Constitutes in A Sentence

    1

    A board of three tax commissioners has supervision of methods of assessment within the state, and with the commissioners of the land office constitutes the state board of equalization.

    2

    A broad, low crustal arch extends southward at the junction of the Atlantic and Gulf coastal plains; the emerged half of the arch, constitutes the visible lowland peninsula of Florida; the submerged half extends westward under the shallow Florida.

    3

    A charging order constitutes a lien on the judgment debtor 's limited liability company interest.

    4

    A general syndic, with two inferior syndics, chosen by the Council General, constitutes the supreme executive of the state.

    5

    A joke that annoys or embarrasses someone is one thing, but you want to avoid doing anything that will injure them or constitutes breaking the law.

    6

    A majority of either house constitutes a quorum, but as regards ordinary bills, on the third reading, not only must they receive a majority of the quorum, but that majority must be at least two-fifths of the total membership of the house.

    7

    A mountain range such as this, attaining altitudes at which vegetable life ceases, and the support of animal life is extremely difficult, constitutes an almost impassable barrier against the spread of all forms of living creatures.

    8

    A species of horse, which seems indigenous to Bhutan, and is used as a domestic animal, is called ldngan, from Tangastan, the general appellation of that assemblage of mountains which constitutes the territory of Bhutan.

    9

    A state board of education, consisting of the state superintendent and five other persons appointed by him, constitutes a state board of examiners (for special primary, high school and professional certificates) and prescribes the course of study.

    10

    A very large portion of north-west Mongolia constitutes a high plain, 3000 to 4200 ft.

    11

    About 74% of the whole constitutes the rural population.

    12

    Abyssinia appears to have been originally peopled by the eastern branch of the Hamitic family, which has occupied this region from the remotest times, and still constitutes the great bulk of its inhabitants, though the higher classes are now strongly Semitized.

    13

    Accepting with reservation Feuerbach's attack on the Hegelian "absolute idea," based on materialistic grounds (Der Mensch ist, was er isst), Marx was led to the conclusion that the causes of that process of growth which constitutes the history of society are to be found in the economic conditions of existence.

    14

    Admitting Kant's hypothesis that by inner sense we are conscious of mental states only, he holds that this consciousness constitutes a knowledge of the "thing-in-itself" - which Kant denies.

    15

    Again, it is difficult to account for what exactly constitutes modest, especially since different people may hold to different standards.

    16

    Aggression constitutes intended harm to another individual, even if the attempt to harm fails (such as a bullet fired from a gun that misses its human target).

    17

    Alcohol is extensively employed as a solvent; in fact, this constitutes one of its most important industrial applications.

    18

    Along the northern margin lies the intensely folded belt which constitutes the coalfield of Namur, and, beneath the overlying Mesozoic beds, is continued to the Boulonnais, Dover and beyond.

    19

    Although most people have a general vague idea of what constitutes an "antelope," yet the group of animals thus designated is one that does not admit of accurate limitations or definition.

    20

    Although there is some debate on what constitutes an appropriate keyword density, one general rule of thumb is to aim for two to six keywords per 200-word blog post.

    21

    Aluminium oxide or alumina, Al 2 0 3, occurs in nature as the mineral corundum, notable for its hardness and abrasive power (see Emery), and in well-crystallized forms it constitutes, when coloured by various metallic oxides, the gem-stones, sapphire, oriental topaz, oriental amethyst and oriental emerald.

    22

    Aluminium silicates are widely diffused in the mineral kingdom, being present in the commonest rock-forming minerals (felspars, &c.), and in the gem-stones, topaz, beryl, garnet, &c. It also constitutes with sodium silicate the mineral lapis-lazuli and the pigment ultramarine.

    23

    An abundance of lean meat and a moderate amount of fat well distributed constitutes a better carcase, and a more economical one for the consumer, than a carcase in which gross accumulations of fat are prominent.

    24

    An immense hemicycle was designed by Bramante for the Vatican, where it constitutes a fine architectural effect at the end of the great court.

    25

    An order of a set of things is to be sought in that relation holding between members of the set which constitutes that order.

    26

    And this constitutes the modern (so-called) "Tatar city" of Peking, the south front of which is identical with the south front of the city of Kublai.

    27

    And yet theism - or monotheism - constitutes a special locus in the history of religion.

    28

    Another basic carbonate, 3(BiO) 2 CO 3.2Bi(OH)3.3H20, constitutes the mineral bismutite.

    29

    Anyone who works in a place of business where behaviors that fit the description of what constitutes a hostile work environment are taking place can be the victim of this type of harassment.

    30

    Anything you think constitutes a serious breach of Jolt ethic must be brought quickly to the attention of an admins.

    31

    Apart from the heavy losses which it imposed on her, it constitutes a fresh departure in her history, as putting an end to her splendid isolation and rendering her dependent on the changes of European politics.

    32

    Apart from the popular paraphrastic translations of the Old Testament (see Targum), the great mass of orthodox Rabbinical literature consists of (1) the independent Midrashim, and (2) the Mishna which, with its supplement the Gemara, constitutes the Talmud.

    33

    Are you interested in learning more about what constitutes a hostile work envrionment?

    34

    Aristotle then wrote three moral treatises, which agree in the fundamental doctrines that happiness requires external fortune, but is activity of soul according to virtue, rising from morality through prudence to wisdom, or that science of the divine which constitutes the theology of his Metaphysics.

    35

    Armfeldt says our army is cut in half, and Paulucci says we have got the French army between two fires; Michaud says that the worthlessness of the Drissa camp lies in having the river behind it, and Pfuel says that is what constitutes its strength; Toll proposes one plan, Armfeldt another, and they are all good and all bad, and the advantages of any suggestions can be seen only at the moment of trial.

    36

    As the land tax forms the mainstay of the imperial revenue, so the ryot or cultivator constitutes the unit of the social system.

    37

    As we have in ourselves an instance of the identity of thought and being, we must suppose a universal identity of the ideal and real behind the antithesis which constitutes the world.

    38

    Assigning it the more extended of these limits, it comprehends the whole of the Indian peninsula, and in this view the mountainous system, consisting of the Eastern and Western Ghats, constitutes the most striking feature of the Deccan.

    39

    At an early stage of development a large cell makes its appearance in the central region of the nucellus; this increases in size and eventually forms three cells; the lowest of these grows vigorously and constitutes the megaspore (embryo-sac),which ultimately absorbs the greater part of the nucellus.

    40

    At Annesley Bay the narrow coast plain is succeeded by foothills separated by small valleys through which flow innumerable streams. From these hills the ascent to the plateau which constitutes northern Eritrea is very steep. This tableland, which has a general elevation of about 6500 ft., is fairly fertile despite a desert region - Sheb - to the S.E.

    41

    At the end of the ancien regime it formed part of the "Gouvernement" of Guienne, and at the Revolution it was incorporated in the department of Lotet-Garonne, of which it constitutes nearly the whole.

    42

    At the same time it must be remembered that there is in India, South Africa, the Urals, in Australasia and parts of North America an important series of rocks, with a " Permo-Carboniferous " fauna, which constitutes a passage formation between the Carboniferous, sensu stricto, and Jurassic rocks.

    43

    B is in fact the centre of the diffraction disk which constitutes the image of A. ??

    44

    Beauty, the sixth Sephirah, constitutes the chest in the archetypal man, and unites Love (4) and Justice (5), which constitute the divine arms, thus yielding the second triad of the Sephiric decade.

    45

    Before you begin, you need to set a clear criteria for what constitutes a "yes" answer and which card will equal a "no".

    46

    Besides the raising of cereals, fruit is extensively cultivated in the surrounding district; its apples and apricots are largely exported, large quantities of wine are produced, and cattlerearing constitutes another great source of revenue.

    47

    Besides the use of the straw when cut up and mixed with other food for fodder, the oat grain constitutes an important food for both man and beast.

    48

    Bismuth trisulphide, B12S3, constitutes the mineral bismuthite, and may be prepared by direct union of its constituents, or as a brown precipitate by passing sulphuretted hydrogen into a solution of a bismuth salt.

    49

    But any citizen summoned or arrested in virtue of the law shall submit without delay, as resistance constitutes an offense.

    50

    But in 1860 the annexation Nice and the adjoining territory to France brought the political frontier farther east, to a point between Mentone and Ventimiglia which constitutes no natural limit.

    51

    But in other parts of his works he suggests that mind and matter are two different aspects of that which is the basis of all things - a monism which is not necessarily materialistic, and which, in the absence of further explanation, constitutes a confession of failure.

    52

    But it is also true that even the mildest depiction constitutes an affront of sorts to most unionists.

    53

    But it is no more than an accident that this year constitutes the dividing line in both cases, the change in the United States being due to the Civil War, which so profoundly influenced the fiscal, economic and political history of the country in all directions.

    54

    But it is not of mind in this aspect 1 The revisional office which philosophy here assumes constitutes her the critic of the sciences.

    55

    But on the important question as to what constitutes the strongest social tissue, or to what extent the analogy between society as at present constituted and organic life is really applicable, we are left without certain guidance.

    56

    But the increase of size which constitutes growth is the result of a process of molecular intussusception, and therefore differs altogether from the process of growth by accretion, which may be observed in crystals and is effected purely by the external addition of new matter - so that, in the well-known aphorism of Linnaeus, the word "grow" as applied to stones signifies a totally different process from what is called "growth" in plants and animals.

    57

    But there is also a theology which constitutes the defining telos of philosophical inquiry.

    58

    But this primordial fire is in itself that divine rational process, the harmony of which constitutes the law of the universe (see Logos).

    59

    But, although the relation of reason to an external authority thus constitutes the badge of medieval thought, it would be unjust to look upon Scholasticism as philosophically barren, and to speak as if reason, after an interregnum of a thousand years, resumed its rights at the Renaissance.

    60

    Calcium carbonate, CaCO 3, is of exceptionally wide distribution in both the mineral and animal kingdoms. It constitutes the bulk of the chalk deposits and limestone rocks; it forms over one-half of the mineral dolomite and the rock magnesium limestone; it occurs also as the dimorphous minerals aragonite (q.v.) and calcite (q.v.).

    61

    Calcium fluoride, CaF2, constitutes the mineral fluor-spar, and is prepared artificially as an insoluble white powder by precipitating a solution of calcium chloride with a soluble fluoride.

    62

    Calcium sulphate, CaSO 4, constitutes the minerals anhydrite (q.v.), and, in the hydrated form, selenite, gypsum (q.v.), alabaster (q.v.), and also the adhesive plaster of Paris (see Cement).

    63

    Cantharidin constitutes from z to r% of cantharides.

    64

    Caring for a child with Angelman syndrome constitutes a complex challenge.

    65

    Cartilage constitutes a major component of the vertebrate skeleton.

    66

    Cattle-rearing is not so well developed as agriculture, but great flocks of geese are reared, especially in the south, and bee-cultivation constitutes another important industry.

    67

    Certain particles go forth from the eye to meet similar particles given forth from the object, and the resultant contact constitutes vision.

    68

    Certainly his polemic as a Christian against the Manichaeism of his youth constitutes a curious preface to his vehement rejection of Pelagian libertarianism.

    69

    Charleston is in the midst of a region rich in bituminous coal, the shipment of which by river and rail constitutes one of its principal industries.

    70

    Consequently, if we know what constitutes good architecture, it seems reasonable to expect all modern architectures to be near optimum.

    71

    Consuming enough whole grains is not difficult to do once you understand what constitutes a serving size.

    72

    Convolvulin constitutes nearly 20% of the resin.

    73

    Create and hang posters in school and community areas that clearly state what constitutes "safe play".

    74

    Cumberland, therefore, lays it down that " The greatest possible benevolence of every rational agent towards all the rest constitutes the happiest state of each and all.

    75

    Cyber predators who meet young people in Internet chat rooms and convince them to leave home to meet or live with them constitutes a relatively new, but growing, problem.

    76

    Decide what constitutes romance, how you will each give and receive it.

    77

    Determining what constitutes a syntax error is not always clear-cut.

    78

    Different diet plans, such as the Atkins Diet and the The South Beach Diet, have different definitions of what constitutes low carb, and those definitions change as you work your way through the diet.

    79

    Each constitutes an administrative county, the Parts of Lindsey having an area of 967,689 acres; Kesteven, 465,877 acres; and Holland, 262,766 acres.

    80

    Each magisterial district constitutes a school district and there are also a few independent school districts.

    81

    Each of the visceral ganglia is connected or combined with an olfactory ganglion underlying an area of specialized epithelium, which constitutes the olfactory organ, the osphradium.

    82

    Each screen is a part of a small grid, each grid a part of a larger area which constitutes a Chapter.

    83

    Edwards contends that the connexion between cause and effect here is as "sure and perfect " as in the realm of physical nature and constitutes a " moral necessity."

    84

    Elastin occurs either as thick strands or as membranes; it constitutes the " elastic tissue " of the anatomist.

    85

    Elsewhere the coast lowlands merely form the lowest steps of the system of terraces which constitutes the ascent to the inner plateaus.

    86

    Emo hair styles are one of the hottest teen hair styles today, but what exactly constitutes an emo style and what that style says about the individual are issues that are entirely open for individual interpretation.

    87

    Even among folks who support mandatory school uniforms, there is a wide range of ideas about what constitutes a uniform.

    88

    Everyone has a different idea of what constitutes a great wine, but understanding the different processes involved in creating organic wine can help you choose.

    89

    Everyone's idea of what constitutes a healthy relationship differs.

    90

    Experiments on alloys are, in some ways, easier to make than on pairs of non-metallic substances, partly owing to the possibility of polishing sections for microscopic examination, and the investigation of alloys has done much to elucidate the general phenomena of solution, of which metallic solution constitutes a special case.

    91

    Extract of belladonna is added to lessen the pain which might occur during the removal of the corn, and this acts as a corrective, while the flexible collodion forms a means of applying it conveniently, and constitutes the vehicle.

    92

    Failure to address this issue in fact constitutes the biggest threat to achieving a lasting urban renaissance.

    93

    Feeling in this higher sense (as distinguished from "organic" sensibility, Empfindung), which is the minimum of distinct antithetic consciousness, the cessation of the antithesis of subject and object, constitutes likewise the unity of our being, in which the opposite functions of cognition and volition have their fundamental and permanent background of personality and their transitional link.

    94

    Ferric oxide or iron sesquioxide, Fe203, constitutes the valuable ores red haematite and specular iron; the minerals brown haematite or limonite, and gothite and also iron rust are hydrated forms. It is obtained as a steel-grey crystalline powder by igniting the oxide or any ferric salt containing a volatile acid.

    95

    Fibroin, which is analogous to horn, hair and like dermal products, constitutes about 75 to 82% of the entire mass, and has a composition represented by the formula C15H23 506.

    96

    Finally the hand-wheel 80 is connected by gearing to the rod carrying the hand-wheel 79, and it can thus be used to give the latter a more rapid motion than if used direct; this constitutes the third speed of movement.

    97

    For a century or more the Tangalai and Vadagalai sects, connected with the worship of the temple, have been quarrelling fiercely as to the form of this symbol; the questions arising out of this led to much litigation, and though final judgment was given by the privy council, the matter still constitutes a danger to the peace.

    98

    For another, why not simply say that the functional role itself constitutes pain's affective phenomenology?

    99

    For example, what constitutes a proper request in Arabic may seem weird in English.

    100

    For that reason, it is important for both dance teachers and parents to know what constitutes a good class.

    101

    For the administration of the common school system each county having five or more civil districts is divided into five school districts, and in counties having five or less than five civil districts each civil district constitutes a school district.

    102

    For the most part the main crest constitutes the Franco-Spanish frontier; the principal exception to this rule is formed by the valley of Aran, which belongs orographically to France but politically to Spain.

    103

    From the coast to the eastern base of the Cascade Mountains the state is heavily timbered, except in small prairies and clearings in the Willamette and other valleys, and the most important tree is the great Douglas fir, pine or spruce (Pseudotsuga Douglasii), commonly called Oregon pine, which sometimes grows to a height of 300 ft., and which was formerly in great demand for masts and spars of sailing-vessels and for bridge timbers; the Douglas fir grows more commercial timber to the acre than any other American variety, and constitutes about five-sevenths of the total stand of the state.

    104

    From this capability of natural development (which already involves a teleological idea) Kant distinguishes the power of moral self-development or selfliberation from the dominion of nature, the gradual realization of which constitutes human history or progress.

    105

    Fruit, especially plums, is very abundant and constitutes a great article of export.

    106

    Gases, consisting principally of light carburetted hydrogen or marsh gas, are of ten present in considerable quantity in coal, in a dissolved or occluded state, and the evolution of these upon exposure to the air, especially when a sudden diminution of atmospheric pressure takes place, constitutes one of the most formidable dangers that the coal miner has to encounter.

    107

    Germany, including Bavaria and Wurttemberg, constitutes with Austria-Hungary a special postal union (Deutsch-Osterreichischer Postverband), besides forming part of the international postal union.

    108

    Harbour improvements also are projected, but in Formosa, as in Japan proper, paucity of capital constitutes a fatal obstacle to rapid development.

    109

    He alone constitutes the world of pure spirit, and is the garment of Shaddai, i.e.

    110

    He finds that throughout the universe there is an unceasing redistribution of matter and motion, and that this redistribution constitutes evolution when there is a predominant integration of matter and dissipation of motion, and constitutes dissolution where there is a predominant absorption of motion and disintegration of matter.

    111

    He has the power to veto bills, to pardon, to grant reprieves and commutations, and to remit fines and forfeitures, but the Board of Charities and Reform constitutes a Board of Pardons for investigating all applications for executive clemency and advising the governor with respect to them.

    112

    He, with the governor and the president of the state university, constitutes a high-school board, having supervision of the secondary schools.

    113

    Helium is present in the atmosphere, of which it constitutes four parts in a million.

    114

    Hence arises the conception of rights and duties which should be maintained by law, as opposed to those actually maintained; with the further consequence that it may become occasionally a moral duty to rebel against the state in the interest of the state itself, that is, in order better to subserve that end or function which constitutes the raison d'être of the state.

    115

    Hence both science and religion must come to recognize as the" most certain of all facts that the Power which the Universe manifests to us is utterly inscrutable."Thus to be buried side by side in the Unknowable constitutes their final reconciliation, as it is the refutation of irreligion which consists of" a lurking doubt whether the Incomprehensible is really incomprehensible."Such are the foundations of Spencer's metaphysic of the Unknowable, to which he resorts in all the fundamental difficulties which he subsequently encounters.

    116

    His first work on this abstruse subject, entitled T heorie des perturbations de la lune, qui sont dues a faction des planetes,1 is remarkable for the boldness of its conception, and constitutes an important addition to celestial dynamics.

    117

    His speculative ideas, his moral teaching and his poetical power are indeed interdependent on one another, and this interdependence is what mainly constitutes their power and interest.

    118

    His work constitutes an enlarged targum on these books, and its object is to prove the everlasting validity of the law, which, though revealed in time, was superior to time.

    119

    His work constitutes the oldest commentary in the world on Genesis and part of Exodus, an enlarged Targum on these books, in which difficulties in the biblical narration are solved, gaps supplied, dogmatically offensive elements removed and the genuine spirit of later Judaism infused into the primitive history of the world.

    120

    How often have you heard stories about how people who play video games have a hard time determining what is part of the game and what constitutes real life.

    121

    However, it is important, especially for women, to have a realistic perspective on what constitutes a healthy weight, which doesn't necessarily mean model-thin.

    122

    However, it's always a good idea to familiarize yourself with what constitutes proper dress.

    123

    However, most school have fairly strict guidelines for what constitutes appropriate attire.

    124

    However, not everyone agrees on what constitutes a violent toy.

    125

    However, what constitutes wages under employment law is not the same as what constitutes emoluments under tax law.

    126

    I think that the present working-class core of the German Communist Party constitutes that Marxist core which the German Communist Party needs.

    127

    I think you may be right that that 15% constitutes a potential undecided vote in a possible future referendum.

    128

    If the human race constitutes a single species, then the mere fact that man now inhabits every region, and is in each case constitutionally adapted to the climate, proves that acclimatization has occurred.

    129

    If the structure of the molecule is so perfectly symmetrical that, in the absence of any external field, the resultant magnetic moment of the circulating electrons is zero, then the application of a field, by accelerating the right-handed (negative) revolutions, and retarding those which are left-handed, will induce in the substance a resultant magnetization opposite in direction to the field itself; a body composed of such symmetrical molecules is therefore diamagnetic. If however the structure of the molecule is such that the electrons revolving around its atoms do not exactly cancel one another's effects, the molecule constitutes a little magnet, which under the influence of an external field will tend to set itself with its axis parallel to the field.

    130

    If this series of operations be made to depend upon the continuous rotation of a winch or handle, the arrangement constitutes an electrostatic influenceenachine.

    131

    If you're not sure what constitutes plagiarism, check out the LoveToKnow Freelance Writing articles What is Plagiarism? and Avoid Plagiarism.

    132

    In 1876 he exhibited an apparatus embodying the results of his studies in the transmission of sound by electricity, and this invention, with improvements and modifications, constitutes the modern commercial telephone.

    133

    In 1880 the state assumed liability for the full amount plus interest, and this balance, $544,061.23, now constitutes an endowment fund, upon' which the state pays 6% interest.

    134

    In 1902, in an "attempt at a chemical conception of the ether," he put forward the hypothesis that there are in existence two elements of smaller atomic weight than hydrogen, and that the lighter of these is a chemically inert, exceedingly mobile, all-penetrating and all-pervading gas, which constitutes the aether.

    135

    In an increasingly casual world, it can be hard to know what constitutes professional attire.

    136

    In architecture, the term "corona" is used of that part of a cornice which projects over the bed mould and constitutes the chief protection to the wall from rain; it is always throated, and its soffit rises towards the wall.

    137

    In cases in which a stepparent may provide a more stable environment for a child than the biological parents, judges may still favor biological parents due to personal and societal beliefs about what constitutes a "normal" family.

    138

    In cases involving cross actions with mutual accounts, say between an Englishman and a German, if the German constitutes himself plaintiff he must sue his opponent before the British court, and vice versa.

    139

    In certain cases, as, for instance, in an iron ring wrapped uniformly round with a coil of wire through which a current is passing, the induction is entirely within the metal; there are, consequently, no free poles, and the ring, though magnetized, constitutes a poleless magnet.

    140

    In combination with calcium sulphate, it constitutes the mineral glauberite or brongniartite, Na2S04 CaS041 which assumes forms belonging to the monoclinic system and occurs in Spain and Austria.

    141

    In conformity with the customs and commercial compact between the two states, renewed in 1899, the monarchy constitutes one identical customs and commercial territory, inclusive of Bosnia and Herzegovina and the principality of Liechtenstein.

    142

    In due time the horse is bled, the serum is filtered free of blood corpuscles, and then constitutes the antitoxic serum, which can be standardized to a certain potency.

    143

    In fact, the dance has become popular enough that there are some arguments as to what constitutes "true" hip hop dancers.

    144

    In general each city, town and township in the state constitutes a separate school district, although two or more of these may unite to form a single district.

    145

    In hydrostatics, for instance, we define a fluid by means of one of its known properties, and from this definition we make the system of deductions which constitutes the science of hydrostatics.

    146

    In June 1835 Airy was appointed Astronomer Royal in succession to John Pond, and thus commenced that long career of wisely directed and vigorously sustained industry at the national observatory which, even more perhaps than his investigations in abstract science or theoretical astronomy, constitutes his chief title to fame.

    147

    In modern times Asturias formed a captaincy-general, divided into Asturias d'Oviedo, which corresponds with the limits of the ancient principality, and Asturias de Santillana, which now constitutes the western half of Santander.

    148

    In Norway it constitutes a considerable part of the dense woods of the southern dales, flourishing, according to Franz Christian Schiibeler, on the mountain slopes up to an altitude of from 2800 to 3100 ft., and clothing the shores of some of the fjords to the water's edge; in the higher regions it is generally mingled with the pine.

    149

    In regard to the second marriage (which constitutes the offence) the English courts have held that it is immaterial whether, but for the bigamy, it would have been a valid marriage or not.

    150

    In the centre of the town are a number of irregular and narrow streets, and the river, polluted by the refuse of dye-works and factories, constitutes a constant eyesore.

    151

    In the circular form it constitutes a natural and even primitive use of the idea of a crown, modified by an equally simple idea of the emanation of light from the head of a superior being, or by the meteorological phenomenon of a halo.

    152

    In us this living power constitutes the ego, which is truly immaterial and immortal.

    153

    Iron disulphide, FeS2, constitutes the minerals pyrite and marcasite; copper pyrites is (Cu, Fe)S2.

    154

    It also constitutes the minerals ornithite, Ca3(P04)2 2H20, osteolite and sombrerite.

    155

    It appears the the social perception of what constitutes "monstrously large" on a fearsome scale has changed quite a bit from the 1950s through today.

    156

    It constitutes a little town of itself, surrounded by walls and a moat, and contains numerous small houses, 18 convents and a church.

    157

    It constitutes practically the exterior environment of the protoplasts, though it is ramifying through the interior of the plant.

    158

    It constitutes the diocese of Bayonne, comes within the educational circumscription.

    159

    It constitutes the diocese of Troyes and part of the archiepiscopal province of Sens.

    160

    It constitutes the dividing line of the city, the cross streets being called east or west according to the side of it they are on.

    161

    It constitutes the entirety of OUR contract with YOU.

    162

    It constitutes the innermost whorl, which after flowering is changed into the fruit and contains the seeds.

    163

    It has its own shops, bazaars, mosques, &c., and constitutes a quarter by itself.

    164

    It is a military district, a customs district (since 1868), is organized into a land district, and constitutes three judicial divisions.

    165

    It is false, therefore, to speak of matter as the principle of individuation; and if this is so there is no longer any foundation for the Thomist view that in angelic natures every individual constitutes a species apart.

    166

    It is ruled by a governor, and, along with Timor (East Indies), constitutes a bishopric, to which belong also the Portuguese Christians in Malacca and Singapore.

    167

    It is the full, rich humanity of his life and personality - not the art behind which the artist disappears, or the definite pronouncements of the thinker or the teacher - that constitutes his claim to a place in the front rank of men of letters.

    168

    It is the game on the perfectly level green that constitutes the historical game of bowls.

    169

    It is the neglect of this which constitutes the principal fault in carrying out the English fan system, as it is usually practised.

    170

    It is the union of these ideas with a hierarchical system, and with the temporal sovereignty of the head of that system in Tibet, which constitutes what is distinctively understood by the term Lamaism.

    171

    It is this definitely rational tone that constitutes the differentia of the teaching of the sages.

    172

    It is this last position that constitutes the fundamental difference between Hutcheson's ethical doctrine and Hume's.'

    173

    It is this that constitutes Polycarp's service to the Church, and no greater service has been rendered by any of its leaders in any age.

    174

    It is to be regarded as a propaedeutic, 12 which, although it is in contact with reality in and through the metaphysical import of the axioms, or again in the fact that the categories, though primarily taken as forms of predication, must also be regarded as kinds of being, is not directly concerned with object-reality, but with the determination for the thinking subject of what constitutes the knowledge correlative to being.

    175

    It therefore violates the guidelines set out in the Convention on Human Rights and Biomedicine, and constitutes medical malpractice by the State.

    176

    It's tough deciding who should be inducted into a hall of fame dedicated to great legs, as everyone has his own opinion of what constitutes hall-worthy gams.

    177

    Its basis is not a coercive authority imposed upon the citizens from without, but consists in the spiritual recognition, on the part of the citizens, of that which constitutes their true nature.

    178

    Judges were put in the position of having to interpret the law to determine what constitutes a "reasonable" amount for child support payments.

    179

    Jung invented or gave precision to many technical terms which Ray and others at once made use of in their descriptions, and which are now classical; and his notions of what constitutes a specific distinction and what characters are valueless as such seem to have been adopted with little change by Ray.

    180

    Laughing at his jokes, at least in his mind, constitutes having a great disposition.

    181

    Le Quatrieme Evangile, one thousand large pages long, is possibly over-confident in its detailed application of the allegorical method; yet it constitutes a rarely perfect sympathetic reproduction of a great mystical believer's imperishable intuitions.

    182

    Lead sulphide, PbS, occurs in nature as the mineral galena (q.v.), and constitutes the most valuable ore of llead.

    183

    Learning what constitutes romance to your partner is an important part of communicating.

    184

    Like their neighbours the Cambodians and the Chinese, the Annamese have a great respect for the dead, and ancestor worship constitutes the national religion.

    185

    Likewise, you may find you need to be more open and flexible about what constitutes sex.

    186

    Long previously Lord Kelvin himself came nearer this view, in offering the opinion that magnetism consisted, in some way, in the angular momentum of the material molecules, of which the energy of irregular translations constitutes.

    187

    Many botanists are even of opinion that the sweet chestnut, which now constitutes so large a part of the forests that clothe the sides both of the Alps and the Apennines, and in some districts supplies the chief food of the inhabitants, is not originally of Italian growth; it is certain that it had not attained in ancient times to anything like the extension and importance which it now possesses.

    188

    Mental stamina probably constitutes at least 50% of whether you will complete the distance or not.

    189

    Michelson's ingenious echelon grating constitutes a realization in an unexpected manner of what was thought to be impracticable.

    190

    More importantly, it doesn't get much more luxurious than the fifteen percent woven cashmere material that constitutes this design.

    191

    Moreover, the native population itself constitutes a large consumer of these oils.

    192

    Most important insurance is winning family holiday insurance travel in constitutes a vantage.

    193

    Nor does the law stipulate what constitutes ' disturbance '.

    194

    Normal ferric arsenate, FeAs0 4.2H2O, constitutes the mineral scorodite; pharmacosiderite is the basic arsenate 2FeAsO4Fe(OK)3.5H2O.

    195

    Now they are everywhere checked by contemporary evidence, and a clearer sense of what constitutes a primary source has discredited much of what had been currently accepted as true.

    196

    Obviously, what constitutes a funny shower curtain is completely individual.

    197

    Of all the fights parents and kids have, what constitutes appropriate swimsuits for teenage girls ranks right up there with conflicts about dating, makeup and heels.

    198

    Of course, as with all videogame definitions, what constitutes a MMOG is somewhat vague.

    199

    Of parrots, Stringops, the kakapo or owl-parrot, is certainly peculiar, while Nestor constitutes a peculiar subfamily of the brush-tongued parrots or Trichoglossidae.

    200

    Of the five teeth between the incisors and molars the most anterior, or the one usually situated close behind the premaxillary suture, very generally assumes a lengthened and pointed form, and constitutes the " canine " of the Carnivora, the tusk of the boar, &c. It is customary, therefore, to call this tooth, whatever its size or form, the " canine."

    201

    Of these the last is very brief, the first not long; the middle constitutes the bulk of the work.

    202

    On the other hand, he does not seem to think that moral sentiment or " taste " can " become a motive to action," except as it " gives pleasure or pain, and thereby constitutes happiness or misery."

    203

    On this account the reign of Trajan constitutes a turning-point in civil as in military history.

    204

    One of such enclosures constitutes the British legation, and most of the other foreign legations are similarly, though not so sumptuously, lodged.

    205

    One of the most useful nutritious species is Cetraria islandica, " Iceland moss," which, after being deprived of its bitterness by boiling in water, is reduced to a powder and made into cakes, or is boiled and eaten with milk by the poor Icelander, whose sole food it often constitutes.

    206

    One special plant is selected each year from the Soo raised from the previous season's test plant, and in four years' time the progeny of this plant constitutes the " general crop."

    207

    One-quarter cup of dried fruit constitutes a serving.

    208

    Only such a policy on the part of the Italian and French workers constitutes the policy of revolutionary internationalism.

    209

    Only what falls under the first and second of the divisions so indicated can be said to have discharged a function in developing philosophy; only so much constitutes Schelling's philosophy proper.

    210

    Orientation of Substituent Groups.-The determination of the relative positions of the substituents in a benzene derivative constitutes an important factor in the general investigation of such compounds.

    211

    Other indicators of fetal well-being include short term variability (STV), which constitutes changes in the FHR from one beat to another, and long term variability (LTV), which is changes in the FHR over a long period of time.

    212

    Otherwise, the Danube constitutes the whole southern frontier; its right bank being Bulgarian for 290 m., and Servian, in the extreme west, for 50 m.

    213

    Over the whole basin this deposit, to a depth of I or 2 ft., is coloured black by decayed vegetation, and constitutes one of the most fertile tracts on the continent.

    214

    Oxygen occurs naturally as one of the chief constituents of the atmosphere, and in combination with other elements it is found in very large quantities; it constitutes approximately eight-ninths by weight of water and nearly one-half by weight of the rocks composing the earth's crust.

    215

    Pennsylvania is by far the most important coalproducing state in the Union, and as much of the iron ore of the Lake Superior region is brought to its great bituminous coal-field for rendering into pig-iron, the value of the state's mineral products constitutes a large fraction of the total value for the entire country; in 1907, when the value of the mineral products of the state was $ 6 57,7 8 3,345, or nearly one-third that of all the United States, and in 1908 when the total for the state was $473,083,212, or more than one-fourth that of the whole United States, more than fourfifths of it was represented by coal and pig-iron.

    216

    Performing these postures constitutes a half sequence, and one full round consists of the sequence of 12 postures done twice, making sure to balance both sides of the body.

    217

    Permafrost, which is solid, frozen soil, constitutes about 25 percent of the land area in the Northern Hemisphere.

    218

    Phosphate rock is heavily exported, and in the opinion of the National Conservation Commission of 1908 the supply cannot long satisfy the increasing demand for export, which constitutes a waste of a precious natural resource.

    219

    Potent, however, as such a vehicle is for expressing thought, its ideographic script constitutes a great obstacle to general acquisition, and the Japanese soon applied themselves to minimizing the difficulty by substituting a phonetic system.

    220

    Precisely how much residual angulation constitutes a failed attempt at reduction remains controversial.

    221

    Pufendorf powerfully defends the idea that international law is not restricted to Christendom, but constitutes a common bond between all nations because all nations form part of humanity.

    222

    Quite apart from the genuineness of a sample, its special aroma constitutes the value of an oil, and in this respect the judging of the value of a given oil may, apart from the purity, be more readily solved by an experienced perfumer than by the chemist.

    223

    Read here to learn what constitutes a low fat diet and how you can work to incorporate this into your lifestyle.

    224

    Remaining itself in repose, it rays out, as it were, from its own fullness an image of itself, which is called vas, and which constitutes the system of ideas of the intelligible world.

    225

    Rice constitutes one of the most important articles of food in all tropical and subtropical countries, and is one of the most prolific of all crops.

    226

    Richet considers that the fusel oil contained in spirits constitutes the chief danger in the consumption of alcoholic beverages.

    227

    Scientifically the name is extended to include all the members of the African genus Cephalophus, which, together with the Indian chousingha, or four-horned antelope (Tetraceros), constitutes the subfamily Cephalophinae.

    228

    Shaftesbury had conclusively shown that these were not in the vulgar sense selfish; but the very stress which he lays on the pleasure inseparable from their exercise suggests a subtle egoistic theory which he does not expressly exclude, since it may be said that this " intrinsic reward " constitutes the real motive of the benevolent man.

    229

    Silver bromide, AgBr, constitutes the mineral bromargyrite or bromyrite, found in Mexico and Chile.

    230

    Silver chloride, AgC1, constitutes the mineral cerargyrite or horn silver; mixed with clay it is the butter-milk ore of the German miners.

    231

    Silver sulphide, Ag 2 S, constitutes the mineral argentite or silver glance, and may be obtained by heating silver with sulphur, or by precipitating a silver salt with sulphuretted hydrogen.

    232

    Since about 1970, psychologists have expanded the notion of what constitutes intelligence.

    233

    Solving the equation by the Ordinary Theory Of Linear Partial Differential Equations, We Obtain P Q 1 Independent Solutions, Of Which P Appertain To S2Au = 0, Q To 12 B U =0; The Remaining One Is Ab =Aobl A 1 Bo, The Leading Coefficient Of The Jacobian Of The Two Forms. This Constitutes An Algebraically Complete System, And, In Terms Of Its Members, All Seminvariants Can Be Rationally Expressed.

    234

    Such a combination constitutes an electromagnet, a valuable device by means of which a magnet can be instantly made and unmade at will.

    235

    Such an arrangement constitutes in effect a condenser, and when the two plates respectively are connected to the secondary terminals of an induction coil in operation, the plates are rapidly and alternately charged, and discharged across the spark gap with electrical oscillations (see Electrokinetics).

    236

    Taurus has a penchant for the fine art and fancies himself knowledgeable enough to know what constitutes good art.

    237

    That proceeding, in February 1806, constitutes the basis of the Continental System.

    238

    That there are defects in the logical process as here outlined to account for the curious rite constitutes no valid objection to the theory advanced, for, in the first place, primitive logic in matters of belief is inherently defective and even contradictory, and, secondly, the strong desire to pierce the mysterious future, forming an impelling factor in all religions - even in the most advanced of our own day - would tend to obscure the weakness of any theory developed to explain a rite which represents merely one endeavour among many to divine the intention and plans of the gods, upon the knowledge of which so much of man's happiness and welfare depended.

    239

    That which distinguishes Herat from all other Oriental cities, and at the same time constitutes its main defence, is the stupendous character of the earthwork upon which the city wall is built.

    240

    The " form " of a thing constitutes it what it is, and at the same time, therefore, is constitutive of the group to which it belongs.

    241

    The above constitutes the whole material which the earlier middle age had at its disposal.

    242

    The absence of forests, which cover hardly 3% of the total area of the island, constitutes a serious obstacle to the prosperity of Sicilian pastoral and agrarian undertakings.

    243

    The acacias and the Rosaceae yield their gums most abundantly when sickly and in an abnormal state, caused by a fulness of sap in the young tissues, whereby the new cells are softened and finally disorganized; the cavities thus formed fill with liquid, which exudes, dries and constitutes the gum.

    244

    The agents of the finance ministry, instead of being mere clerks, are now employed in " the assessment and collection of taxes, the control of expenditure, the preparation and execution of the budget, the estimates of the necessary cash required at different points of the empire - all that, in fine, constitutes the real financial administration of a great empire."

    245

    The aim of scientific Old Testament criticism is to obtain, through discrimination between truth and error, a full appreciation of the literature which constitutes the Old Testament, of the life out of which it grew, and the secret of the influence which these have exerted and still exert.

    246

    The amount constitutes more than half of the total aid package announced for Nigeria.

    247

    The analysing appliance constitutes the main feature of a spectroscope.

    248

    The anhydrous nitrate, obtained by heating the crystallized salt, is very phosphorescent, and constitutes "Baldwin's phosphorus."

    249

    The Annelidan affinities are superficially indicated in so marked a manner by the thinness of the cuticle, the dermomuscular body-wall, the hollow appendages, that, as already stated, many of the earlier zoologists who examined Peripatus placed it among the segmented worms; and the discovery that there is some solid morphological basis for this determination constitutes one of the most interesting points of the recent work on the genus.

    250

    The answer constitutes the substance of aesthetics, considered as a branch of philosophy.

    251

    The appearance of these minute oysters constitutes what the fishermen call a "fall of spat."

    252

    The arch and its retorts is termed a bed or setting, and a row of beds constitutes a bench.

    253

    The arrangement of the fibro-vascular system in the lamina constitutes the venation or nervation.

    254

    The arsenal extends for a mile and a half along the southern coast of the Mare Piccolo, which constitutes its chief basin.

    255

    The assembly of all householders in villages of less than 30 households, and of 30 elected men in villages having from 30 to 300 households (dne from each io households in the more populous ones), constitutes the village assembly, similar to the mir, but having wider attributes, which assesses the taxes, divides the land, takes measures for the opening and support of schools, village grain-stores, communal cultivation, and so on, and elects its ataman (elder) and its judges, who settle all disputes up to fio (or above that sum with the consent of both sides).

    256

    The body of legal rules and customs which obtained in England before the Norman conquest constitutes, with the Scandinavian laws, the most genuine expression of Teutonic legal thought.

    257

    The box is thus entirely closed at the front, while the front carbon disk, which constitutes an electrode, is perfectly free to follow the motions of the diaphragm.

    258

    The carboxyl group constitutes another convenient startingpoint for the orientation of many types of organic compounds.

    259

    The chief river flowing towards the Atlantic is the Bidasoa, which rises near the Puerta de Maya, and after flowing southwards through the valley of Baztan takes a north-easterly course, and for a short distance above its outfall at Fuenterrabia constitutes the frontier between France and Spain (Guipuzcoa); by far the larger portion of Navarre is drained to the Mediterranean through the Ebro, which flows along the western frontier and crosses the extreme south of the province.

    260

    The city within the municipal limits constitutes a separate division of the county.

    261

    The claim to universality and the isolated abstract individual presupposed by such economics constitutes a denial of interdependence and impermanence.

    262

    The Coastal Plain of Virginia is covered with pine forests which merge westward with the hard woods of the Piedmont Belt, where oaks formerly prevailed, but where a second growth of pine now constitutes part of the forest.

    263

    The coenosarc constitutes a system by which the digestive cavity of any one polyp is put into communication with that of any other individual either of the trophosome or gonosome.

    264

    The competition thus constitutes what is termed a " block test," and it is instructive in affording the opportunity of seeing the quality of the carcases furnished by the several animals, and in particular the relative proportion and distribution of fat and lean meat.

    265

    The complex system of dead and dying tissues cut off by these successive periderms, together with the latter themselves in fact, everything outside the innermost phellogen, constitutes what is often known botanically as the bark of the tree.

    266

    The concern of NOP is the addition of vitamins, minerals, and other synthetic additives as well as what constitutes a nutritionally-balanced diet for pets.

    267

    The contents of the pan are once more allowed to cool and settle, and the soap as now formed constitutes a pure curd coap, carrying with it some proportion of uncombined alkali, but containing the minimum amount of water.

    268

    The continual, slow and laborious progress from the one to the other is that which really constitutes history, and man becomes civilized by rendering himself the conscious and independent possessor of all that in poetical wisdom remained impersonal, unconscious, that came, as it were, from without by divine afflatus.

    269

    The cycle of its transformations and successive condensations constitutes the life of the universe, the mode of existence proper to finite and particular being.

    270

    The determination to realize the self in some definite way constitutes an "act of will," which, as thus constituted, is neither arbitrary nor externally determined.

    271

    The discovery had, however, yet to be completed by that of auscultation, or listening to sounds produced in the chest by breathing, the movements of the heart, &c. The combination of these methods constitutes what is now known as physical diagnosis.

    272

    The dorsal part of the somite has travelled dorsalwards, and now constitutes a small space (triangular in section) just dorsal to the gut.

    273

    The eastern part of the chain passed from South France through the Vosges, the Black Forest, Thuringia, Harz, the Fichtelgebirge, Bohemia, the Sudetes, and possibly farther east; this constitutes the " Varischen Alps " of Suess.

    274

    The eastern portion of Utah consists of high plateaus, and constitutes a part of the Colorado Plateau province.

    275

    The ego is itself both body and soul - the conjunction of both constitutes it; our "organization" or sense nature has its intellectual element, and our "intellect" its organic element.

    276

    The establishment and convection of a single polar atom constitutes in fact a quasi-magnetization, in addition to the polarization current as above defined, the negative poles completing the current circuits of the positive ones.

    277

    The Executive Council constitutes one branch of the legislative assembly; the House of Delegates the other.

    278

    The exponent of logic as metaphysic, for whom the rational is the real is necessarily in revolt against all that is characteristically Kantian in the theory of knowledge, against the transcendental method itself and against the doctrine of limits which constitutes the nerve of " criticism."

    279

    The extreme south-west part of the continent constitutes a separate zoological district, comprising Arabia, Palestine and southern Persia, and reaching, like the hot desert botanical tract, to Baluchistan and Sind; it belongs to what Dr Sclater calls the Ethiopian region, which extends over Africa, south of the Atlas.

    280

    The fact is, no one--not the game companies, not the TV, not even your own kids-- really knows what constitutes a "cool" game.

    281

    The fairway between this bank, which begins to the west of Dumbarton, and the southern shore constitutes the safest anchorage in the upper firth.

    282

    The female flowers of the Taxaceae assume another form; in Microcachrys (Tasmania) the reproductive structures are spirally disposed, and form small globular cones made up of red fleshy scales, to each of which is attached a single ovule enclosed by an integument and partially invested by an arillus; in Dacrydium the carpellary leaves are very similar to the foliage leaves - each bears one ovule with two integuments, the outer of which constitutes an arillus.

    283

    The fibro-vascular system in the leaf constitutes the venation.

    284

    The first group comprises such subjects as land-surveying; here the measurements in the elementary stages take place in a plane, and the consideration of volumes necessarily constitutes a later stage; and the figures to be measured are mostly not movable, so that triangulation plays an important part.

    285

    The first is represented by the Deutero-Isaiah, who constitutes the climax and close of Hebrew prophetism, which is henceforth (with the possible exception of the Trito-Isaiah, Malachi and Jonah, who reproduce some features of the earlier prophecy) a virtually arrested development.

    286

    The first is termed foreshots, the second constitutes the potable spirit, and the third is called feints.

    287

    The first sort is analytical; mathematical and ethical knowledge represents the second; physical science forms the third; real knowledge of self, God and the world constitutes the fourth.

    288

    The first, which constitutes the north, east and south-east of the district, is a low-lying plain; while the other, which comprises the southern and southwestern portion, forms a high table-land from 1500 to 2 500 ft.

    289

    The formal fact of thinking is what constitutes our being; but this thought leads us back, when we consider its concrete contents, to the necessary pre-supposition on which our ideas depend, the permanent cause on which they and we as conscious beings depend.

    290

    The gallery now constitutes a unique collection of Venetian paintings from the most ancient artists down to Tiepolo, one hall only being reserved for other Italian schools and one for foreign schools.

    291

    The genus is a member of the natural order Smiliaceae, and constitutes the tribe Smilacoidide, characterized by its climbing habit, net-veined leaves and dioecious flowers.

    292

    The god was originally a stranger, taken into the kin by a rite of blood brotherhood, and this constitutes the dark point of the theory; for Robertson Smith regards the blood bond as relatively late; hence we do not see how the god became associated with the kin.

    293

    The greater part of the Serra da Estrella constitutes the watershed between the Mondego and Zezere.

    294

    The growth of the imperial museum of antiquities, under the direction of Hamdy Bey, within the grounds of the Seraglio, has been remarkable; and while the collection of the sarcophagi discovered at Sidon constitutes the chief treasure of the museum, the institution has become a rich storehouse of many other valuable relics of the past.

    295

    The heron (sagi) constitutes a charming feature in a Japanese landscape, especially the silver heron (shira-sagi), which displays its brilliant white plumage in the rice-fields from spring to early autumn.

    296

    The hierarchy which centres in the pope constitutes the Church of which the sacramental system is the inner life and penance is the sanction.

    297

    The Inspecting Officer must make the decision as to what constitutes ' reasonably convenient ' for each specific case.

    298

    The introduction of these lines and points constitutes a striking achievement in geometry, and from their association with circles they have been named the " circular lines " and " circular points."

    299

    The inwardness of savage religion - the meaning it has for those who practise it - constitutes its essence and meaning likewise for him, who after all is a man and a brother, not one who stands really outside.

    300

    The Karawanken railway, a direct connexion with Bohemia and the northern industrial provinces of Austria, is calculated to counteract the gravitation of traffic towards the German ports; while the Tauern railway constitutes the shortest route to the interior of Austria and to the south of Germany.

    301

    The last constitutes a valuable article of commerce in the form of copra, from which palm oil is expressed; the natives make use of this oil in made dishes, and also of the soft half-green kernel and the coco-nut " milk," the clear liquid within the nut.

    302

    The level at which it is desired to keep the water in these ditches constitutes the unit of water measurement for the polder, and is called the polder's zomer peil (Z.P.) or summer water-level.

    303

    The Matra group is of volcanic origin, rising abruptly in the great Hungarian plain, and constitutes one of the most beautiful groups of the Carpathians; lastly, to its east extend the thicklywooded Biikk Mountains (3100 ft.).

    304

    The military force constitutes the XIX.

    305

    The most varied changes of this kind have been described, and are generally familiar as monstrosities; the study of them constitutes, under the name of teratology, a distinct department of biology.

    306

    The movement in opposite directions of these charged ions constitutes the electric current in the solution.

    307

    The municipal council of Trieste constitutes at the same time the local Diet of the crown land, and is composed of S4 members.

    308

    The necessity, for administrative or other purposes, of tabulating separately the returns for so many cross-divisions of the country constitutes one of the main difficulties of the English census operations, more particularly as the boundaries of these areas are frequently altered.

    309

    The network of shallow and still limans or "cut-offs" in the delta of the Volga and the shallow waters of the northern Caspian, freshened as these are by the water of the Volga, the Ural, the Kura and the Terek, is exceedingly favourable to the breeding of fish, and as a whole constitutes one of the most productive fishing grounds in the world.

    310

    The new channel into which the river flows is of course so much land lost, while the old bed constitutes an accession to the adjacent estates.

    311

    The next question constitutes perhaps the most important problem in Greek political development.

    312

    The Nile constitutes, in the words of Lord Cromer, the true justification of the policy of re-occupation, and makes the Sudan a priceless possession for Egypt .2 The Sudan having been reconquered by " the joint military and financial efforts" of Great Britain and Egypt, the British government claimed " by right of conquest " to share in the settlement of the administration and legislation of the country.

    313

    The northern part of Tuscany is indeed occupied to a considerable extent by the underfalls and offshoots of the Apennines, which, besides the slopes and spurs of the main range that constitutes its northern frontier towards the plain of the Po, throw off several outlying ranges or groups.

    314

    The northern portion of the residency constitutes the most fertile portion, is generally flat with a hilly group in the middle, where the two inactive volcanoes, Karang and Pulosari, are found, while the north-western corner is occupied by the isolated Gede Mountain.

    315

    The object of reeling is to bring together the filaments (bave) from two or more (generally four or five, but sometimes up to twenty) cocoons, and to form them into one continuous, uniform, and regular strand, which constitutes the " raw silk " of commerce.

    316

    The omission of a specific scheme to address generalized blight constitutes a major flaw in the proposed compensation package.

    317

    The other and larger tableland, which constitutes the substantial part of Iceland, reaches its culminating point in the south-east, in the gigantic snowfield of Vatnajokull, which covers 3300 sq.

    318

    The outer single layer of cells which constitutes the surface of the vesicle is the ectoderm or epiblast.

    319

    The ovary enlarges, and, with the seeds enclosed, constitutes the fruit, frequently incorporated with which are other parts of the flower, as receptacle, calyx, &c. In gymnosperms the pollen-tubes, having penetrated a certain distance down the tissue of the nucellus, are usually arrested in growth for a longer or shorter period, sometimes nearly a year.

    320

    The persistence of this form of the idea of sacrifice constitutes so marked a feature of the history of Christianity as to require a detailed account of it.

    321

    The phosphide obtained by heating cupric phosphate, Cu 2 H 2 P 2 O 81 in hydrogen, when mixed with potassium and cuprous sulphides or levigated coke, constitutes " Abel's fuse," which is used as a primer.

    322

    The power of resisting displacement constitutes stability, the power of each piece to resist disfigurement is its stiffness; and its power to resist breaking, its strength.

    323

    The presence of the two successive larval forms in the life-history constitutes what is called hypermetamorphosis.

    324

    The profusion of turrets, pinnacles, and dormer windows which decorates the roof of this, the chief portion of the château, constitutes the main feature of the exterior, while in the interior are a well-preserved chapel of the 16th century and a famous double staircase, the construction of which permits two people to ascend and descend respectively without seeing one another.

    325

    The profusion of turrets, pinnacles, and dormer windows which decorates the roof of this, the chief portion of the château, constitutes the main feature of the exterior, while in the interior are a well-preserved chapel of the 16th century and a famous double staircase, the construction of which permits two people to ascend and descend respectively without seeing one another.

    326

    The rearing of the silk-worm, especially in the lowlands, constitutes another great source of revenue, and furnishes the material for the only extensive industry of the country.

    327

    The recently discovered species, Sphenophyllum fertile, while resembling Bowmanites Romeri in its peltate, bisporangiate sporangiophores, is peculiar in the fact that both dorsal and ventral lobes of the sporophyll were fertile, dividing in a palmate manner into several branches, each of which constitutes a sporangiophore.

    328

    The relation of these works to the various original sources constitutes the critical problem before the modern historian in reference to the history of Alexander.

    329

    The revenue derived from the sales and leases of this land constitutes an endowment fund upon which the state as trustee pays 6% interest.

    330

    The review should not copy or closely paraphrase other work, whether published or unpublished, without due acknowledgment, as this constitutes plagiarism.

    331

    The series of exceptional measures by which that confusion of powers was created constitutes the "Revolutionary government" in the strict sense of the word, a government which was principally in vigour during the period called "the Terror."

    332

    The setting up, by a householder, of a set of three sacrificial fires of his own constitutes the first ceremony of the former class, the Agny-adhana (or (?) Agny-adheya).

    333

    The soil of Bukovina is fertile, and agriculture has made great progress, the principal products being wheat, maize, rye, oats, barley, potatoes, flax and hemp. Cattlerearing constitutes another important source of revenue.

    334

    The species without a parachute constitutes the genus Zenkerella, and looks very like an ordinary squirrel (see Rodentia).

    335

    The stems of cycads are often described as unbranched; it is true that in comparison with conifers, in which the numerous branches, Stem springing from the main stem, give a characteristic form to the tree, the tuberous or columnar stem of the Cyca daceae constitutes a striking distinguishing feature.

    336

    The study of the physical properties of fluids in general constitutes the science of hydromechanics, and their applications in the arts is termed hydraulics; the special science dealing with the physical properties of gases is named pneumatics.

    337

    The style is concise, the anecdotes are well told, the descriptions short and picturesque; the whole constitutes one of the most living pictures of medieval society.

    338

    The tale of the dealings of his descendants with these two classes of opponents constitutes the greater part of English history for a full century.

    339

    The tiny aperture that serves as both entrance and exit to this great basilica constitutes a danger to pilgrims.

    340

    The Tom Clancy gaming universe has established a large following and constitutes a large portion of online gaming.

    341

    The town is built of the red granite for which it is famous, and the quarrying of which for home and foreign use constitutes an important industry.

    342

    The tracing of this history, and the explanation of the general characters of Echinoderms and of the differentiating features of the classes in accordance therewith, constitutes the Pelmatozoic theory.

    343

    The treatise thus constitutes the first document in the modern science of Biblical criticism.

    344

    The tritelluride constitutes the mineral tetradymite, B12Te3.

    345

    The upholders of such a theory would, in general, deride the term `"metaphysics" or "ontology"; but it is evident, none the less, that their position itself implies a certain theory of the universe and of our own place in it, and the establishment of this theory constitutes their metaphysics.

    346

    The Ural, in its lower part, constitutes the frontier between European Russia and the Kirghiz steppe; it receives the Sakmara on the right and the Ilek on the left.

    347

    The USDA has a very specific definition of what constitutes organic.

    348

    The utterance of these speech elements in definite order constitutes the roots and sentences of the various tongues.

    349

    The Wasatch Mountain range constitutes the eastern margin of the Great Basin in central and northern Utah, and resembles the true basin ranges in that it is formed by a great block of the earth's crust uptilted along a north-south fault-line.

    350

    The weaving of blankets, handkerchiefs, and cotton and silk cloths constitutes quite an important industry.

    351

    The western part of the range, which received the name of Paropamisus Mons from the ancients, diminishes in height west of the 65th meridian and constitutes the northern face of the Afghan and Persian plateau, rising abruptly from the plains of the Turkoman desert, which lies between the Oxus and the Caspian.

    352

    The wood of these rafts is sold in Bagdad, and constitutes, in fact, the chief supply of wood in that city.

    353

    The, city lies at the base of the eastern slope of the first Watchung, or Orange, Mountain, and is primarily a residential suburb of New York and Newark; with East Orange, West Orange and South Orange it constitutes virtually a single community, popularly known as " the Oranges."

    354

    The, utterance of these speech elements in definite order constitutes the roots and sentences of the various tongues.

    355

    There are all kinds of packages to be found for what constitutes a set.

    356

    There are many schools of thought regarding what constitutes a healthy diet.

    357

    There are useful judicial dicta as to what constitutes substance and what constitutes procedure.

    358

    There is a division of society into septs or clans, the membership of which constitutes the closest tie.

    359

    There is no one definition of what constitutes the "best" diamond ring, but the perfect ring will be the one that is favored in the eyes of the recipient.

    360

    There is, however, one true river of some size, the Hlaing, which rises near Prome, flows southwards and meets the Pegu river and the Pazundaung creek near Rangoon, and thus forms the estuary which is known as the Rangoon river and constitutes the harbour of Rangoon.

    361

    There's some debate about whether it constitutes a health hazard, but in most insulation applications fiberglass is contained under a safe covering to keep it away from circulating air.

    362

    Therefore, we are entitled to say that the idea of death constitutes the central theme of this deeply existential poetry.

    363

    Therein an order Thoracica comprehends the pedunculate Lepadidae, together with the operculate and sessile Balanidae and Verrucidae; a single species without cirrhi constitutes the order Apoda, and a single species with only three pairs of cirrhi the order Abdominalia.

    364

    These questions are legitimate, because what constitutes a formal dress has more than one definition, and to find a plus size formal in sizes larger than 20 you need to know where to shop.

    365

    These results reveal either a surprising ignorance by caterers of what they are producing or a reckless disregard for what constitutes a healthy meal.

    366

    These rules may include who can use instant message features, whether vulgarities are allowed, and what constitutes harassment.

    367

    They are seen to be united under the relation of cause and effect, determining and determined, which turns out to mean that they are merely passing manifestations of some single entity or energy which constitutes the real unknown essence of the things that come before our knowledge.

    368

    They form the two intermediate "steps" between the coast-lands and the inner plateau which constitutes the largest part of South Africa.

    369

    They have a different definition of what constitutes processed.

    370

    This accidental fact constitutes a prime difference in favour of the preceding period, in which there were only five pontiffs during the first sixty years of the 13th century.

    371

    This amount constitutes less than 10% of the overall research fund expenditure.

    372

    This book of the Old Testament, which, as we now read it, constitutes a sequel to the book of Joshua, covering the period of history between the death of this conqueror and the birth of Samuel, is so called because it contains the history of the Israelites before the establishment of the monarchy, when the government was in the hands of certain leaders who appear to have formed a continuous succession, although the office was not hereditary.

    373

    This coalfield, ministering to the multifarious metal manufactures of Birmingham, constitutes the centre of the Midlands.

    374

    This Congregation, established in 1542 by Paul III., constitutes the tribunal of the Inquisition, of which the origins are much older, since it was instituted in the 13th century against the Albigenses.

    375

    This constitutes 10.4 percent for Social Security and 2.9 percent for Medicare.

    376

    This constitutes a serious breach of ethics and must be brought quickly to the attention of an administrator.

    377

    This constitutes the general theory of convergence of series (see Series).

    378

    This constitutes the theory of knowledge in the only tenable sense of the term, and it lays down, in Kantian language, the conditions of the possibility of experience.

    379

    This deflection of water has also seriously interfered with the palm groves, the cultivation of which constitutes a large part of the industry of the surrounding country along the river.

    380

    This elemental fire is in itself a divine rational process, the harmony of which constitutes the law of the universe.

    381

    This finer matter which collects in the centre of each vortex is the first matter of Descartes - it constitutes the sun or star.

    382

    This formation process constitutes the majority of the 90- to 120-day bone cycle, which then passes into the quiescent phase.

    383

    This inner life constitutes the oneness of believers and forms the true Church which is invisible.

    384

    This is because everyone has different criteria of what constitutes "good".

    385

    This is brought about by a double commissure, of which the ventral portion is considerably thicker than the dorsal, and which, together with the brain-lobes, constitutes a ring through which both proboscis and proboscidian sheath pass.

    386

    This large evaporation, which constitutes the so-called transpiration of plants, takes place not into the external air but into this same intercellular space system, being possible only through the delicate cell-walls upon which it abuts, as the external coating, whether bark, cork or cuticle, is impermeable by watery vapour.

    387

    This periodic distribution in time and space constitutes an electric wave proceeding outwards in all directions from the sending antenna.

    388

    This plain is continued on the opposite bank of the Danube by the valley of the Morava (Marchfeld), which constitutes the easiest access to the north.

    389

    This relation of the men who command to those they command is what constitutes the essence of the conception called power.

    390

    This statement constitutes the famous hypothesis of Fresnel, which thus ensures that all phenomena of ray-path and refraction, and all those depending on phase, shall be unaffected by uniform convection of the material medium, in accordance with the results of experiment.

    391

    This system of intercellular spaces, extending throughout the plant, constitutes a reservoir, charged with an atmosphere which differs somewhat in its composition from the external air, its gaseous constituents varying from time to time and from place to place, in consequence of the interchanges between itself and the protoplaste.

    392

    This use of formulae for dealing with numbers, which express magnitudes in terms of units, constitutes the broad difference between mensuration and ordinary geometry, which knows nothing of units.

    393

    This usurpation constitutes the greatest travesty of the American Constitution and jurisprudence in the history of this nation.

    394

    This we may consider as one of the striking parallels which meet us in other religions to that "hope of the advent of an ideal king which was one of the features of that larger hope of the salvation of Israel from all evils, the realization of perfect reconciliation with Jehovah and the felicity of the righteous in Him," to which reference was made in an early portion of this article and which constitutes the essential meaning of Messiahship. The form in which the Indian conception presents itself in the above quoted lines is more closely analogous amid many differences to the later and apocalyptic type of the Messianic idea as it appears in Judaism.

    395

    This writing has been preserved in its entirety in the Ascension of Isaiah, of which it constitutes chaps.

    396

    This, together with the north portion of the Neuerhafen, constitutes the free harbour.

    397

    This, with proper apparatus for originating electric currents at one end and for discovering the effects produced by them at the other end, constitutes an electric telegraph.

    398

    Though agriculture constitutes the most important branch of industry in the province, it is still in a very backward state.

    399

    Thus it appears that of the coal raised in England the county of Durham contributes about 22%, Yorkshire 17%, Lancashire 16%, Stafford and Derbyshire each about 9%, and Northumberland 7%; while of the coal raised in Wales 85% is contributed by the county of Glamorgan; and that the coal production of England and Wales together constitutes, in quantity and value, 85% of the whole production of the United Kingdom.

    400

    Thus the Apocrypha Proper constitutes the surplusage of the Vulgate or Bible of the Roman Church over the Hebrew Old Testament.

    401

    Thus the sulphate constitutes the minerals anhydrite, alabaster, gypsum, and selenite; the carbonate occurs dissolved in most natural waters and as the minerals chalk, marble, calcite, aragonite; also in the double carbonates such as dolomite, bromlite, barytocalcite; the fluoride as fluorspar; the fluophosphate constitutes the mineral apatite; while all the more important mineral silicates contain a proportion of this element.

    402

    To begin with, it is obvious that the number of sacraments must vary according to the criterions we use of what constitutes a sacrament.

    403

    To have set a dam against this process with the whole force of a mighty personality constitutes the importance of Athanasius in the world's history.

    404

    To help form an idea of what constitutes autistic behavior patterns, take a look at the list below.

    405

    To limit this freedom constitutes a grievous violation of a basic right.

    406

    To solve the question of how freedom and necessity are combined and what constitutes the essence of these two conceptions, the philosophy of history can and should follow a path contrary to that taken by other sciences.

    407

    To the majority, this is a trifling matter, but obviously it constitutes a serious moral transgression for a Christian.

    408

    To understand the reasons, it's important to first know exactly what constitutes certified organic and kosher meats.

    409

    Together with the drill (q.v.), the mandrill, Papio maimon, constitutes the subgenus Maimon, which is exclusively West African in distribution, and characterized, among other peculiarities, by the extreme shortness of the tail, and the great development of the longitudinal bony swellings, covered during life with naked skin, on the sides of the muzzle.

    410

    Ultraspeed will be the sole arbiter as to what constitutes a violation of the AUP.

    411

    Unfortunately, determining what constitutes best practice in ' synthetic ' phonics is by no means clear-cut.

    412

    Unfortunately, there is no fixed level of noise which constitutes a noise nuisance.

    413

    Very probably the power which the appendage of a given segment has of assuming the perfected form and proportions previously attained by the appendage of another segment must be classed as an instance of " homoeosis," not only where such a change is obviously due to abnormal development or injury, but also where it constitutes a difference permanently established between allied orders or smaller groups, or between the two sexes.

    414

    Voyagers may be wondering, what exactly constitutes the dress code?

    415

    Waagen's law of mutation, or the appearance of new parts or organs so gradually that they can be perceived only by following them through successive geologic time stages, appears to be directly contradictory to the saltation principle; it is certainly one of the most firmly established principles of palaeontology, and it constitutes the contribution par excellence of this branch of zoology to the law of evolution, since it is obvious that it could not possibly have been deduced from comparison of living animals but only through the long perspective gained by comparison of animals succeeding each other in time.

    416

    We need to readdress what constitutes a water hazard or danger.

    417

    What constitutes a dress coat may differ from person to person, but suffice it to say that you would wear one with professional outfits or when you're trying to look especially nice while also braving the cold.

    418

    What Constitutes an Iron Ore.

    419

    What constitutes mature morality is a subject of great controversy.

    420

    What constitutes significant collocation, however, can only be answered statistically.

    421

    What one store may label as clearance prices may be regular prices at another retail outlet, and what constitutes a great deal for one person may still be too expensive for another.

    422

    Whatever constitutes bullying in the academic context should also be developed and publicized.

    423

    When deprived of the gluten it constitutes oswego, maizena or corn flour.

    424

    When the atoms are in motion these strain-forms produce straining and unstraining in the aether as they pass across it, which in its motional or kinetic aspect constitutes the resulting magnetic field; as the strains are slight the coefficient of ultimate inertia here involved must be great.

    425

    Whenever Ion freeholders request it, the county commissioners must submit to the voters of a proposed high school district the question of establishing a high school district, and each precinct giving a majority vote for it constitutes a part of such a district for establishing and maintaining a high school.

    426

    Whether or not a particular scheme constitutes an unlawful lottery is a matter which only a court can define authoritatively.

    427

    Whether you are a manger, business owner, or employee, it's important to understand what constitutes a hostile work environment.

    428

    While abuse and neglect of children is obvious in many parenting situations, some situations may be less clear-cut and leave a sizeable debate on what exactly constitutes parental rights.

    429

    While that has certainly changed for most Christians, even today there are various opinions on what constitutes true Christian music.

    430

    While there may never be agreement over what constitutes "authentic" Middle Eastern dance, it is certainly a vibrant art form that continues to bring pleasure to performers and audiences throughout the world.

    431

    Winter wheat constitutes almost the entire output.

    432

    With growing concern about adult osteoporosis, it is important to realize that the mass of skeleton built during childhood and into early adulthood constitutes bone banked against inevitable later withdrawals.

    433

    With some modifications introduced by Jefferson, notably the adoption of a higher unit of value (the dollar instead of one-tenth of a cent), this plan constitutes the basis of the present American system.

    434

    With this, she includes a discussion of what constitutes a good basic diet.

    435

    Without the Revival of Learning the direction of those forces would have been different; but that novel intuition into the nature of the world and man which constitutes what we describe as Renaissance must have emerged.

    436

    Y Y' is a so.- iron yoke, which rocks upon knife-edges K and constitutes the beam of the balance.

    437

    Yarmorasen, who died in 1282, founded the dynasty of the Abd-el-Wahid, who ruled the greater part of what now constitutes Algeria.

    438

    Yet in doing so he adopts no simple-minded view of what constitutes boundaries or their recognition.

    439

    Yet while, in its application to history, Hegel's theory of evolution has points of resemblance with those doctrines which seek to explain the worldprocess as one unbroken progress occurring in time, it constitutes on the whole a theory apart and sui generis.

    440

    You may notice that different sweeteners are used in these recipes, but this can be attributed to various cultural differences in what constitutes the proper gingerbread formation.

    441

    You might consider getting clarification from your employer as to what constitutes "gross misconduct" in the workplace.

    442

    You'll need to decide what constitutes the awarding of a treat.

    443

    You've forgotten what constitutes love.