1. Thus the two terms came to be used not just of modes of being with which individuals engaged but the outward life-styles they embraced. 2. Another gambling term comes to mind, however. 3. Battlefield terms come to mind because the educational process has become almost a war in our increasingly competitive world. 4. After consulting with a consultant, the court will say only that the term comes out of astronomy, as a measure of rating the brightness of stars. 5. But as children began taking apples to their teachers, the term came into modern usage. 6. But he said it has taken time for him to come terms with what she did. 7. But the term also has come to mean blacks of racially mixed blood and the Afro-French culture they developed. 8. Even after an uncomfortably accurate term has come into common use, doctors can simply change it. 9. He said he seriously considered retirement when his term came up last year. 10. His two terms came at a crucial time, politically, economically, and spiritually. |