 27 BCE to 37 CE, have been excavated in sites as far afield as the Kushan and Indus ports. |
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| Cattle sometimes consume metal objects which are deposited in the reticulum and irritation from the metal objects causes hardware disease. |
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| This might cover metalwork, ceramics, glass, arms and armour, and a wide range of objects. |
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| Many of the important characteristics of these objects had been developed by the 13th century. |
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| Scientists often posed with instruments and objects of their study around them. |
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| In 1772 an auction in the Palazzo Vecchio of objects from storage dispersed the Medici porcelains conserved in Tuscany. |
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| Delftware includes pottery objects of all descriptions such as plates, ornaments and tiles. |
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| Suffix pronouns are used as markers of possession and as objects of verbs and prepositions. |
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| Infants imitate words that they hear and then associate those words with objects and actions. |
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| Moreover, the Wuvulu language has different numerical systems for animate objects and inanimates objects. |
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| The term objective case is then used for the oblique case, which covers the roles of accusative, dative, and objects of a preposition. |
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| Finnic languages, such as Finnish and Estonian, have two cases to mark objects, the accusative and the partitive case. |
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| German uses the accusative to mark direct objects and objects of certain prepositions, or adverbs relating to time. |
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| The new grammar considers other total objects as being in the nominative or genitive case. |
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| The use of a classifier is similar to, but not identical with, the use of units of measurement to count groups of objects in English. |
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| One can see that the difference is in the language, not in the reality of the objects. |
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| Noun phrases often function as verb subjects and objects, as predicative expressions, and as the complements of prepositions. |
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| Verbs must agree in class with their subjects and objects, and adjectives with the nouns that they qualify. |
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| The objects that verbs do and do not take is explored in detail in valency theory. |
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| For languages that have case and thus freer word order, morphological case is the most readily available criterion for identifying objects. |
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| In Latin and related languages, direct objects are usually marked with the accusative case, and indirect objects with the dative case. |
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| Note as well that some objects are marked in telling ways in particular languages. |
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| Similarly to person deixis, the locations may be either those of the speaker and addressee or those of persons or objects being referred to. |
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| A further example is languages that can relativize only subjects and direct objects. |
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| First Nations traded their furs for many French goods such as metal objects, guns, alcohol, and clothing. |
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| Most broadly and concisely, property in the legal sense refers to the rights of people in or over certain objects or things. |
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| Kant argued that there can be exactly the same relation between two completely different objects. |
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| Analogous objects did not share necessarily a relation, but also an idea, a pattern, a regularity, an attribute, an effect or a philosophy. |
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| The mapping takes place not only between objects, but also between relations of objects and between relations of relations. |
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| If the objects were the things that the company was able to do, then the powers were the means by which it could do them. |
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| It can also include material objects, such as buildings, works of art or tools. |
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| They are finding the remains of ovens for smelting copper and preparing food as well as quotidian objects such as mats and storage pots. |
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| Property law in Canada is the body of law concerning the rights of individuals over land, objects, and expression within Canada. |
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| If a Member objects, then the division bells are rung throughout the Parliamentary estate. |
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| However, iron objects of great age are much rarer than objects made of gold or silver due to the ease with which iron corrodes. |
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| This requires property relations which enable objects of value to be appropriated and owned, and trading rights to be established. |
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| Sintering is part of the firing process used in the manufacture of pottery and other ceramic objects. |
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| These objects are made from substances such as glass, alumina, zirconia, silica, magnesia, lime, beryllium oxide, and ferric oxide. |
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| The walls of the shaft are circular, finished in stucco, and hung with paintings and other curious objects. |
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| An objective of refactorization is to clear up the global scope of all the library variables, functions and objects. |
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| They can produce a great variety of glass objects, ranging from drinking cups to window glass. |
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| The objects are created by laying down or building up many thin layers of material in succession. |
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| The total number of objects in the museum's collection numbers is several million. |
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| Ospreys have vision that is well adapted to detecting underwater objects from the air. |
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| The ability to leave marks on paper and other objects gave graphite its name, given in 1789 by German mineralogist Abraham Gottlob Werner. |
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| As women have none of the objects in life for which an enlarged education is considered requisite, the education is not given. |
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| They are believed to haunt particular locations, objects, or people they were associated with in life. |
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| David Turner, a retired physical chemist, suggested that ball lightning could cause inanimate objects to move erratically. |
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| Scattered beyond the Kuiper Belt is a disk of objects such as Eris and Sedna. |
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| We introduce and study also an interesting class of more general objects which we call semiloopoids. |
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| Do ye want me to become a sleuth, or engage detectives to track the objects of your erroneous philanthropy? |
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| But for better or worse, the souklike kaleidoscope of objects and cultures has slowed a bit. |
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| Variety of objects has a tendency to steal away the mind from its steady pursuit of any subject. |
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| His advertising tells a story, but so do the objects themselves. |
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| We are looking into an area in which biomorphic and technoid objects seem to exist in a Utopian atmosphere. |
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| In each language, mechanisms are available which allow us to classify, serialize, localize, and temporalize the objects of possible experience. |
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| When objects are brought into thermal contact, the macroscopic properties may initially change but after some time no further changes will occur. |
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| SessionFactory objects are threadsafe, so it is not necessary to obtain one for each thread. |
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| To reach the Self, then, one has simply to 'unreach' all objects. The Self is ever-manifest, self-revealing. |
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| Java has no first-class functions, so function objects are usually expressed by an interface with a single method. |
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| And various grewsome objects, a card case of human skin, and the twisted scarf used by a strangler. |
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| During the haunting, strange voices and noises were heard and objects flew off tables. |
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| They were targeted not only because they stored books but also precious objects that were looted by invaders. |
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| In fact, most of Aristotle's life was devoted to the study of the objects of natural science. |
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| The discovery of bronze enabled people to create metal objects which were harder and more durable than previously possible. |
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| Based on the style of lettering and the accompanying objects, it probably dates to the end of the 2nd century. |
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| In particular, we prove that the fibrant objects are those satisfying descent with respect to all hypercovers. |
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| Most critics group Lanyon with the Chicago imagists, artists who use ordinary objects and meticulous detail to explore fantasy. |
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| The non-correspondence between meaning and working begins in the process of conception, as incommensurableness between objects and interests. |
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| The purpose of philosophy is to unite oneself with the objects of the intellect, and even at last with the One that is above all intellection. |
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| There aren't many interactable objects in the game, so you shouldn't have any trouble finding the key. |
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| In computer programming, the practice of using always references in place of copies of equal objects is known as interning. |
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| After eight hours, the English ships began to run out of ammunition, and some gunners began loading objects such as chains into cannons. |
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| Material artefacts left by the Romans and the invaders are often similar, and tribal items were often modelled on Roman objects. |
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| He also showed that coloured light does not change its properties by separating out a coloured beam and shining it on various objects. |
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| Most of the technology involved in the web, like the hypertext, like the Internet, multifont text objects, had all been designed already. |
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| As operators are usually interested only in moving targets, it was desirable to filter out any distracting reflections from stationary objects. |
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| With HTML constructs, images and other objects, such as interactive forms, may be embedded into the rendered page. |
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| The observed fact that the gravitational mass and the inertial mass is not the same for all objects is unexplained within Newton's Theories. |
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| Classical mechanics provides extremely accurate results when studying large objects and speeds not approaching the speed of light. |
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| When both objects are moving in the same direction, this equation can be simplified to. |
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| For extended objects composed of many particles, the kinetic energy of the composite body is the sum of the kinetic energies of the particles. |
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| In the case of high velocity objects approaching the speed of light, classical mechanics is enhanced by special relativity. |
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| He demonstrated that these laws apply to everyday objects as well as to celestial objects. |
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| The St Cuthbert Gospel is among the objects later recovered from St Cuthbert's coffin, which is also an important artefact. |
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| Flowers, birds, animals, instruments, symmetric mandala drawings, objects, idols are all part of symbolic iconography in Hinduism. |
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| Myrvold notes that copies of the Guru Granth Sahib are not regarded as material objects, but as living subjects which are alive. |
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| They were most likely used to drop objects on attackers, or to allow water to be poured on fires to extinguish them. |
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| Castles have been compared with cathedrals as objects of architectural pride, and some castles incorporated gardens as ornamental features. |
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| There were some 100,000 objects, displayed along more than ten miles, by over 15,000 contributors. |
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| The stirrups are wider and the saddle has rings and ties that allow objects to be attached to the saddle. |
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| The second proposal is pagan origins for the custom of rolling objects down the hill. |
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| In 1670, as a sign of her rising favour with the pontiff she requested, and was granted, devotional objects. |
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| The site is open to the public and has a visitor centre with a small museum of objects associated with the caves, including a stuffed cave hyena. |
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| The artefacts are nearly all martial in character and contains no objects specific to female uses. |
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| Most of the gold and silver items appear to have been intentionally removed from the objects they were previously attached to. |
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| A major research and conservation project began in 2012 to clean, investigate and research the Staffordshire Hoard objects. |
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| In this role, he produced not only portraits and festive decorations but designs for jewellery, plate and other precious objects. |
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| He focused on secular designs for decorative objects, and on portraits stripped of inessentials. |
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| Holbein's way of designing objects was to sketch preliminary ideas and then draw successive versions with increasing precision. |
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| When designing precious objects, Holbein worked closely with craftsmen such as goldsmiths. |
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| Rossetti contributed designs for stained glass and other decorative objects. |
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| There are a group of mnemonic poems designed to help memorise lists and sequences of names and to keep objects in order. |
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| In addition, some Old English text survives on stone structures and other ornate objects. |
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| In response, the angel Michael explains that Adam does not need to build physical objects to experience the presence of God. |
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| Instead of directing their thoughts towards God, as they should, humans tend to turn to erected objects and falsely invest their faith. |
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| It is also known as micropsia and macropsia, a brain condition affecting the way that objects are perceived by the mind. |
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| The carefulness of lifting pots and objects from the soil filled me with a longing to be an archaeologist myself. |
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| These include street names, mountains, companies, species of animals and plants as well as other notable objects. |
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| The site includes 18,000 words of information on characters, places and objects in the Harry Potter universe. |
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| Films often have different themes for important characters, events, ideas or objects, an idea often associated with Wagner's use of leitmotif. |
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| Sloane's collection, while including a vast miscellany of objects, tended to reflect his scientific interests. |
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| On the return of antiquities from wartime storage in 1919 some objects were found to have deteriorated. |
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| It became easier to lend objects, the constitution of the Board of Trustees changed and the Natural History Museum became fully independent. |
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| Paleolithic objects from the Sturge, Christy and Lartet collections include some of the earliest works of art from Europe. |
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| The Sainsbury African Galleries display 600 objects from the greatest permanent collection of African arts and culture in the world. |
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| The three permanent galleries provide a substantial exhibition space for the Museum's African collection comprising over 200,000 objects. |
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| States are immaterial and nonphysical social objects, whereas governments are groups of people with certain coercive powers. |
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| Pictish art appears on stones, metalwork and small objects of stone and bone. |
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| Though coins were not absent from Scotland before David, these were by definition foreign objects, unseen and unused by most of the population. |
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| Now that we know we have mocked out the objects and verified that the method we expected was called, we are ready to write a unit test. |
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| This work also demonstrated that the motion of objects on Earth and of celestial bodies could be described by the same principles. |
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| He also showed that the coloured light does not change its properties by separating out a coloured beam and shining it on various objects. |
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| Newton used them to explain and investigate the motion of many physical objects and systems. |
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| These three laws hold to a good approximation for macroscopic objects under everyday conditions. |
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| On Earth, gravity gives weight to physical objects and causes the ocean tides. |
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| Gravity has an infinite range, although its effects become increasingly weaker on farther objects. |
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| This was a major departure from Aristotle's belief that heavier objects have a higher gravitational acceleration. |
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| Galileo postulated air resistance as the reason that objects with less mass may fall slower in an atmosphere. |
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| The National Gallery of Art thus showcases art made in the United States, but also owns objects from across the world. |
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| In Newtonian physics, however, no such acceleration can occur unless at least one of the objects is being operated on by a force. |
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| The strength of the gravitational field is numerically equal to the acceleration of objects under its influence. |
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| Also, again ignoring air resistance, any and all objects, when dropped from the same height, will hit the ground at the same time. |
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| The discovery of neutron stars sparked interest in gravitationally collapsed compact objects as a possible astrophysical reality. |
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| Other compact objects, such as neutron stars, can also have photon spheres. |
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| Through the Penrose process, objects can emerge from the ergosphere with more energy than they entered. |
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| Some candidates for such objects have been found in observations of the young universe. |
|
| Another possibility for black hole growth, is for a black hole to merge with other objects such as stars or even other black holes. |
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| The objects must therefore have been extremely compact, leaving black holes as the most plausible interpretation. |
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| For example, a supermassive black hole could be modelled by a large cluster of very dark objects. |
|
| As with classical objects at absolute zero temperature, it was assumed that black holes had zero entropy. |
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| However, the atomic electron and proton are held together by electromagnetic force, while planets and celestial objects are held by gravity. |
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| Adjectives precede nouns, direct objects come before verbs, and there are postpositions. |
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| Icons are not considered by the Orthodox to be idols or objects of worship. |
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| It also studies the meanings and uses people attribute to various objects and practices. |
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| Impressionist paintings demonstrated that human beings do not see objects, but instead see light itself. |
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| From 1945 onwards, Waugh became an avid collector of objects, particularly Victorian paintings and furniture. |
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| His purpose was to create objects that were finely crafted and beautifully rendered. |
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| It brought the need for books that were aesthetic objects as well as words to the attention of the reading and publishing worlds. |
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| According to Blake, he chose all of the objects in the picture at random, but the sleeves of Sgt. |
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| His paintings show heavily misty mountains in which the shapes of the objects are barely visible and extremely simplified. |
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| Sculptors sometimes use found objects, and Chinese scholar's rocks have been appreciated for many centuries. |
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| The powder on the floor defines the surface of the floor and the objects appear to be partially submerged, like icebergs. |
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| I want to occupy the territory, but the territory is an idea and a way of thinking as much as a context that generates objects. |
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| She took a workshop on casting with the sculptor Richard Wilson and began to realize the possibilities in casting objects. |
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| While still at the Slade, Whiteread cast domestic objects and created her first sculpture, Closet. |
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| After her first solo exhibition, Whiteread decided to cast the space that her domestic objects could have inhabited. |
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| Emin has often made use of found objects in her work from the early use of a cigarette box found in a car crash in which her uncle died. |
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| In the latter cases art objects may be referred to as archeological artifacts. |
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| It produced many iron objects such as swords and spears, which have not survived well to the 2000s due to rust. |
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| Bronze continued to be used for highly decorated shields, fibulas, and other objects, with different stages of evolution of the style. |
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| There is no observed conjunction to ground an inference either to extended objects or to God, as unobserved causes. |
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| Fundamentally, Marx assumed that human history involves transforming human nature, which encompasses both human beings and material objects. |
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| If they are not scientific, it needs to be explained how they can be informative about real world objects and events. |
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| In an airplane, most objects of interest are below the aircraft, so it is sensible to define down as a positive number. |
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| Like stars, cities and states reorganize and energize the smaller objects within their gravitational field. |
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| The vast majority of data entries on the SIS, around 49 million, concern lost or stolen objects. |
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| Thus, if the speed of flow is doubled, the flow would dislodge objects with 64 times as much submerged weight. |
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| The location of the service delivery is referred to as the stage and the objects that facilitate the service process are called props. |
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| Classical economists contended that goods were objects of value over which ownership rights could be established and exchanged. |
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