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She grabbed the first quotation that came to mind.
His first quotation related directly to trade union law reforms that he knows perfectly well were supported by my party.
The first quotation from the Bible is sung by the tenor, like an Evangelist.
The first quotation is attributed to The Keener's Manual but not the second.
The first quotation affirms the transcendence of God, who is not part of the world's furniture, like an idol in a shrine.
But here the very opposite is happening: here in my first quotation the poet breaks his machine because he will clog it with raw fact.
Where the first quotation refers to The Seventh Seal and means Woe!
The first quotation is Søren Kierkegaard stating that "The instant of decision is madness".
As the first quotation from the Norton Anthology states: "Ultimately, the instress of inscape leads one to Christ".
Professor Tribe missed the first quotation, but Senator Simpson abandoned the quiz after conceding that some of the quotations might have been taken out of context.
We can only conjecture that it was a favourite dish at the table of the skippers of 'country ships,' who were themselves called 'country captains,' as in our first quotation.
Rather surprisingly, the first quotation they give is from a popular encyclopedia of 1840: "As a painter of animals, Edwin Landseer far surpasses any of the old masters".
The majority are fitted in quite neatly, but the addition of a sentence after the first quotation on page 34 makes the referent of "Another possibility", which opens the next sentence, ambiguous.
I fear that Hendrickson relied too readily on the OED2e , in this instance, for that source mentions mustangs in its first quotation, from American Speech , Volume I, 1925.
The first quotation, which calls Jews "Selfish, crafty, unreliable, miserly and underhanded" was part of a lengthy anti-Jewish statement made by a Serb internee whom Mr. Tudjman identifies as anti-Semitic.
The first quotation seems to be a version of the familiar rhyme with the street seller's cry of 'hot cross buns' (i.e. cross buns which are hot), while the others refer to cross buns.
The "28" stands for Parmenides (to whom Diels-Kranz devote chapter 28 in the numeration of the current edition), the "B" indicates that it is a quotation, and the "1" means that it is the first quotation in Diels' ordering of quotations of Parmenides.
Under the Federal Rules of Evidence, an excited utterance is a hearsay exception, and is admissible to prove the truth of the statement itself (e.g., in the case of the first quotation above, to prove that the vehicle the declarant was riding in was, in fact, about to crash).
Tell us why we should believe that, as attorney general, you will accept those voices in your own party who counsel compromise. . . . MR. ASHCROFT - The first quotation was a quotation about whether, in my judgment, a party should set forth a clear agenda.