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"perceptively" Definitions
  1. in a way that shows the ability to see or understand things quickly, especially things that are not obvious
"perceptively" Synonyms
shrewdly judiciously intelligently astutely wisely cunningly perspicaciously sagaciously knowingly alertly craftily foxily skillfully artfully cannily carefully cleverly sagely acutely keenly sympathetically appreciatively feelingly kindly responsively sensitively understandingly warmly affectionately benevolently compatibly cordially emotionally harmoniously heartily humanely kindheartedly softheartedly warmheartedly warm-heartedly appreciably significantly considerably markedly substantially visibly measurably noticeably ascertainably definitely detectably evidently obviously discernibly greatly much palpably perceptibly recognisably(UK) recognizably(US) attentively observantly intently watchfully heedfully mindfully awarely vigilantly percipiently studiously regardfully interestedly diligently earnestly rigorously scrupulously raptly rationally logically sensibly reasonably soundly coherently commonsensically practically pragmatically prudently validly analytically commonsensibly informedly levelheadedly solidly groundedly clearly philosophically matter-of-factly presciently farsightedly providently foresightedly visionarily predictively oracularly forehandedly forwardly prognostically prophetically proactively discerningly fatidically apocalyptically intuitively insightfully clairvoyantly psychically receptively amenably openly susceptibly impressionably accessibly welcomingly favourably(UK) friendlily suggestibly pliably pliantly favorably(US) flexibly readily willingly clearheadedly composedly unconfusedly open-mindedly unbiasedly impartially objectively neutrally dispassionately disinterestedly detachedly liberally tolerantly acceptingly catholicly freely permissively undogmatically even-handedly fair-mindedly strongly determinedly fanatically resiliently resolutely steadfastly tenaciously firmly passionately ardently dedicatedly enthusiastically feistily fiercely spiritedly zealously aggressively doggedly intensely More

80 Sentences With "perceptively"

How to use perceptively in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "perceptively" and check conjugation/comparative form for "perceptively". Mastering all the usages of "perceptively" from sentence examples published by news publications.

"Scream" is urgent, not frantic, and constantly moves; not even just rhythmically, but perceptively, too.
He also perceptively observed that the Republican Party had an outdated picture of the suburban voter.
P.J. O'Rourke, a conservative humourist, perceptively skewered left-wing pieties in books like "Parliament of Whores" (1991).
Female philosophers had written perceptively about motherhood over the years, but what had been said about fatherhood?
He also summons, exuberantly and perceptively, the look, sound and sometimes smell of pivotal scenes and songs.
In "Democracy in America", Alexis de Tocqueville wrote perceptively of randomly chosen juries as forms of political institutions.
The rear-engine 911 essence is a perceptively heavier tail that's easier to rotate in a controlled manner.
Mr. Charlap perceptively notes some of the challenges of trying to use formal partition to end ethnic-sectarian fighting.
"I'm sorry if my recklessness upsets you," Jed says perceptively as Jonathan/Tom/Andrew reaches to put the kettle on.
Stylishly and perceptively curated by Laure Dalon, "Fantin-Latour" showcases nearly 18703 paintings, drawings and lithographs spanning the artist's career.
People we rarely, if ever, schedule social events with offline nonetheless hover perceptively in the margins of our online social networks.
One very encouraging sign is how perceptively the pastry kitchen has located the sensuous side in some traditional Italian-cafe sweets.
Schiller considered Shakespeare a kindred spirit who wrote more perceptively than almost anyone else about what it meant to be human.
As Bloomberg's Jonathan Bernstein perceptively wrote over the weekend, much of this dynamic is explained by Trump's failure as a chief executive.
As Frum perceptively writes: A scandal involving the president could likewise wreck everything that Republican congressional leaders have waited years to accomplish.
The standard drive mode perceptively grabs the highest gear ratio possible, earnestly reaching for the E.P.A. rating of 18 city/25 highway.
We did it anyway around Amit and others at Google, but it perceptively changes the discussion when there's real people with their real names.
" Yet America has been able to maintain consistency because its policy, he perceptively notes, "always flowed organically from the Republic's values and geographic circumstances.
" Another r00tz hacker perceptively quipped: "Many kids at school don't understand that the apps they use a million times a day are created by coders.
This was at Columbia University's medical school, and they were wonderful students; in some ways, they read books more perceptively than the usual academic students.
Law professor Mehrsa Baradaran has perceptively noted that certain public-sector deposits — for example, those of federal agencies — may require higher levels of capital to protect taxpayers.
" This unblinking, unblinkered response was both typical and atypical of Sendak's attitude toward his mortality, as Katie Roiphe perceptively shows in "The Violet Hour: Great Writers at the End.
Turner perceptively captures the subtle psychological dynamics of cults, from the power of group norms to the blind adherence to beliefs that are no less arbitrary than those of established religions.
" Vietnamese recognized that the Americans were not "colonialists," the journalist Robert Shaplen observed, but, he perceptively added, "there has evolved here a colonial ambience that can sometimes be worse than colonialism itself.
Rather than dismissing his singular experience as a black man, one that brought him both prominence and pain, the obituary, to my mind, perceptively illuminates it, as few written elsewhere have done.
It is formally populist and perceptively "Trumpian," and after becoming the face of the "no" vote during the referendum lead-up, it is likely to become the leading party in the next election.
Jones wrote perceptively about the Canada paintings and the Briey paintings, which "court risk, walking a fine line between attraction and repulsion," and a number of key people read his piece and took notice.
Blessed Child is as much memoir as history, and it perceptively mines an experience many people have: If you were raised in a restrictive or insular community, what does it mean to grow up?
I've been embraced by people over the last few years who have an unfailing dedication to vision, who see the world perceptively and imaginatively and who seem to move mountains to bring ideas to fruition.
He relishes art nouveau civic architecture, which he perceptively notes was characteristic not of national capital cities "but of the self-conscious and self-confident bourgeoisies of provincial or regional ones"—Munich, Glasgow, Helsinki, Barcelona.
Then it will be much easier and far less expensive to provide full-coverage insurance for all — or at least for all who are perceptively willing to be served by an intelligently designed healthcare system.
Driver writes perceptively about the persistence of this horrifying practice in American schools; according to the Department of Education, during the 2013-14 school year, more than 110,000 American students, disproportionately black, were subjected to corporal punishment.
Done perceptively, with analytic thinking and an effort to connect the dots between this experience and others, this can be the beginning of a value system that readers might share, or reject, or at least attempt to understand.
As Ron Brownstein has perceptively argued, a Moore victory would come down to his retaining the support of white women who have no college education and who will hold their noses and vote for Moore despite his record with women.
This means, as The Week columnist Damon Linker notes perceptively, that he's guaranteed to do things that seem "abnormal" and that take both the press corps and D.C. mandarins aback —– like, say, actually enforcing already on-the-books immigration laws.
As wrestling blogger Thomas Holzerman perceptively pointed out in the wake of the promo, the weirdest, wildest stuff from the supposedly kayfabe breaking Kenny Omega or fever dream promotion DDT Pro at least owes fidelity to a shared wrestling reality, which everyone adheres to.
" And though Moore's review of a 1988 John Cheever biography contains the regrettable sentence "Promiscuity ripped open a room in him," it also perceptively suggests Cheever's similarity to Fitzgerald in the "powerful, liquored ambivalence" with which they both sought "to charm and impress the rich.
" He perceptively notes that our equation of sexual desire with juvenescence sets up a form of competition whereby the mandate to remain young is played upon by all the forces of the marketplace — "the professional commentators and product vendors and the needy audiences and ordinary people.
He perceptively points out that two former mayors — John Hickenlooper of Denver, now governor of Colorado, and Mitchell Landrieu of New Orleans — and present mayors Eric Garcetti of Los Angeles and Bill de Blasio of New York City, are on the 2020 list of possible Democratic presidential candidates.
And when on November 15, 2016, a week after the election, he portrayed Steve Bannon turning into a werewolf as he howls at the sight of an ascendent Trump-in-the moon, he perceptively plumbed the fear and loathing that gripped the majority of Americans who had voted against the president-elect.
"In our portfolio, which represents 70,000 units mostly in the luxury space, we're seeing that our renters are spending a relatively low amount of their income on rent despite rents being perceptively high," said Toby Bozzuto, president and CEO of The Bozzuto Group, a multifamily management and development company operating in the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic.
I've even noticed on smaller Android releases, like Nextbit's Robin, have also deleted the app drawer (though the phone does comes with the Google Now launcher pre-installed.) Combine this slow disappearing act with the fact these same Android makers (Nextbit excluded, that phone is just plain weird looking) are inching perceptively closer to being more and more iPhone-like in material and design, and it's understandable that some Android fans are sensing a hostile software takeover.
Perceptively, Maydanyk noted that, though we do not know why Marchenko left the Russian church to begin with, no matter how difficult life became for him outside of it, he never returned to its fold. He died in 1952. He was buried in Libau, Manitoba.
Esther Addley, reviewing the second episode for The Guardian, said Tales from Pleasure Beach was "nicely shot, well acted and refreshingly frank in its portrayal of alcopop-swilling sexual manners", however she found it "rattling through a series of stock tableaux that juddered perceptively under the weight of their agony aunt morality".
Baudelaire was an active participant in the artistic life of his times. As critic and essayist, he wrote extensively and perceptively about the luminaries and themes of French culture. He was frank with friends and enemies, rarely took the diplomatic approach and sometimes responded violently verbally, that often undermined his cause.Richardson 1994, p. 268.
XIII, No. 3 [Winter 2012/13], pp. 32-52, at p. 35. As Ernest Smith has perceptively noted, 'Fitzwilliam grew up to be the typical eighteenth-century aristocrat – a man to whom politics was a natural responsibility due to his order, his family and his country, but not a field for the display of ambition.
Goldberg acquired WYDD-FM in 1963 and operated the radio stations for more than 25 years. Goldberg developed WEFB-TV (TV3) and Westmoreland Cable in 1968, one of the first cable franchises in western Pennsylvania. The cable system was later sold to Comcast Corporation. In the 1980s, Goldberg was the first to privately own satellite transponders and perceptively anticipated the advent of commercial television satellite broadcasting.
Detached, she observes life and her family critically and perceptively. Roden, 27, a war veteran, is in rebellion against his family, his class and its values. Stella, early 20s, is a spoilt, superficial flapper; Francis, 18, a carefree public schoolboy lined up for Cambridge. Roden shocks his family – but not Caroline – by going out with and bringing home a 'common' London working girl, Grace Draper.
It was seen by Colonel William Leake in 1806. Dodwell perceptively recognised its close links with a relief in the collection of the Villa Albani in Rome, catalogued in the eighteenth century by Winckelmann. Otto Magnus von Stackelberg also drew casts of it, which had been taken to Athens. It was then acquired by Frederick North (later Earl of Guilford) in 1810 at Corinth.
Nevertheless, Grant adapted and by complying with the Acts and instructing his subordinates to do likewise, he further alienated Johnson. For example, Grant authorized Sheridan to remove public officials in Louisiana who were against congressional Reconstruction. Sheridan's aggressive methods to register freedmen met with Johnson's disapproval, and the President sought his removal. Grant perceptively stayed the middle course, and recommended a rebuke but not a dismissal.
The reviewer for The Indian Express called the film "an interesting social drama well acted with the additional attraction of a few songs of the great Bharathi rendered by Mahalingam. Baby Kamala is responsible for some good dance numbers." Randor Guy of The Hindu wrote that the concept "had nothing to do with the freedom movement, but it had everything to do with perceptively capturing the spirit of the times, making it a hit".
In both cases, aliens are being hidden and shielded from others. Sarah Hunter of Booklist applauds Ambassador for "[injecting] meaningful depth into an exciting sci-fi adventure, perceptively exploring what it means to be alien while avoiding a heavy-handed message." Hunter highlights the technical aspects of the work which make it characteristic of the sci-fi genre, alongside the politically significant messaging which intervenes in a palatable way into American politics.
The publisher asked that John write a book about basketball as it is played in countries all over the world. That book became Around the World. Working with boys during school visits, talking to them, hearing the reasons they do and do not read, John has written books he would have liked reading as a teen. Crackback is set within the realities of high school football and Box Out perceptively follows a sophomore as he is called up to play varsity basketball.
O'Regan's fifteen-year term ended in October 2009. Her last judgment for the Court, Mazibuko v City of Johannesburg,Mazibuko and Others v City of Johannesburg and Others (2009) ZACC 28; 2010 (4) SA 1 (CC). on the right to water, proved highly controversial. For some, it was a perceptively restrained summation of the Court's socio- economic rights jurisprudence; for others, it was a "disappointing" and "profoundly conservative" failure by the Court to come to the aid of South Africa's poorest communities.
Lawrence was a prolific writer throughout his life, a large portion of which was epistolary; he often sent several letters a day, and several collections of his letters have been published. He corresponded with many notable figures, including George Bernard Shaw, Edward Elgar, Winston Churchill, Robert Graves, Noël Coward, E. M. Forster, Siegfried Sassoon, John Buchan, Augustus John, and Henry Williamson. He met Joseph Conrad and commented perceptively on his works. The many letters that he sent to Shaw's wife Charlotte are revealing as to his character.
His Cheekati Rojulu (Dark Days) graphically depicts the atrocities committed by the state on the innocent citizens of India during the infamous Emergency of 1975-77. His Women's College and Vichalitha (The Disturbed) perceptively treats the discrimination and injustice being meted out to women in India. Bondhavyalu (Relationships) depicts the altered socio-economic scenario in Telangana during twenty five years between 1970-1995. Naveen's short stories have appeared in five collections — Life in a College, Enimido Adugu (Eighth Step), From Anuradha with Love, Nishkriti (Deliverance) and Bandhitulu (The Enslaved).
Perceptively, a columnist for the Los Angeles Times wrote during the Olympics: 'Freeman has emerged at the Sydney 2000 Games as the most potent symbol of a nation's hopes both for Olympic glory and reconciliation for sins of the past' (as quoted by Paul Sheehan in "Cathy who? Condoms and controversy make a world of difference", Sydney Morning Herald, 27 Sep. 2000, p. 2). Moreover, Freeman's prominence at the opening ceremony encapsulated the Olympic ideals of promoting sport and celebrating the history and culture of the host country.
54–55 His political and cultural essays were published in The Nation, the New Statesman, the New York Review of Books, and Esquire magazines. As a public intellectual, Gore Vidal's topical debates on sex, politics, and religion with other intellectuals and writers occasionally turned into quarrels with the likes of William F. Buckley Jr. and Norman Mailer. As a novelist, Vidal explored the nature of corruption in public and private life. His polished and erudite style of narration readily evoked the time and place of his stories, and perceptively delineated the psychology of his characters.
Her latest book is Let Me Continue. Hwang's work Kong’s Garden was translated into English by Asia Publisher. She was one of four featured speakers at a bilingual author’s roundtable in Myeongdong Seoul on September 12, 2015. Korean Literature Now Magazine sums up Hwang's work: : Hwang perceptively portrays the pain of those living in a space that cannot possibly be represented by the word “slum,” a space always in danger of falling into ruin. She illustrates the fiery trace of lives that cannot be compensated for, and life’s suffering that cannot be converted into money.
Judith's eleven-year-old daughter, Naomi is biracial and perceptively intelligent for her age. At times unruly and prone to fits and running away from her single mother, Naomi and her quirky ways befriend Stephanos through frequent visits to his store where they read books together. Bonded through their mutual loss of fathers, Naomi is comforted by this friendship just as much as Stephanos. Naomi's arrival with her mother to Logan Circle as well as her Caucasian and African background serve to highlight the gentrification and cultural conflicts of the neighborhood.
He is also discussed in some of the works of James Joyce.Martin (1992) passim Wagnerian themes inhabit T. S. Eliot's The Waste Land, which contains lines from Tristan und Isolde and Götterdämmerung, and Verlaine's poem on Parsifal.Magee (1988) 47 Many of Wagner's concepts, including his speculation about dreams, predated their investigation by Sigmund Freud.Horton (1999) Wagner had publicly analysed the Oedipus myth before Freud was born in terms of its psychological significance, insisting that incestuous desires are natural and normal, and perceptively exhibiting the relationship between sexuality and anxiety.
Yoon Ga-eun graduated from History Department at Sogang University and continued her graduate studies at the School of Film, TV & Multimedia at Korea National University of Arts. Her first film as a director is 19 minutes short film The Taste of Salvia introduced in 2009. Beginning with it, she directed several films including Proof (2010), Guest (2011), Sprout (2013), Tabloid Truth (2014) and The World of Us (2015). The first work that she began to make a mark is Guest (2011), a movie perceptively capturing a phase of the growing pains that a pubescent high school girl experience.
The right-wing press, and the Nazi Party in particular, used the Barmat scandal as a vehicle to express its underlying anti-Semitic, anti-socialist and anti-democratic sentiments.Fulda p. 103-05. An Austrian commentator perceptively noted that the right-wing press and propaganda campaign, using the Barmat scandal as the excuse and opportunity for expressing its sentiments, was more dangerous than the military coups to which the Republic had been subjected. The press campaign appealed to the hearts and minds of those who sought an excuse and a reason for the hardships and perceived injustices that Germany continued to suffer.
Beginning as a Cornet at Waterloo, Matthew Hervey of the 6th Light Dragoons, and son of the vicar of Horningsham finds himself in many of the colonial military actions thereafter, including Ireland, Canada, India, South Africa, Burma and the Balkans. His climb through the ranks is neither fast nor easy, as the son of a vicar does not have the private means to readily buy promotion. His romantic life is also more turbulent than might be expected of a vicar's son. Despite his personal trials he makes a very human effort to remain a man of honor, and the adversities he faces change him perceptively as a character throughout the series.
" Innocent Employments, another installment in the Memoirs, was published in 1967. It recounted Turpin's father's rise as a stamp dealer and his own early days in the trade. The Laughing Cavalier (1969) was subtitled A Memoir, A Novel and an Epilogue and recalled Turpin's parents and his father's second marriage after his mother's death. Robert Baldick praised Turpin's subtle approach: "If Mr. Turpin cultivates a small plot of literary earth, he tends it with exquisite skill, and the results are never disappointing.... Few authors have written so perceptively about the father-son relationship: it is high time Mr. Turpin's quiet talent was more widely recognized.
The quartet's last performances as an ensemble were three concerts in Buffalo in February 1967. The music critic Michael Steinberg recalled meeting Kroyt in Buffalo the previous year: > It was an evening that ended with the Kroyts driving us to our hotel in an > absolutely awesome vehicle, about the size of a motor launch, furnished in > rich blues, frighteningly quiet, and representing a life style I had not > associated with the playing of chamber music. I remember, too, a man of rare > warmth, charm and humor, who spoke generously, perceptively, and with > pleasing irreverence, about his colleagues in the musical world. Kroyt was diagnosed with stomach cancer in 1968.
The most prominent technique used is checkerboard rendering, wherein the console only renders portions of a scene using a checkerboard pattern, and then uses algorithms to fill in the non-rendered segments. The checkerboarded screen can then be smoothed using an anti-aliasing filter. Hermen Hulst of Guerrilla Games explained that PS4 Pro could render something "perceptively so close [to 4K] that you wouldn't be able to see the difference". PS4 Pro supports Remote Play, Share Play, and streaming at up to 1080p resolution at 60 frames per second, as well as capturing screenshots at 2160p, and 1080p video at 30 frames per second.
By taking advantage of the frame-to-eye effects of a framerate higher than 60 frame/s, the GPU is able to better smooth aliased edges by rotating the anti-aliasing sampling pattern between frames. A 2X software setting became perceptively equivalent to 4X. Unfortunately, it required the system to be able to maintain at least 60 frame/s or temporal anti-aliasing would cause a noticeable flickering, because the user would be able to see the alternating AA patterns. If the framerate could not be maintained, the driver will disable Temporal AA. However, in games which this performance level could be maintained, Temporal AA was a nice addition to ATI's excellent anti-aliasing options.
This was to serve him in good stead in John Dexter's masterly staging of The Life of Galileo in 1980, the first Brecht to become a popular success. Hall called him "unsentimental, dangerous and immensely powerful," and The Sunday Times called his performance "a decisive step in the direction of great tragedy... great acting," while fellow actors paid him the rare compliment of applauding him in the dressing room on the first night. Ralph Richardson dubbed him The Great Gambon, an accolade which stuck, although Gambon dismisses it as a circus slogan. But as Sheridan Morley perceptively remarked in 2000, when reviewing Nicholas Wright's Cressida: "Gambon's eccentricity on stage now begins to rival that of his great mentor Richardson".
The 2011 tour visited performing arts venues in cities throughout the United States including Los Angeles, Houston, Dallas, Atlanta, Seattle, Minneapolis, and Boston. The 2012–2013 tour began in Los Angeles in January 2012, with return engagements in San Francisco, San Diego, Seattle, Chicago and Atlanta as well as stops in several other cities. The Screwtape Letters has been described as "Humorous and lively ... the Devil has rarely been given his due more perceptively!" by The New York Times, "A profound experience" by Christianity Today and "Wickedly witty ... One hell of good show!" by The Wall Street Journal. The Barley Sheaf Players of Lionville, Pennsylvania performed James Forsyth's play Screwtape in September 2010.
Highly recommending the novel, which "delves into the timely issue of violence against and between young black men—both its possible causes, and its heartrending effects on the families involved", BookPage stated that "Edwards perceptively explores a wide realm of issues ... with compassion for her characters and with intuitive understanding of the effects of loss on a family".Deborah Donovan, "A mother's search for justice" (review of The Mother), BookPage, May 2016. Paste magazine described it as "a powerful work that illuminates the web of ramifications spun from a personal tragedy",Bridey Heing, "A Murder Trial Tackles Race and Class in The Mother by Yvvette Edwards", Paste, 10 May 2016. and NBC News commented on the author's "masterful storytelling".
While in law school, Ahmari co-edited with Nasser Weddady the 2012 book Arab Spring Dreams: The Next Generation Speaks Out for Freedom and Justice from North Africa to Iran, an anthology of the top essays submitted by young Middle Eastern dissidents to the Dream Deferred Essay Contest. The Times Literary Supplement writes that Weddady and Ahmari "perceptively edited this collection of winning entries" from the Dream Deferred contest, and that "some of these young writers [featured in the anthology] possess more clarity than all the pundits combined." The book received endorsements from Polish Nobel Peace Prize winner Lech Wałęsa and feminist icon Gloria Steinem, who wrote the anthology's foreword. Ahmari's book, The New Philistines, a polemic on how identity politics are corrupting the arts, was released on October 20, 2016 from Biteback Publishing.
A. Dodson, op. cit. (1993), p.55. These two epithets were only gradually employed by the 22nd Dynasty pharaohs, starting from the reign of Osorkon II. By contrast, Shoshenq I's nomen simply reads ‘Shoshenq-meryamun’. Shoshenq I's immediate successors, Osorkon I and Takelot I also never used epithets beyond the standard ‘meryamun’ (beloved of Amun). In his 1994 book on the Canopic Equipment of the Kings of Egypt, Dodson perceptively observes that when the sibast epithet ‘appears during the dynasty of Osorkon II’, it is rather infrequent, while the netjerheqawaset ('god-ruler of Thebes') and netjerheqaon epithets are only exclusively attested ‘in the reigns of that monarch’s successors’ – that is Shoshenq III, Pami and Shoshenq V.A. Dodson, The Canopic Equipment of the Kings of Egypt (1994), p. 93.
Although the northern mining did not itself become the main center of power in New Spain, the silver extracted there was the most important export from the colony.Peter Bakewell, Silver Mining and Society in Colonial Mexico: Zacatecas 1546–1700. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 1971. The control that the royal mints exerted over the uniform weight and quality of silver bars and coins made Spanish silver the most accepted and trusted currency. Many of the laborers in the silver mines were free wage earners drawn by high wages and the opportunity to acquire wealth for themselves through the pepena systemFor their troubles, they were compensated with real salaries and, “far more important,” as Bishop Mota y Escobar perceptively wrote, “with silver ore that they got to keep and which they call among themselves pepena.” Indeed, after doing their daily work, free Indians were permitted to collect any silver-encrusted rocks they wanted.
When he and Liddell failed in their bids to gain field commissions, however, Buhoup used what was left of his political leverage to have his company transferred to the Special Battalion where he hoped to gain a field commission once it was converted into a full regiment.Schreckengost, 46-47. With six companies now under his belt—an interesting cross-section of Louisiana society—one which David French Boyd of the soon-to-be organized 9th Louisiana perceptively described as being "a unique body, representing every grade of society and every kind of man, from the princely gentleman who commanded them down to the thief and cutthroat released from parish prison on condition he would join Wheat….Such a motley herd of humanity was probably never got together before, and may never be again," Wheat resolved to get his menagerie to Virginia, the seat of war, as soon as possible.
As dean she was "tough-minded and unyielding to pressure," standardizing the curriculum and perceptively evaluating the faculty. She thus quickly gained the confidence of Bob Jones, Sr., who treated her as a member of his official family.Turner, Reflecting God’s Light, 11; Bob Jones, Jr. to Doris Harris, February 15, 1977, BJU Archives. Hutto and Jones were both natives of southeast Alabama and had been born less than fifteen miles from each other. Jones deferred to Hutto in "the technical educational work," and he noted in a 1935 chapel service that the two "check[ed] each other. I might turn this school into a camp meeting, but Miss Hutto says, ‘No, this is a college.’ So she keeps me reminded that this is a college, and I keep her reminded that we have to keep our religion."Undated letter quoted in Johnson, 198; chapel talk, March 4, 1935, quoted in Turner, Standing Without Apology, 65.
Apart from its narrative momentum, as the lives of a disparate collection of lodgers in a down-at-heel rooming house fatally intertwine and unravel, the novel perceptively and accurately depicts "Kenbourne Vale" a fictional North West London suburb, during the 1970s public services strikes, with a shifting population, old terraced houses being demolished or cropped up into cheap rental warrens, grimy waste-ground and car-parks, Council housing estates, pretentiously-named streets, cheap corner shops and kebab houses. It's a world of self-service launderettes, overflowing dustbins and neglected amenities. The novel is full of cool observation and irony, touching on sexism, feminism and racism (key social themes of the 1970s). The major irony is that an aggressively normal research graduate is writing a thesis on criminal psychopathy, sharing his surname and lodgings with a repressed psychopath; and his innocent, well-meant action forces the strangler out onto the streets in search of real victims again.
The night before the signing of the Treaty of Waitangi at Kaitaia, Panakareao called for Puckey and spent a long time discussing and questioning the meaning, translation, and significance of the term "kawanatanga" which Henry Williams had used in the Treaty. In Panakareo's speech to assembled chiefs, (translated by Puckey and recorded by Richard Taylor at the time), he endorsed the Treaty. He said he understood the words of the Treaty to mean that "the shadow of the land was passing to the Queen, while the substance remained with Māori", a view he perceptively and presciently reversed a year later in light of increasingly bitter practical experience in subsequent dealings with Pākehā authorities, when he stated that he saw that the substance of the land had passed to the Queen and that the shadow had remained with Maori. In 1845 the Book of Common Prayer was translated by a committee comprising William Williams, Robert Maunsell, James Hamlin and William Puckey.
Haar, Grove online As such, his theories of musical composition were disseminated by the Venetian School, by composers such as Adrian Willaert, whose book Musica nova (New Music, 1568) contains madrigal compositions derived from the linguistic theories of Bembo. As a writer, in the book De Ætna ad Angelum Chabrielem Liber (1496), Bembo tells how he and his father, Bernardo, climbed Mount Ætna and there found snow in summertime, a reality that contradicted the Greek geographer, Strabo, who said that snow was present only in winter; nonetheless, Bembo perceptively notes: “But first-hand inquiry tells you that it lasts, as does practical experience, which is no less an authority.” Bembo's edition of Tuscan Poems (1501), by Petrarch, and the work of lyric verse Terze Rime (1530) much influenced the development of the Tuscan dialect into the literary language of Italy. In Gli Asolani (The People of Asolo, 1505) Bembo explained and recommended Platonic love as superior to carnal love, despite his love affair with the married Lucrezia Borgia (1480–1519);“Pietro Bembo” Encyclopædia Britannica (1911) p. 0000.
However, in the text of the statue, he is not given a specific throne name or prenomen, the use of a cartouche by a royal prince is attested in other periods of Egyptian history such as that of Amenmes, son of Thutmose I, and the documents depicts Shoshenq C as a simple High Priest of Amun on the side of the legs of the Nile God, rather than a king. In addition, none of Shoshenq C's three wives used the title "King's Wife" in any of their artifacts. More significantly, none of his three children ever gave their father a royal title on their own funerary objects such as a Priest Osorkon, whose funerary papyri is now in the St Petersburg Museum, or the God's Wife Karomama Meritmut. Finally, as Helen Jacquet-Gordon perceptively notes in her Bi Or 32(1975) Book Review of Kenneth Kitchen's TIPE book, Shoshenq C's third child—the Priest (and future king) Harsiese A does not assign royal titles to his father on a Bes-statue in Durham Museum which he dedicated to his father's memory.

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