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A case will often include either the resolution or a rephrasing of it.
The Psalms are good for this kind of doubled rephrasing.
Yet this rephrasing is itself equivalent to the statement Any plane contains a point.
And while they may think they know what I am saying after the first pass, the subsequent rephrasing confirms or revises that understanding.
The rephrasing of questions on equations in terms of points on curves turns out to be felicitous.
He thus felt that this one was not actually a separate one, but rather a rephrasing of the first Beatitude at Matthew 5:3.
Indeed, 'diagnosis prognosticates aetiology' is a rephrasing of this 'truism'in scientific jargon.
The following rephrasing of the second theorem is even more unsettling to the foundations of mathematics:
Jennie hadn't missed the quick rephrasing; he had almost mentioned the booby trap they had nearly sprung.
Mediators use information management skills encouraging parties to reach an amicable agreement by enabling them to communicate more effectively through the rephrasing of their arguments.
Only the adjective "torchlit" and the colloquial rephrasing of "hanky" keep the passage from complete mustiness.
Some participants did not agree with both the abolishing of the Second World War blemish and the rephrasing of the message.
Through these themes of rephrasing unasked questions and asking users to interact, Lady Penelope's design offer a fresh perspective on everyday life.
Instead Aristotle launches into a rephrasing of the problem, the Theory of Act and Potency.
I felt an exasperation, that he should throw on me the whole burden of pronunciation and polite rephrasing, and set myself a rosary in penance.
This paradox is a rephrasing of the simplest case of the two envelopes problem, and the explanation of "what goes wrong" is essentially the same.
In an interview, Mr. Galbraith said his comments about Vukovar were only a rephrasing of what he had been told by United Nations officers there.
The proposition that "fathers are just another new disposable item," a rephrasing of Vice President Quayle's salvo, never made much sense in contemporary American family life.
"You cannot run before you walk," he repeated to almost every rephrasing of that question from Fandarel, Jaxom, Jancis, and Belterac.
However, Mathews' rephrasing was queried by Moritz von Leonhardi, the German editor and publisher, with whom he corresponded.
This line is actually a rephrasing of dialogue spoken by actor Tom Baker in the 1976 Doctor Who serial The Deadly Assassin.
For example, the need for some modifications became apparent; the rephrasing of some questions and a refocusing of emphasis towards texts used in Secondary schools would have been helpful.
Stuart Flexner, author of "I Hear America Talking", states that it is a vulgar rephrasing of the old New England expression "Fish or cut bait".
He was often quoted for his rephrasing of President Roosevelt's famous pronouncement on fear, saying, "We have nothing to fear from the future except our own foolishness and slothfulness."
The optimistic view is that this verse is a rephrasing of the ancient idea of carpe diem, live each day to it fullest because one never knows what will happen tomorrow.