This action may take several minutes for large corpora, please wait.
doc#110 | that on both sides sovereign Americans had | given | their lives in the Civil War to maintain |
doc#110 | this involves. The 140,414 Americans who | gave | "the last full measure of devotion" to |
doc#110 | But the fact that 70,524 other Americans | gave | the same measure of devotion to an opposing |
doc#110 | they fought for. The lives so many of them | gave | , to forestall what they believed would |
doc#111 | just such a unit, composed of people, which | gives | us both some immunity from, and a way of |
doc#111 | dwindle to complete darkness apparently | gave | rise to a ritual and celebration which |
doc#111 | tools which scientific understanding has | given | us to build and manipulate a more protective |
doc#112 | some unconscious division of labor, to have | given | them that one function and no other, leaving |
doc#112 | inexplicable. Take Augustine's doctrine of grace | given | and grace withheld: have you pondered the |
doc#112 | key word in my plays is 'perhaps`". </p><p> | Given | a theological lead, I asked what he thinks |
doc#112 | me or my mother had run away from home to | give | me an unhappy childhood. I told him no, |
doc#113 | perversely fascinated by it. Instead of | giving | themselves spontaneously to the orgiastic |
doc#113 | spontaneously to the orgiastic release that jazz can | give | them, they undergo psychoanalysis or flirt |
doc#114 | concurrent majority", which, he said, "by | giving | to each portion of the community which |
doc#114 | said in his "Second Inaugural" that God " | gives | to both North and South this terrible war |
doc#115 | might have did not lie in that direction. He | gives | us an account of this in his lively and |
doc#116 | individual's lessened desire and ability to | give | his services to the growth of his company |
doc#117 | shorter wave lengths and should in some cases | give | otherwise unobtainable information about |
doc#118 | total arc power is transferred to the anode | giving | rise to local heat fluxes in excess of |
doc#118 | electron heat transfer to the anode for a | given | power output. 2. Continuous motion of the |