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that every camera has a unique
> One thing you should know is that every camera has a unique "noise signature" that can be used to later connect a picture with a camera.
— from Little Brother by Cory Doctorow

that each cell has a unity
This is nothing but another way of expressing the cell-doctrine, to which many medical men are now committed, which means that all bodies are built up of cells and that each cell has a unity and a purpose of its own.
— from An Epitome of the History of Medicine by Roswell Park

the enchanted castle hall And up
Gentle footsteps that lightly fall Through the enchanted castle hall, And up in the golden street.
— from Poems by Marietta Holley

the eighteenth century Hunter alone underwent
Of all the most illustrious Scotchmen of the eighteenth century, Hunter alone underwent that influence, and he alone displayed a certain hesitation and perplexity of thought, which seems unnatural to so great a mind, and which, as it appears to me, is best explained by the peculiar circumstances in which he was placed.
— from History of Civilization in England, Vol. 3 of 3 by Henry Thomas Buckle

the earlier capacity however and upon
[Pg 23] It was in the earlier capacity, however, and upon an occasion when he was given a trick at the wheel that Macy found himself in a thick fog off a New England port—one version of the story says Boston, the other New Bedford.
— from The Romance of a Great Store by Edward Hungerford

the eye could hardly arrange under
In Summer all these were a mass of living green, that the eye could hardly arrange; under Spring's delicate marshalling every little hill took its own place, and the soft swells of ground stood back the one from the other, in more and more tender colouring.
— from Hills of the Shatemuc by Susan Warner

the eighteenth century had already unconsciously
Together with its extravagancies and lyricism, Romantic literature deliberately put into practice some important principles which certain forerunners of the eighteenth century had already unconsciously illustrated or timidly taught.
— from Balzac by Frederick Lawton

the eighteenth century had arisen ultimately
The American problem in the eighteenth century had arisen ultimately out of the demand of the Americans for unqualified and responsible control over their own affairs: the attitude of the Englishman in reply to this demand (though he never clearly analysed it) was, in effect, that self-government was a good and desirable thing, but that on the scale on which the Americans claimed it, it would be fatal to the unity of the Empire, and the unity of the Empire must come first.
— from The Expansion of Europe; The Culmination of Modern History by Ramsay Muir

the European Community HAVE AGREED upon
THE HIGH CONTRACTING PARTIES, DESIRING to lay down the Statute of the European System of Central Banks and of the European Central Bank provided for in Article 4a of the Treaty establishing the European Community. HAVE AGREED upon the following provisions, which shall be annexed to the treaty establishing the European Community: CHAPTER 1 CONSTITUTION OF THE ESCB ARTICLE 1 The European System of Central Banks.
— from The Treaty of the European Union, Maastricht Treaty, 7th February, 1992 by European Union

the European Community HAVE AGREED upon
PROTOCOL ON THE EXCESSIVE DEFICIT PROCEDURE THE HIGH CONTRACTING PARTIES DESIRING to lay down the details of the excessive deficit procedure referred to in Article 104c of the treaty establishing the European Community, HAVE AGREED upon the following provisions, which shall be annexed to the Treaty establishing the European Community: ARTICLE 1 The reference values referred to in Article 104c(2) of this Treaty are: - 3% for the ratio of the planned or actual government deficit to gross domestic product at market prices; - 60% for the ratio of government debt to gross domestic product at market prices.
— from The Treaty of the European Union, Maastricht Treaty, 7th February, 1992 by European Union

the eighteenth century hangs askew upon
And we walk about soberly in the apartments, deserted since the departure of the Assumptionists: some abandoned books, collections of sermons, rest on a shelf of the library; old priests' hats lie on the floor; a béret lies on a corner of a table, a great map of Paris in the eighteenth century hangs askew upon a wall; the breeze blows through the windows whose panes are broken....
— from The Spell of the Heart of France: The Towns, Villages and Chateaus about Paris by André Hallays


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