Sentences with phrase «not name authors»

Not exact matches

(Unfortunately, I can't remember the author's name, and even though the internet is theoretically forever, the article I eventually wrote has disappeared.)
Only later did many readers notice that the authors were not in fact the well - known short - selling firms Muddy Waters and Citron Research, but rather two fake accounts using similar names with misspellings: @Mudd1waters and @Citreonresearc.
Reference herein to any specific product or vendor by trade name, trademark or otherwise does not constitute or imply its endorsement, recommendation or favoring by the authors or contributors and shall not be used for advertising or product endorsement purposes.
But if I use the right schema around my name in the article's HTML, I can indicate to Google that I'm the author of the article, not just another term in a sea of indistinguishable words.
I was not familiar with Maurece Schiller's name, but when Tom mentioned that this was the author that Joel Greenblatt referenced in his lectures, I was immediately curious.
Opinions expressed are that of the author and are not endorsed by the named broker dealer or its affiliates.
An author can't just say that «in Jesus's day, one of the ways people got around actually saying the name of God was to substitute the word «heaven»» without telling me how he knows that to be true!
They may or may not receive the glory that belongs to God alone by not doing these things openly in the name of Jesus who is the author of the good works He ordained that we should walk in.
2) name usage statistics do not guarantee the miraculous — but they certainly place an author in that immediate context (or at the very least, with direct access to someone who was from that immediate context), which is a MAJOR contingency that has been much debated in the question of authorship... which IS the topic you raised.
We could point to examples of semantic structure, grammatical style, references to culture, and a whole host of other historical critical standards to prove by scholarly consensus that the author whose name is on the book did not actually write it.
Historical criticism is the process by which modern scholars examine the text of ancient documents and try to determine when they were truly written and whether or not they were authored by the person whose name is on the document.
The gospels were 2nd hand accounts, recorded many years after the alleged events and there is no extrinsic corroborating evidence indicating the alleged witnesses were there at the correct time / place (and again, the authors of the gospels are widely acknowledged not to be the apostles for which they are named).
Of the seven evangelical Protestant authors (e.g., Francis Schaeffer, Cornelius Van Til, Harold Lindsell, A. W. Tozier), it is fair to say that none of them would be named, and most of them would not be known, outside the world of evangelicalism.
The stories were put to writing by — so tradition says — Moses (though his name doesn't appear as «inspired author»).
Unfortunately, the authors in this collection almost always turn to «Father, Son, and Spirit» as the only faithful way to name the divine; they do not suggest alternatives that they would accept, even as a complement to traditional naming.
The city sands out from revious cases for the reasons the author mentions (prayers are almost always christian, name a specific deity) but also because this wasn't some long held tradition.
Indeed, many of the hymnals, worship books and feminist theologians that the authors criticize make room for some naming of God as «Father, Son, and Holy Spirit» so long as masculine imagery is not overly dominant.
Second, for someone who is so uptight as this author about knowing religions and even writing a book about it, the mere fact that not ONCE in this article did you use the official and correct name of the church of Jesus Christ of latter day saints (aka Mormon) in my mind completely discredits your temper tantrum.
(Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan, 1997); E. W. Kenyon, In His Presence: The Secret of Prayer (Kenyon Publishing Society, 1999); E. W. Kenyon, Jesus the Healer (Kenyon Gospel Publishing Society, 2000); E. W. Kenyon, The Hidden Man (WA: Kenyon Publishing Society, 1998); E. W. Kenyon, The Wonderful Name of Jesus (Kenyon's Gospel Publishing Society, 1998); John Baker, Celebrate Recovery (CA: Celebrate Recovery Books, 1994); Bob and Pauline Bartosch, Overcomers Outreach: A Bridge to Recovery (La Habra, CA: Overcomers Outreach, 1994); Cathy Burns, Alcoholics Anonymous Unmasked (PA: Sharing, 1991); Cal Chambers, Two Tracks - One Goal (British Columbia: Credo Publishing Corporation, 1992); Martin M. Davis, The Gospel and the Twelve Steps (San Diego, CA: RPI Publishing Inc., 1993); Len C. Freeland, author of Chapter 28, «The Salvation Army» in (Alcoholism: The Total Treatment Approach, edited by Ronald J. Catanzaro IL: Charles C. Thomas Publisher, 1968); Mark H. Graeser, John A. Lynn, John W. Schoenheit, Don't Blame God: A Biblical Answer to the Problem of Evil, Sin and Suffering.
Each year when it is read I can hardly conceal a smile as the author lists (and not just once) the titles of the king's advisors — the satraps, prefects, governors, counselors, treasurers, justices, magistrates, and officials of the provinces — or as he takes delight (again not just once) in naming the musical instruments that called people to worship the golden statue — the sound of the horn, pipe, lyre, trigon, harp, drum, and the entire musical ensemble.
I won't mention the name of the book here, but suffice it to say that the author, a prominent church leader, had some pretty bizarre views of heaven, and more specifically, of hell.
I emphasize that these and other comparisons are being constructed from my interpretation of the trinitarian theologies of Leonardo Boff and Raimon Panikkar and have not been named in this way by the authors themselves.
'' isn't it ironic that the author's last name is «Stedman,» which is the same as Opera's boyfriend's first name?!
Finally, I am reminded of an observation that the blogger «Camassia» once made regarding A Place at the Table, a book by a gay author named Bruce Bawer: «The unintentionally funny part of Bawer's book was that he accused other Christians of not being real Christians because, among other things, they accuse other Christians of not being real Christians.»
One sees in Bloom's The Book of J that discrimination is required, just as it was required in historical analysis, if the Bible is not to lose its theological voice in the name of secular worship of an author or an aesthetic ideal.
The authors can not restrain themselves; they finally call it by its theological name: justification through works.
The exploration of «theology proper,» a ready activity in Pentecostal schools, more often than not will be done with the aid of systematic theologies bearing the names of authors who pre-dated the Pentecostal movement — Charles G. Finney, Charles Hodge, W G. T. Shedd, A. H. Strong, R. A. Torrey.
«One must be careful not to say that the author of the epistle is using «metaphors» when he applies the title of high priest to Christ and the name of «sacrifice» to his
You know, some recipes by big name authors just don't work.
The author loves wine as well as cycling therefore he named his blog «The Drunken Cyclist» as he thought he would write about wine and cycling but, not too far along, his focus became almost exclusively on wine.
Penned by the authors of the similarly named blog, I never followed it because I did not find their language amusing.
by the way don't know how the author came with the names of Moaninho and Martinez, they were never first choice to any ARSENAL fan, but maybe at some point the thought came because anything was / is better of what we have, the DELUDED one must leave preferably by his own accord so we can still look at him with the respect he earned in the Old Days.....
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Author should probably have named the article «So What if Arsenal don't reach the Champions League»?
After writing his first book about his life as a vet, author Alf Wight couldn't find a suitable pseudonym under which to publish his memoirs until one night he was watching a game of football and was rather taken with the name of Hibernian's goalkeeper - Jim Herriot.
I'm not going to mention the book by name because the author is actually a lovely woman with good intentions, but as I read the book I felt my throat tightening and a cold pit growing in my stomach.
In case the name does not ring a bell, she is the author of the Fed Up With Lunch: The School Lunch Project blog (a must - read!)
While babies are not normally named after their mother and father, the firstborn male is often named after the paternal grandpa while the girl baby is named after the paternal grandmother,» says naming expert Neala Shane, author of «Inspired Baby Names from Around the World.»
«A name that has not been popular can suddenly start climbing the charts after a celebrity uses it,» shares Amanda Barden, author of «Baby Names Made Easy.»
Some political communications companies on both sides do specialize in outreach to the authors and audiences of the big - name political bloggers, but this exercise is not for the empty of pocket.
http://www.thisislondon.co.uk/standard/article-23597038-details/High-flying+minister+was+implicated+over+Tory+leak/article.do «When not working at the Treasury under her maiden name of Helen Goodman, the report's author was an ambitious Labour politician using her married name of Helen Seaford.»
Many of these were books I had to read in graduate school, and even among the books I don't recognize many of the authors» names are familiar.
The man who authored the «Vote Cuomo, not the Homo» line and who refused to lobby in favor of gay marriage needs to rethink his tactics before he calls out any more names
(Authors with gender - ambiguous names such as Chris or Robin were not included in the analysis, which still preserved 92 percent of the data and didn't appreciably change the final results.)
If your name appears as an author on a manuscript, you are responsible for the manuscript's veracity; but to what extent, and to whom, isn't clear.
In what Lindsay calls the worst case that he has seen, an author suggested a reviewer who shared her first name but not her surname.
Anecdotes of manuscripts with Chinese author names being automatically subjected to extra review for language or content are not uncommon.
In a 2006 study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association, the authors reviewed 1000 research articles from 10 high - ranking, international peer - review journals and found that up to 11 % of articles had authors who weren't named.
Not so clear, however, is the name of the genus, which the authors have translated also from Greek as «with snake,» but find themselves unaware of the meaning behind.
Like the transistor, this development also involved a neologism: the word bit, chosen in this case not by a committee but by the lone author, a 32 - year - old named Claude Shannon.
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