I've worked in criminal justice for years, and I always know what should be done when there is a substantial corpus delicti. |
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The period of limitation shall not run during any time when the corpus delicti remains undiscovered. |
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It also promotes growth of the corpus luteum when the ovary prepares to release the egg into the uterus. |
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The corpus spongiosum is a chamber that surrounds the urethra and becomes engorged with blood during an erection. |
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Bridges of gray matter pass across the internal capsule, producing the striped appearance from which the corpus striatum derives its name. |
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Another mass of grey matter behind the corpus striatum is the thalamus, which lies in the walls of the third ventricle. |
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Congenital brain anomalies like microcephaly, abnormal cortical mantle formation, agenesis of the corpus callosum have been reported. |
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We report one such case of sincipital encephalocele with agenesis of corpus callosum and intracranial lipoma. |
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Details of mistakes in pagination and in signature numbering, very frequent in this corpus, are given in full. |
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He has written the first monographic analysis of the complete corpus of the late Renaissance Calabrian friar and naturalist philosopher. |
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And there are no territorial limits to the reach of habeas corpus articulated in the text. |
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This volume provides an introductory survey of the last generation of scholarship on the corpus of eddic mythological poetry. |
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The government is maintaining that these aliens do not have the right to file habeas corpus petitions in U.S. federal courts. |
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The petition for a writ of habeas corpus at issue in this case was filed on Hamdi's behalf by his father. |
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Access to a court through a petition for a writ of habeas corpus is among the most fundamental democratic rights of humanity. |
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When convicted prisoners brought petitions for writs of habeas corpus before the U.S. Supreme Court, the prisoners were released immediately. |
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During the last phase, known as the luteal phase, the follicle collapses and the corpus luteum is formed if pregnancy does not occur. |
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The gastric hypoacidity in gastric cancer was, until recently, thought to be predominantly due to gastric corpus gastritis. |
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When we use habeas corpus, we protect the safety of both our physical selves and our moral selves. |
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Its definitions are generally supported by examples of usage taken from the corpus. |
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Even when the corpus callosum is intact, striking dissociations of consciousness can be demonstrated. |
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Furthermore, it is possible to search the corpus according to different beginning graphemics of the words. |
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Ovulation will not occur and there will be no formation of a corpus luteum to secrete progesterone and oestrogen. |
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Just because an active form doesn't exist in the relatively small corpus of the New Testament, this is no reason to deem a verb deponent. |
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The word appears in both the active and the middle voice in Luke, the Pauline corpus, Hebrews, James and 1 Peter. |
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What would we say, for example, if a juror brought habeas corpus against the bailiff? |
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And the writ of the habeas corpus was the proper process to bring the subject before the Circuit Court for its adjudication. |
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To test the accuracy of our negation tagger, we evaluated our system against a gold-standard, human-annotated corpus of 250 reports. |
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It is a vital contribution to the growing critical corpus on literatures of the Americas. |
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Civilians enjoyed the rights to counsel and trial by jury and the privilege of a habeas corpus writ to test the legality of government detention. |
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The great cerebral vein can be seen curving below the splenium of the corpus callosum to empty into the straight sinus. |
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These are important striate branches of the middle cerebral artery, destined for the corpus striatum, internal capsule and associated structures. |
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The first concerns social historians' attitudes towards the folklore corpus. |
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The folklore corpus has been used by historians and anthropologists alike as a historical source. |
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Why is the second-rate part of a hero's corpus uncritically praised or else ignored to keep the hero's reputation unsullied. |
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It will be essential reading for scholars interested in antonymy and corpus linguistics. |
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It is secreted by the corpus luteum during pregnancy and by the ovaries during the luteal phase of the menstrual cycle. |
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These proofs date from the same period of revision exemplified by the large corpus of revises that came in late April and throughout May. |
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Drawing on an exhaustive and tangled corpus of material, Kinney examines the many facets of these enterprises. |
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The act legitimized Lincoln's suspensions of habeas corpus and approved future suspensions for the duration of the war. |
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A habeas corpus writ requires the release of a prisoner held without trial or lawful charge. |
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The anterior and posterior portions of the corpus callosum curve sharply downwards to form its genu and splenium, respectively. |
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There is evidence of a small focus of hyperintensity along the undersurface of the genu of the corpus callosum. |
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The corpus profile is weakly concavoconvex and there are short trails, the dorsal being strongly geniculate. |
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The right fallopian tube, right ovary, uterine corpus, and uterine cervix were all grossly unremarkable. |
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But the Chief Justice said that, if that was the case, a habeas corpus hearing could go on for weeks to no purpose. |
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The spines in both rows increase in size away from the umbo and there are a few rare scattered additional spines on the ventral corpus. |
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Gastrin acts on the enterochromaffin-like cells in the gastric corpus to release histamine, which stimulates parietal cells to secrete acid. |
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The mass extended into the left hemisphere through the anterior corpus callosum and obliterated the frontal horn of the right lateral ventricle. |
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Above the splenium of the corpus callosum, the cingulate sulcus turns abruptly upwards to reach the superior margin of the hemisphere. |
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In this preparation the corpus callosum, caudate nucleus, and most brainstem structures have been removed. |
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His systematization of these texts became one of the chief bases for the structure of the later printed versions of this corpus of texts. |
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The major data source for the linguist is not a corpus of attested utterances but a native speaker's intuitions. |
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Using a sample corpus of educational materials for the Spanish-speaking population, we show that this is indeed the case. |
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In Bushell's case habeas corpus was used to release a juryman who had been gaoled for returning what the court regarded as a perverse verdict. |
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Indeed, Ireland has the largest corpus of early medieval water mill sites in the world. |
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This text is an important contribution to a growing corpus on a volatile subject that has generated studies in several disciplines. |
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How do the basic values of the writ of habeas corpus compare to those of the Bill of Rights generally? |
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The principle of habeas corpus is a demand that free people make toward state power. |
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Under U.S. law, a person held in custody by a state may challenge his conviction or sentence by seeking a writ of habeas corpus in federal court. |
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The Natural Language Toolkit, for example, has a movie reviews corpus you can use for sentiment analysis. |
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As we increase the size of the corpus, the number of tokens of the morpheme will obviously increase. |
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You or your representative has the right to go to a court and seek a writ of habeas corpus. |
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That is the issue where attention to critical thought and the corpus of historical writing in general becomes crucial. |
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Surely Hawkins's contribution to the corpus will stand as one of the offerings most deserving of the laurel wreath the poet himself desired. |
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At this point, bisection of the corpus luteum results in no bleeding, whereas bisection at all other phases results in bleeding. |
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A second, less-frequent muscle contraction, isthmus peristalsis, transports bacteria from the corpus to the terminal bulb. |
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But what to do about people who had already been sentenced under the old scheme, and whose sentences were now being reviewed via habeas corpus? |
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And so the initial corpus of money was expanded many times over, as a result of shrewd investments. |
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This grammar is the first pedagogic grammar to integrate syntax and lexis using corpus data. |
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The gastroenterologist should map the stomach with adequate sampling of the antrum, corpus, and cardia. |
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During the war, there were six efforts by internees or prisoners to exercise the writ of habeas corpus in the federal district court in Honolulu. |
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A groundbreaking contribution to Arthurian scholarship, this volume should be essential reading for all students of the corpus. |
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What information science takes from anthropology, in my view, is but a small, generally nonscientific, portion of the corpus of research. |
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An immense corpus of commentary grew up in Hellenistic, Roman, and Byzantine times around Dionysius' brief text. |
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Schmidt's piano music for piano-left hand is an uniquely valuable corpus, and it is seriously compromised when played two-handedly. |
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The beer tent at the finish line will take your mind off your hammered corpus. |
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If, however, the fugitive is committed to prison, the Act contemplates that he may seek to challenge that warrant by habeas corpus proceedings. |
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Even then, it's hard to get semantic judgements or mentions of ungrammaticality from a corpus. |
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Atrophy is most marked in the corpus striatum of the basal ganglia, including the caudate and putamen. |
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The term corpus striatum refers to the caudate, putamen, and globus pallidus. |
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The internal capsule and corona radiata have been exposed by removal of the corpus callosum, caudate nucleus, and diencephalon. |
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It is introducing identity cards, restricting immigration, seeking to curb the right of habeas corpus and extending antisocial behaviour orders. |
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Chronic gastritis as well as activity was more prevalent as well as severe in the antrum as compared to the corpus. |
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We have tried to overcome this drawback by taking biopsy samples from the anterior as well as posterior walls in both the antrum and the corpus. |
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Within the stomach, the gastrostomy site should be in the middle to distal third of the corpus. |
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Once a power to detain is held to depend on precedent fact, then of course anyone subjected to it can properly invoke habeas corpus. |
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The cells remaining in the ruptured follicle proliferate rapidly and form the corpus luteum. |
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Heuristics can enable one to concordance. even a large corpus. |
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That language suggests that, if the prisoners had alleged different facts, they might have been entitled to a writ of habeas corpus from a civilian court. |
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For example, the analysis found a relative increase in the distance between the superior colliculus and the splenium of the corpus collosum in patients. |
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The two internal cerebral veins join beneath the splenium of the corpus callosum to form the great cerebral vein, but the site of union is not visible in this preparation. |
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Over the footpace of the altar hangs a unique crucifix on which the carved oak corpus leans forward in a spasm of death agony, with its arms grotesquely twisted behind. |
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He develops a general account of spatial capitalist production, bringing together and expanding on ideas developed in his large corpus of empirically based work. |
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The return to a writ of habeas corpus ad subjiciendum must be indorsed on or annexed to the writ and must state all the causes of the detainer of the person. |
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Hernandez was well-known in their rough corpus Christi neighborhood as an unsavory character. |
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So did readers of the corpus Christi Caller-Times in Texas, the Indianapolis Star and the Pensacola News Journal. |
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In the depths of the specimen it is possible to see the inferior surface of the corpus callosum, to which the body of the fornix is firmly attached. |
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Jack Rueter has compiled and edited a new text corpus of Komi Zyrian. |
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Discussion resulted in agreement on the remainder, and the main body of the corpus was re-examined to accommodate changes to the original coding system. |
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The percentage of tokens covered in this small academic corpus did not differ substantially from the percentage of tokens covered in the first part. |
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The former includes the fundus and the rostral two-thirds of the corpus, while the latter constitutes the rest of the corpus, the antrum, and the pylorus. |
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However, at this point in time robust registration of fast and small changes in the corpus cavernosum smooth muscle action potential is not possible. |
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Greenpeace and student activists were outlawed and habeas corpus was suspended. |
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In 1701 a statute declared that habeas corpus did not apply to the miners and in 1708 it was enacted that a collier escaping could be brought back within eight years. |
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Now, if you please, Senator McCain, in the spirit of habeas corpus, show me the body. |
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If foreign decisions were freely citable, it would mean that any judge wanting a supporting citation had only to troll deeply enough in the world's corpus juris to find it. |
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Because we know that the writ of habeas corpus provides one of the most significant protections of human freedom against arbitrary government action ever created. |
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Yes, it may only be a piddling little thing, compared with the potential threat to human rights represented by introduction of ID cards, and the suspension of habeas corpus. |
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In the pregnant cow, the conceptus must inhibit the release of uterine PGF 2alpha so that the corpus luteum continues to secrete progesterone and pregnancy can be established. |
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They deserve fuller annotation and analysis than the editor has provided, but are nevertheless welcome additions to the corpus of published epic texts. |
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A preliminary analysis of various vocabulary items based on the linguistic corpus obtained suggests that expected dialectical variation exists between and within communities. |
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The cingulate sulcus begins below the rostrum of the corpus callosum and arches in front of the genu of the corpus callosum, about a finger's breadth distant from it. |
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The anterior cerebral artery can be seen running on the medial surface of the hemisphere, first beneath and then around the genu of the corpus callosum. |
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The Leonine revival featured not only the harnessing of Thomas' thought to confront modernism, but as a necessary preparation, the modern editing of his sizeable corpus. |
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These approaches have quite different origins in artificial intelligence and linguistics, and involve corpus input, lexicons and knowledge bases in quite different ways. |
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The local churches were celebrating The Feast of corpus Christi by launching brilliantly exploding rockets into the night. |
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The patient was born at 32 weeks' gestation with subsequent developmental delay, agenesis of the corpus callosum, and panhypopituitarism. |
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The abolitionist papers before the war form a rich corpus of examples of plantation creole. |
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His condemnation for Origenism by the 553 Council of Constantinople accounts for the loss of most of his enormous corpus. |
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Due to its similarity to LH, urine-derived hCG has been used to trigger ovulation and luteinization and to support the corpus luteum. |
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Finally, 16 of these patients had surgery, undergoing a lobectomy, tumor removal, or corpus callosotomy to remove or control the seizure focus. |
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The field of corpus linguistics features divergent views about the value of corpus annotation. |
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Options for epilepsy surgery include resective surgery, corpus callosotomy, multiple subpial transections and the vagus nerve stimulator. |
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Postmortem examinations demonstrated an arachnoid cyst, corpus callosum agenesis and left diaphragmatic hernia. |
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The Quranic Arabic Corpus is an annotated corpus for the Classical Arabic language of the Quran. |
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Even if disjointed and unconnected, all the initiatives were presented as a coherent and chronologic corpus of ideas mundacistas. |
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On operation, an anterior approach was used for the spine and the left foramina and the corpus of the fourth cervical vertebra was exposed. |
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The third layer loaded since the Bronze Age could be of Yeniseian, it could result in a Sino-Yeniseian corpus of common etymological units. |
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Benign masses with complex features can include corpus luteum, mature teratomas, hydrosalpinx, theca lutein cysts, or endometriomas. |
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The corpus luteum secretes hormones that prepare the uterus for a possible pregnancy in the event the ovulated ovum was fertilized. |
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However even corpus linguists who work with 'unannotated plain text' inevitably apply some method to isolate salient terms. |
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The cut surface of the right ovary showed a hemorrhagic cyst consistent with corpus luteum. |
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By sharing data, corpus linguists are able to treat the corpus as a locus of linguistic debate, rather than as an exhaustive fount of knowledge. |
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Ectopic cysts will be highly echogenic, while corpus luteum will have an echogenicity equivalent to or slightly less than the ovary itself. |
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Relationship among preovulatory follicle, corpus luteum and progesterone in oestrus synchronized buffaloes. |
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Concomitant with the developing intrauterine gestational sac is the development of the corpus luteum. |
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Other implied powers include injunctive relief and the habeas corpus remedy. |
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To explore the first question, we have compared the DaSciTex corpus with the registerially mixed FLOB corpus. |
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Backus in a Dutch-Turkish corpus reports that 11 of 27 Dutch EL plural nouns are marked by a Dutch plural. |
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Serum progesterone concentration associated with superovulation and premature corpus luteum failure in dairy goats. |
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This corpus includes the ancient Sutras organized into Nikayas, itself the part of three basket of texts called the Tripitakas. |
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His own corpus is not devoid of humour, notably his sixth prolusion and his epitaphs on the death of Thomas Hobson. |
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Besides node word selection, the choice was between a lemmatized and non-lemmatized corpus. |
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The reliability of lemmatic bundles, on the other hand, depends on the consistency and procedure of lemmatisation in the corpus. |
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The corpus callosum is known to be the largest white-matter fibre tract in the brain. |
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These include a corpus of 2,381 poems collectively known as Sangam literature. |
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The damage occurs in the corpus callosum, the structure that allows communication between the brain's left and right hemispheres. |
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It is the language of a large corpus of literature, including the Ulster Cycle. |
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Judaism includes a wide corpus of texts, practices, theological positions, and forms of organization. |
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These commandments are but two of a large corpus of commandments and laws that constitute this covenant, which is the substance of Judaism. |
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Much of the Greek literary corpus remained in Greek, and few in the west could speak or read Greek. |
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Instead, it was an entirely new dictionary produced with the aid of corpus linguistics. |
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In several of the treatises, there are references to other works in the corpus. |
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Individuals who published seditious material were punished, and, in 1794, the writ of habeas corpus was suspended. |
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By the late seventeenth century these two works had become the basic corpus of the psalmody sung in the Kirk. |
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In all there are about 400 surviving manuscripts from the period, a significant corpus of both popular interest and specialist research. |
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In chapter five she focuses on the Middle English corpus of Marian miracle manuscripts. |
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The core corpus of Old Church Slavonic manuscripts is usually referred to as canon. |
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In time, their writings, together with the Analects and other core texts came to constitute the philosophical corpus of Confucianism. |
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The Germania manuscript corpus contains two primary variant readings of the name. |
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There was also a memorable encounter while disembarking at corpus Christi. |
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Placental mammals have a corpus callosum, unlike monotremes and marsupials. |
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Typically, these co-occurrences are frequently repeated or statistically relevant in a corpus. |
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The Veps are the only Baltic Finnish people with no significant corpus of Kalevala meter oral poetry. |
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The church had a liturgy written in Cyrillic and a corpus of translations from Greek that had been produced for the Slavic peoples. |
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Photographs also must be permissioned and credited, although a corpus of copyright-free images does exist online. |
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Therefore I decided to lemmatize, using the morphological analyser Estmorf, which automatically lemmatized and disambiguated the whole corpus. |
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Because of the biodegradability of wood, the corpus of Maya woodwork has almost entirely disappeared. |
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During the 16th and 17th centuries, Classical Nahuatl was used as a literary language, and a large corpus of texts from that period exists today. |
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Grant suspended habeas corpus in nine South Carolina counties under the authority of the Ku Klux Klan Act. |
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Further prospective randomized studies are needed to evaluate the safety and efficacy of DMPA and OC in preventing hemorrhagic corpus luteum. |
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Corpus callosum Agenesis of Genu and Genu mildly abnormality corpus anterior body dysplastic. |
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Notwithstanding the rule against controverting the truth of the return, judges were not entirely precluded from reviewing facts on habeas corpus. |
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The study of corpus linguistics provides us with many insights into the real nature of language, as shown above. |
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His argument rests on an unresolved tension in Rawls's corpus, between representationalism and constructivism. |
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The most common of the other such prerogative writs are habeas corpus, quo warranto, prohibito, mandamus, procedendo, and certiorari. |
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The clitics ci and vi are both locatives, but the author provides corpus data to demonstrate the marginal status of the latter. |
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For scholars in corpus linguistics, diachronic linguistics, semantic change, lexicology, and word formation. |
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The morphosyntactic descriptions that the words of the corpus are annotated with follow the JOS MSD specifications. |
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Charles Holcombe's A History of East Asia is a fine addition to the corpus of textbooks on East Asian history and civilizations. |
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Writ of habeas corpus is not only to ask a detainer to produce the detainee in the court. |
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I compare the author's main claims concerning ghosts and spirits with a variety of passages from the Mohist corpus and other relevant texts. |
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While texts in Sirayan and other aboriginal languages are lost, there is still a substantial extant corpus of texts in Sinckan and Favorlang. |
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This volume investigates a corpus of 30 narrative and dramatic Anglophonic texts in which the motif of scientist as God is both central and explicitly verbalized. |
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Gumul noted an increase in conjunctive devices in the work of interpreters between English and Polish, as did Becher in a corpus study of English to German translations. |
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There does not survive a vast corpus of native law from Scotland particularly, certainly nothing like that which comes from early medieval Ireland. |
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Her epigraphic corpus, the Inscriptions of Roman Tripolitania, written with John Ward-Perkins, was published in 1952, and remains the authoritative work. |
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This discovery increases the corpus of Classic period Maya mural painting to include residential figural wall art with highly complex painted texts and calendrical content. |
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Among the indigenous languages of the Americas, the extensive corpus of surviving literature in Nahuatl dating as far back as the 16th century may be considered unique. |
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What playing musical instruments does that other activities don't is strengthen the corpus callosum that links the hemispheres of the brain by creating new connections. |
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Term Suggest ion, that identifies concepts that are mentioned in the user's corpus but are not yet included in the ontology in order, thus facilitating thesaurus enrichment. |
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Regulation of progesterone synthesis and action in bovine corpus luteum. |
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There are, however, three inflatable cylinders of erectile tissue, two corpora cavernosa on the upper surface and the corpus spongiosum running centrally up the underside. |
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Effects of sildenafil on the relaxation of human corpus cavemosum tissue in vitro and on the activities of cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase isozymes. |
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The general belief among Buddhists is that the canonical corpus is vast. |
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The cynfeirdd poetry is the largest source of information, and it is generally accepted that some part of the corpus was first composed in the Old North. |
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Populous Acadian communities in the Atlantic provinces contributed their song variants to the huge corpus of folk music of French origin centred in the province of Quebec. |
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Because the proceedings are translated into all of the official EU languages, they have been used to make a multilingual corpus known as Europarl. |
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One poem was translated into French in 1762, and by 1777 the whole corpus. |
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In the 1790s Robert Burns embarked on an attempt to produce a corpus of Scottish national song contributing about a third of the songs of The Scots Musical Museum. |
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Hence, both SMT and EBMT rely on a sententially aligned bilingual corpus. |
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Lincoln responded by establishing martial law, and unilaterally suspending habeas corpus, in Maryland, along with sending in militia units from the North. |
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Gregory is the only pope between the fifth and the eleventh centuries whose correspondence and writings have survived enough to form a comprehensive corpus. |
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The second is an extensive attestation in the Oxyrhynchus corpus, where it seems most frequently to describe the Nile barges of the Ptolemaic pharaohs. |
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This corpus of nearly 250 texts and drawings thus constitutes one of the main sources for the investigation of Indian Ocean trade networks in that time period. |
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In fact, a writ of habeas corpus has scope for wide application. |
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Constitution, but many English common law traditions such as habeas corpus, jury trials, and various other civil liberties were adopted in the United States. |
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He argues the art-historical cases for their chronology and the result is valuable for revealing a coherent corpus, which he summarizes succinctly. |
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In addition to being already translated and aligned, the size of the Hansards and the fact that new material is always being added makes it an attractive corpus. |
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These include critical evaluations of her corpus of children's literature, and Modernist interpretations of Humphrey Carpenter and Katherine Chandler. |
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More recently, in the past five years, there has been the effort to collect, computerise, and analyse a million-word corpus of both written and spoken Singapore English. |
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Significant fitnessrelated differences were seen in several key white matter regions, including the corpus callosum which joins the brain's left and right hemispheres. |
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The corpus of related texts tells us that within rural society it was not improbable for your neighbour's envy of your fine cattle to take the form of a mara. |
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Original petition for writ of habeas corpus to obtain release from custody under sentence to five years imprisonment for aiding coprisoners in endeavors to escape from jail. |
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A corpus approach is a useful methodology for observing, describing and interpreting the stylistic features of language in literary and non-literary texts. |
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The concept of goliardic poetry rests on a series of stylistic traits and the identification of the corpus with the figure of the wandering goliard. |
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And fourth, ancient library catalogues predating Andronicus' intervention list an Aristotelian corpus quite similar to the one we currently possess. |
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The colonists drew on English law books, leading them to an anachronistic interpretation of Magna Carta, believing that it guaranteed trial by jury and habeas corpus. |
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After inspection the group adjourned to Corpus Christy Communal Centre where tea was served and the signing took place. |
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The crew got back on top of Corpus at the Railway Bridge to gain a hard fought bump. |
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In 1913, after some frantic cramming, he went up to Corpus Christi College, Cambridge, to read for the History tripos. |
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The Minorite monastery with the Church of Corpus Christi and Annunciation of the Virgin was founded in 1350 by the Rozmberks. |
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One of the problems which faces the furbishers at Corpus Christi is the amount of previously applied British Museum Leather Dressing. |
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The three-hour flight included approaches and touch-and-goes at NAS Corpus Christi, NAS Kingsville, Kleberg Co. and Alice. |
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Other corpora, such as the North American News Text Corpus, are bigger, but contain only formal writing and speech. |
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These are applications for writs of Habeas Corpus made in the context of extradition proceedings. |
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In COMPUTING, a comparable list of the words in a text or CORPUS of texts, created by means of a concordancing program. |
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The house itself was built around 1750AD and the Friars of the Corpus Friary lived there after the Friary itself became inhabitable. |
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The sacramental ritual performed by the Corpus Domini priest differs subtly from that delivered by Christ in the Corpus Domini Altarpiece. |
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Engraved in the Corpus Hippocraticum and the Galenic writings, these hypotheses formed a medical ideology that remained influential for millennia of medical history. |
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Right there the Kalki initiated the youth, and for four months he taught him all the highest tantras especially the three Bodhisattva Corpus commentaries. |
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Richard Fox was an English churchman, successively Bishop of Exeter, Bath and Wells, Durham, and Winchester, Lord Privy Seal, and founder of Corpus Christi College, Oxford. |
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Maundy Thursday, Good Friday, Easter, Ascension Day, and Corpus Christi are recognized as national holidays and are observed according to the religious calendar. |
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Williams returned to England in 1990 as White's Professor of Moral Philosophy at Oxford and fellow of Corpus Christi. |
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In 1921 his family came to the UK, and he was educated at St Paul's School, London, and Corpus Christi College, Oxford. |
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The Corpus continues to have a major influence on public international law. |
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This Eastern empire continued to practice Roman Law and formalized it via the Corpus Juris Civilis. |
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The Corpus Juris Civilis was translated into French, German, Italian, and Spanish in the 19th century. |
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In 1976, she won a Drama Desk Award for her performance in Alan Bennett's play Habeas Corpus. |
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In total, the texts in the Oxford English Corpus contain more than 2 billion words. |
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An imperial assembly at the fields of Roncaglia in 1158 reclaimed imperial rights in reference to Justinian's Corpus Juris Civilis. |
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The Hippocratic Corpus, popularly attributed to an ancient Greek practitioner known as Hippocrates, lays out the basic approach to health care. |
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The written treatises within the Corpus are varied, incorporating medical doctrine from any source the Greeks came into contact with. |
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Other influential translated medical texts at the time included the Hippocratic Corpus attributed to Hippocrates, and the writings of Galen. |
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Corpus linguistics has generated a number of research methods, which attempt to trace a path from data to theory. |
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Book series in this field include Language and Computers, Studies in Corpus Linguistics and English Corpus Linguistics. |
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Texan cities classifiable as such specifically include Abilene, Austin, Corpus Christi, and El Paso. |
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The High Court of Justice grants relief through orders such as injunction, mandamus and Habeas Corpus, as well as through declaratory judgments. |
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Volumes 82, 97, and 98 of Corpus Juris Secundum appear in the closing credits of the Perry Mason television series. |
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In 1794 Richard Sheridan used the reading of the bill to raise the subject of the suspension of the Habeas Corpus Act. |
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Thomas was educated at Lord Weymouth's Grammar School, Warminster, Winchester, and Corpus Christi College, Oxford. |
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My instructor decided to stop by Corpus Christi International for a touch-and-go, preceded by a short break at the numbers. |
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The discovery well is located approximately 40 miles south-southeast of Corpus Christi, Texas and is situated in 80 feet of water. |
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The Corpus Juris Civilis, which was established between 529 and 535 AD attempted to pull together Rome's history of law into one document. |
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See the preface to the critical edition by Schoell and Kroll, Corpus juris civilis, vol. |
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In the Hippocratic Corpus honey was prescribed as medicine in many formats, but most commonly as hydromel or oxymel. |
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The project is located in the city of Ingleside on the La Quinta Ship Channel which is part of the Port of Corpus Christi. |
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Bell, The Libraries of the Cistercians, Gilbertines and Premonstratensians, Corpus of British Medieval Library Catalogues 3, pp. |
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The works of Aristotle that have survived from antiquity through medieval manuscript transmission are collected in the Corpus Aristotelicum. |
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The remaining two are in the Bodleian Library at Oxford and the Parker Library of Corpus Christi College, Cambridge. |
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The Greek medical foundation comes from a collection of writings known today as the Hippocratic Corpus. |
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History of Rome, Roman constitutional law and Corpus Inscriptionum Latinarum, all by Theodor Mommsen, became very important milestones. |
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But deep water was not secured until 1926, when Corpus Christi dug itself out 21 miles to the sea. |
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Passage of the Petition of Right in 1628 and Habeas Corpus Act in 1679 established certain liberties for subjects. |
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Ultimately, civil law and praetoric law were fused in the Corpus Juris Civilis. |
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The extant works of Aristotle are broken down according to the five categories in the Corpus Aristotelicum. |
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The Corpus Aristotelicum is the collection of Aristotle's works that have survived from antiquity through Medieval manuscript transmission. |
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More's friend Luis Vives received it in Valencia, where it remains in the collection of Real Colegio Seminario del Corpus Christi museum. |
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Their inscriptions are collected in the volume XVII of the Corpus Inscriptionum Latinarum. |
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The Corpus Christianum has since existed with the modern idea of a tolerant and diverse society consisting of many different communities. |
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The Protestant Reformation and rise of modernity in the early 16th century entailed the start of a series of changes in the Corpus Christianum. |
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An analysis of the British National Corpus found chairman used 1,142 times, chairperson 130 times and chairwoman 68 times. |
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The Custos Brevium appointed the Clerk of the Juries, responsible for issuing writs of Habeas Corpus. |
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These courts do not use the common law of England, but are civil law courts largely based upon the Corpus Juris Civilis of Justinian. |
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They were experts in interpreting Canon law, a basis of which was the Corpus Juris Civilis of Justinian which is considered the source of the civil law legal tradition. |
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Binchy's six volume Corpus Iuris Hibernici and a few texts left out of that work made it into another book intended as a companion to the Corpus Iuris Hibernici. |
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However, no English translation of the entire Corpus Juris Civilis existed until 1932 when Samuel Parsons Scott published his version The Civil Law. |
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Referring to Justinian's Code as Corpus Juris Civilis was only adopted in the 16th century, when it was printed in 1583 by Dionysius Gothofredus under this title. |
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New Greek legal codes, based on Corpus Juris Civilis, were enacted. |
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The essence of Zakonopravilo was based on Corpus Iuris Civilis. |
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More than 10,000 entries now contain citations to the West Key Number System and to Corpus Juris Secundum, providing a clear map to cases and encyclopedic analysis. |
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In 1679, this policy of using extrajudicial imprisonments to quell rebellion finally provoked the English Parliament to pass the Act of Habeas Corpus in England. |
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Recent studies have suggested treatment outcome in adolescents with social anxiety disorder can also be assessed by analysing language by means of Corpus Linguistics. |
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Hippocratic medicine represented learned medical practice beginning with the Hippocratic Corpus having been written down, therefore requiring practitioners to be literate. |
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The Corpus forms the basis of civil law of many modern states. |
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In law, Andreas Alciatus infused the Corpus Juris with a humanist perspective, while Jacques Cujas humanist writings were paramount to his reputation as a jurist. |
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In 534, the Corpus was updated and, along with the enactments promulgated by Justinian after 534, formed the system of law used for most of the rest of the Byzantine era. |
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Scots law has a basis derived from Roman law, combining features of both uncodified civil law, dating back to the Corpus Juris Civilis, and common law with medieval sources. |
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The feast day of Corpus Christi was also celebrated in Penzance. |
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The image became linked to the medieval religious feast of Corpus Christi. |
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Secular law, or Roman law, was advanced greatly by the discovery of the Corpus Juris Civilis in the 11th century, and by 1100 Roman law was being taught at Bologna. |
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The Corpus Juris Secundum is an encyclopedia whose main content is a compendium of the common law and its variations throughout the various state jurisdictions. |
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She was nominated for the 1974 Tony Award for Best Actress in a Play for the plays, Chemin de Fer and The Visit, and won a Drama Desk Award in 1976 for Habeas Corpus. |
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These cycles were often performed during the Feast of Corpus Christi and their overall design drew attention to Christ's life and his redemption for all of mankind. |
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Father O'Connor's first appointment was at Corpus Christi, Middlesbrough, where his fellow curate was Canon Michael Davern who was the homilist at his Requiem Mass. |
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Monopolies were cut back severely, and the Courts of Star Chamber and High Commission were abolished by the Habeas Corpus Act 1640 and the Triennial Act respectively. |
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A Gospel Book believed to be directly associated with St Augustine's mission survives in the Parker Library, Corpus Christi College, Cambridge University, England. |
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Taken as a whole, these are referred to as Corpus Christi cycles. |
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The Pastoral epistles were apparently not part of the Corpus Paulinum in which this order originated and were later inserted after 2 Thessalonians and before Philemon. |
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