Not exact matches
But sharing files still
requires extra steps for people who want to share other
kinds of files like Microsoft (msft)
Word documents.
In other
words, Wycliffe identifies precisely the
kind of metaphysical background for Scripture which
requires one to understand it in a Catholic way, within the fuller reality
of Christian redemption.
On principle I think some find those 3
words more than a semantic difference and don't want to necessarily acknowledge that planning
of any
kind requires vision, agenda or rules.
For by «mental» prayer traditional writers have intended to denote the
kind of conscious relationship with God that does not
require the use
of words, spoken or formed.
This is not because such
words are supposed to have some
kind of vitalistic tinge which will redeem what we have to say from apparent mechanistic suggestions, but because they are in fact
required for any genuine understanding
of the world and any sound explanation
of how things come to be.
You speak about a
kind of listening to the
Word that does not
require advanced biblical criticism.
But Pepperberg's bird Griffin understood the English
word «wait» and did not
require the
kind of pre-training that hindered others, she said.
It's a recommendable buy if you're not after the last
word in handling sharpness or off - road ability, yet
require a vehicle that is comfortable and composed on the road; it can successfully leave tarmac for brief stints, but it
kind of seems out
of place there, especially if it's riding on 19 - inch rims.
In other
words, what
kind of out -
of - the - box thinking is
required to take the current state
of e-publishing to a whole new level?
'' [A] s the manifest purpose
of the constitutional provisions, both
of the states and
of the United States, is to prohibit the compelling
of testimony
of a self - incriminating
kind from a party or a witness, the liberal construction which must be placed upon constitutional provisions for the protection
of personal rights would seem to
require that the constitutional guaranties, however differently
worded, should have as far as possible the same interpretation...»
Tonight, I want to thank Diana Skaggs, at the [KY] Divorce Law Journal, for her generous write - up on this post in Blawg Review # 101 — and, especially, for sharing the most
kind words of Prof. Alan Childress, who had the best reaction I could have desired from a professor
of Professional Responsibility: «It will be
required reading for every legal ethics class I teach.»
I don't
require much, just a few
kind words of acknowledgement is usually enough to motivate me to keep pleasing.
This
requires couples to function with an unwritten agreement to offer something in return for each
kind of word or deed.